HUSBAND RESCUED DESPAIRING WIFE After Four lean of Dbcourafbf Conditions, Mr*. BaQock G*T« Up ii Despair. HUbui S COM to P—«•—, Catron, Ky.—ln an Interesting letter from this place, Mr*. Bettle Bullock writes as follows: "1 suffered for four years, with womanly troubles, and during 1 this time, I could only sit up for a little while, and could no walk anywhere at an. At times, I wotud have seve-e pains 1 in my left tide; The doctor was called In, and his treat- 1 ment relieved me fo a while, but I was 1 soon confined to m- bed again. After t that, nothing seemed to do me any good, j SUNDAY SCHOOL Lesson Xlll.—First Quarter, For March 26, 1916. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Tsxt of the Lttion, Rev. vii, 9-17, Quarterly Review —Golden Text, Rev. vll, 16, 17—Commentary Prepared by Rev. O. M. Stearne. LKBSO* I. —Tho Ascending Lord, Acta 1, 1-14. Golden Text, Epb. lv, 8, "When He ssccuiled on hltfh lie led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men." During tlie forty days after Ilia rcmir rectlon, wben He showed blmaelf alive many times to Ills disciples, lie ul ways spoke of the Kingdom of God which He will surely aet up on earth wltb Israel ii H U center when He HIIIIII coino ngaln In Ills glory. Now we urt to witness to lllm by tbe Holy Hplrlt. I.KHSUM ll.—Tbe Coining of tbe Holy Bplrlt, Acta 11, 1-13. Golden Text, I Cor. 111, 10, "Know yo not that ye are ■ temple of God and tbat tbe Spirit of God dwellcth In you?" He aald Unit when lie reached borne He would send tbe Iloly Hplrlt, wbo would bring to tbelr remembrance all that He llnd ever aald to tbcm and take of Ills tblnga and allow tliem unto tliem and •how tbem tblnga to couie mid guide tbem Into all truth. LESBO.V lll.—l'eter'a sermon at Pen tocos t. Acta 11, 14-17. Golden Text. Acta It. 2t, "\Vhonoever ahull cull on tbe name of the Lord aimll lie anved." Wlillo we wnlt for tho coming of the kingdom which wnsfymtpoued because rejected, the Spirit liua come to testify of • risen living Christ at God's right hand and to gather unto lllm nil the "wbosoevers" wbo are willing to re ccive Him, follow Him and suffer with Him. LKSSO* IV. -The Spirit of 1,1 fe, Rom. vlll, 12-30. Gold«n Text, Horn.. Till, 14, "As many ns are led by tbe Spirit of God tbeae are aona of God." Tills |H the great Hplrlt chapter Indorsing tbe necessity of tlie new birth and teach Ing that all such are children and helra of God and can never be separated from His love—that the Father, Son v and Spirit aro all for us aud that In Christ all thing* are freely ours. LESSON V.—The Lame Man leaping. Acts 111, 1-12. Golden Text Acta 111, 0, "Peter said. Silver and gold hnvo I none, but what I have, that give I the*. In tbe name of Jeaua Christ of Nssareth, walk." Thla man, over for ty years of age, who bad never walked 0 step In all his life, la aeen, by all Who knew him to be Incurable, walk Ing and leaping and praUlng God. and Peter testified tbat thla waa tbe work Of the mi seen living Christ ' Lesson Vl.—Tbe BoldnesS of Peter and John, Acta lv, 8-21. Golden Text, 1 Cor. xvl, 13, "Watch ye, aland faxl In the faith, quit you like men, lie strong." I'eler and John, after a night In prliion. being brought before the high priest and the council to an swer for the healing of this man. do not healtitlc to aay before the council what they snld liefore the iieople In tbe temple that It waa the Work of Jeaua Cbrbit. whom they crucified. who la sllve. l.rw«ii VII.-Humbled and Kxnlted Phil. 11, 1-11. Goldeu Text, II Cor. vltl. 0, "Though He wan rich, yet for your as ken He been me |>oor." Despised and rejected of men. but choaen of God •od preck) u*. tlie only Saviour, willing to aave prouil I'harlaeea aa well ai confessed slnnerf If they would only come to Him. LESSON VIII.—The Brotherhood at Jerusalem. Acts lv, 82; v, HI Golden Text, I Pet I, 22, "Love one another from tbe heart fervently." The powet of the risen Christ drew the believer* close to Him and to esch oilier, at lean some of tbem, snd for s time, bnt soon deceit and murmuring became man! fast, snd we have still to wait to see s company of believers, however few. Continuing with ooe accord. Whole hearted surrender to Ood Is rare. Lxaeox IX.—The aeveu helpers. Arts vl* 1-7. Golden Text. GaL vl. 2, "near ye one another 1 * burdens snd so fulfill the lsw of Christ." That tlie apostle* Bight continue In prayer and tbe inln Istry of tbe Word s committee of ■even spirit filled men waa chosen to attend to murmurera and to ere Unit no one was neglected. LESSON X.—Tlie denth of Stephen 'Acts vll, 04; vUI. a Golden Text. Iter I J, 10, "Be thou faithful unto death, snd I will give thee tlie crown of life" Being Oiled wltb the Spirit produces different reanlts; In tbe cane of I'eler \ i&0OO souls from oue sermon wltb per Mentions; In'tbe case of Siephen not . such manifest result* In aoul savins and persecuted to destb. but be saw heaven opened and Jesus In glory. j£ LKSSON Xf.—Heroes and martyrs nl faith, Heb. *l. 1; Xll. 2. Golden Text, H«b. xIL 1. 2, "Let us run wltb pa ttence the race that Is set before us. onto Jesus." The end of chap tsr X and tbe beginning of chuplcr xll set before os tbe great need of falili - and petlence; then In chapter xl we hsve this (rest list of those wbo were notable Illustrations of faith and pn Hence, sll dvlng in fslth snd still wait in* for th* kingdom. LESSON XIL-Phlllp snd the Ethlo jfcp. Act, vtll, *4O. floidtn Te«. IP ■" Kg; ■ ———— # / I had gotten so weak I could not stand, and I gave up In despair. At last, my husband got me a bottle of Cardul, the woman's tonic, and I com menced taking It Frora the very first dose, I could ted It was helping me. I can sow walk two miles without its tiring me, and am doing an my work " If you art an run down bom womanly troubles, don't give up in despair. Try Cardui, the woman's tonic. M has helped more than a million women, in its 50 years of continuous success, and should surely help you, too. Your druggist has sold Cardui for years. He knows what it wUI do. Ask him. He win recom mend it Begin taking Cardui today. Writs fat Ctpttoaooca MAJICIM- Co.. LA4IM* Advtoory D«pt.. Chattanooga, Tonn., for Speciai Italructioiis »n your caao and64-paffo book. Homo If ■!■■■! for Wwn," Mat la plala wrapper. J-6o Act* vtll. no I r. "Cnderstiinrtcf tho- Wlint thou reiulesl7' Perse-etltlon *ciu r eut preachers -if the Word, and ninny heard and believed, and there w»* Joy on earth and In heaven. The Lord saw one hungry soul truly seeking, anil by an angel and the noly Spirit and a willing and obedient man He brought blm light and sent him on bla way re joicing. " J r* .... [THE CITY NO FLIES IN HAVANA, SAYS A CONSULAR REPORT Banishment le the Reeult of Munioipal Cleanliness and Care. The visitor from the United States cannot fall to bo impressed with tbe absence of flies in Havana, say* a con sular report. A fly Is a real rarity—so Is a mo»iulto —and screens are not al all a necessity. The absence of these pests Is simply tbe result of municipal cleanliness and care. 1 IliiHtratlng the general understand ing of the necessity to watch out for breeding sources, Mounted Officer Pe dro Sierra reported to the chief of sat^ aTIIEET HWEEI'EIIS IN HAVANA. Itatlon tbat lie bad observed n plant In the vcdailo (residential district) that apparently was n source of files. Tbe plant has a fruit resembling a fig, In which, Sierra asserts, larvae are to be found. He conducted some experi ments himself, becoming convinced that the plant afforded a breeding place for the jiesls; then he so report | ed. If tho experiments of the depart ment of sanitation confirm him uu doubtedly an order will be issued foi tbe destruction of all such planta In and around Havana, aud incidentally Officer Sierra will be rewarded. There Is no need for "fly swatting campaigns'' around tho cleau capital of Cuba. The aanltarlana mako files an Impossibility and confirm absolute ly tbe doctrlno that municipal cleanll neas will prevent the appearance of flies altogether. A recent visitor to Havana makes a ststemrnt which may further explain the absence of flies. He writes: One of the first things I noticed with out having to have my attention called to It was that In Havana they do not allow garbage cans and ash barrels to bo placed on the sidewalks In tbe pub 11c highways or In front of residences, spsrtmeut bouses or botela. Tbey pipe their sewage miles out Into tho gulf of Mexico. Veblclea of varloua sort* In tbe employ of the government col lect tbe garbage and waste and burn It In Isolated plares provided for the purpose, and every property owuer 1* required to keep Ills |iroperty not only clean, but presentable and attractive. Dayton Association Has Now Plan. Tbe llcurt of Imy ton association ol Dayton, 0., has Inaugurated an em ployment and business excliunge serv Ice. Applications for employment may l« listed without cost, and efforts will bt made to secure mule and female serv ice for members of the association and oilier mervhiuit* and business men In what Is known no the heart of l>sy tou district. In connection with this feature tin aaxoclntton headquarters Is listing bust ness pro|H>rtlcs that are for sale In and out of Dayton nnd endeavoring to secure purchasers. While the service waa atartcd primarily as an aid to members of the Boosters' association. Its work will not be confined to the membership. Tbe sssoclatlon is slso trying to ae cure tenants for buildings In tbe heart of Dayton snd Is meeting, with a meas ure of success. As much stimulus as la poaalble la being given bnlldlng lin provements, and tbe prescut Indira tlons are that the heart of Dayton will . develop marked construction changer durlug the spring nnd summer nnd Show a greater r.ctlvjty In building op erstlons than any other section of the city, ' *■ She Qet the Last Word. He— Man wua born to trouble aa tbe iparka fly upward. Shu-Yes-to trou , ble woman.— Judge. - I-* - - STYUSH DESIGN IN ROUGH CAST. Design 1030, by Glenn L. Saxton, Architect, Minneapolis, Minn. PERSPECTIVE VIEJJV—FROM ▲ PHOTOGRAPH. ! NO R—M In r i * FbS tj-oxim lJJ zq-tx. K-tf ]JJ_P io-o«i7iM f IJpiArzAlJ FIRST FLOOR PLAN. SECOND FLOOR PLAN. Sun roomH and (deeping porches aeem to be ss essential as chambers bathrooms. This plan has both, as well as other improvements. In the first and second stories. There la a combination sUlrwsy with bookesses on tbe landing and seat on the other side. Sliding French doors between the living room and dining room. French door between the sun psrlor and living room. Size, 28 feet wide by SO feet deep, exclusive of all projections. First story, 9 feet; second story, 8 feet. Pull basement under entire house and under sun parlor, 7 feet high in tbe clear. Cost to build, exclusive ef heating and plumbing, $4,600. Upon receipt of $1 the publisher of this paper will furnish a copy of Saxton's book of plans, "American Dwellings," which contains over 100 de signs costing from SI,OOO to $6,000; also a book of intsrlors, $1 per copy. United States Should Be Prepared to Enforce Peace By ALFRED NOYES, Noted EnglUh Poet IBELIEVBiymost heartily in preparedness for America at the present time. Every Englishman I have spoken to thinks that it is neces sary Tor America to prepare to defend herself and to give herself more than a mere voice in the council of the nations. The variourforms of government should be studied by the nations with a view to revising them so that a handful of men would not be able to cause great wars, and in this great work America should be ABLE TO MAKE HER INFLUENCE FELT BY BEING STRONG ENOUGII TO BACK UP HER VIEWS, I BELIEVE. A study of tho situation will show that this would not mean tho per msncnt maintenance of expensive armaments, but would mean prepared ness on a large scale only for the time being—preparedness to enforce peace instead of preparedness for war. It would be the duty of the na tions that scrutinized the forms of the world's governments to be ready to back up their decisions with force if necessary. «t >t K BEING ABLE TO DO THIB WOULD MAKE IT UNNECESSARY ACTUALLY TO EXERT THE FORCE, BUT IF THE PARTICIPATING NA TIONS WERE NOT PHYSICALLY STRONG ENOUGH TO CARRY OUT THEIR DEMANDS THEIR WORK WOULD BE FRUITLESS. Uses and Abuses of Fertilizers] By Prof. R. J. H. De Loach, Director of Georgia Experiment Station. 2. INTELLIGENT USE OF FERTILIZERS IN GERMANY. The Becond of a Series of Six Articles. All state institutions have fostered the fertilizer trade ainca its origin In the early fifties. State organisations of all kinds have taken a lively part In the building up of the trade, and In later years the states have taken It for granted that the tradfls profitable to farmers and merchants alike, and have therefore framed laws to regulate Its manufacture and sale. In every state where fertiliser Is sold in appreciable quantities laws have been passed exacting certain requirements of the manufacture, as to analyses, grades, etc. Besides the trade, over-ambitious, might forget its obligation to the consumer and offer ,for aale inferior material under the name of fer tilisers. We may say without fear of aucceasful contradiction that tbe states themselves are largely responalble for the rise and volume of the fertiliser trade. It has long been recognised that Oermany leads the world in many lines of sclenoe. This is perhaps true In regard to the use of fertilisera In early years. Oermany discovered that mineral salts applied to growing crops Increased the yields Immensely, and gave time and atudy to the lylng causes, and has suggested to the other parts of the world many valu able leasons on her findings. Von Lleblg, through his studlea and lec tures on modern agriculture, has made known much of the work of Germany In tbe early hlatory of the ose of commercial fertilisers. Lleblg says that Kuhlman, a German agricultural scientist, applied salammoniac to a meadow In tbe yeara 1846 and 1846, and found that on a hectare (2H acres) he gath ered 8,140 pounds of hay more than on the same kind of meadow where he did not use tbe aaiammonlnc. He secured thla result by using about 100 pounds of salammoniac to tbe acre. , In commenting upon this Von Lleblg hss the following to say: "It Is quite certain, that in tbe action of the guano, which produced tbe crop next highest after the Chill saltpeter, an unmistakable part waa played by the ammonia contained In It On the other hand, however, the experiments with carbonate and nitrate of ammonia show that a quantity of ammonia, or nitrogen, equivalent to that In 20 pounds of guano and employed under tbe same conditions, was almost without effect." Fertiliser Experiments In Oermany. A little further along be says: "The most recent observations on the comportment of the soli towards the food of plants show how alight la the knowledge we possess of their mode of nourishment, and of the part which tbe soil, by Ita physical condition, plays In It The comportment of the salts of ammonia, of chloride of sodium, and of nitrate of soda, towards the earthly phosphates In tbe soil, may perhsps assist us In throwing some light on their action, or one of tbelr actions, on the growth of planta." This statement was made because It waa always found that when common salt was added to certain mineral manures, greater yield waa obtained, and Von Lleblg came to the conclusion tbat thla was due to the relation of this added material to tbe liberation of potash In the solla. Only a short time after the war between the stataa the German pot ash beds were discovered and by rapid leaps and bounds this material gained In favor with planters as well aa experimenters. The necessity for find ing a combination to liberate (be potash In the soils was now removed and thorough satisfaction was found in the use of the nitrate of soda and the potash salts, and here the Industry stood for a long time. Lleblg does claim, however, that Tribaslc phosphate of lime crept Into the formula and was found efficient. This fact Is very significant and happened to be dis covered by a constant study of the use of the nitrate of soda and potash salts. Lleblg thought that these two plant food materials bad tbe power of dissolving phoephorlc add In the form of e«rthly phosphates, and these In turn added greatly to the yield of farm crops. Germany's Crop Yields Greater Than Other Natlona. We have here many hints of what afterwards really'developed to be facta —namely that tbe three great elements of plant food that should be applied to the soil for good crop ylelda are phosphoric acid, ammonia and potash. For many years these three elements have been the essential elements of plant food In a fertiliser formula. Today Oermany applies more mineral salts per acre to her crops than any other nation In the world, and partly aa a consequence gets higher ' yields of (arm crops than any other nation. U Is significant tbat theae two facts are so closely related, but It must be remembered that Oermany baa learned the leason of good tillage—deep plowing, the proper use of vegetable matter In the soil, and tbe dangerous practice of continuous cropping with any alngla crop. It la also ta to remembered that the lands on which tbe moat money can be cleared without any ktnda of fertilisers are tbe lands that will give greatest profits with fertilisers. ROAD WORK IN RURAL SECTIONS Soggistions to Coimnuiiltiis For Improved Highways. DRAINAGE AN ESSENTIAL TIM Right Man In ■ Community Should Bo Plaood In ChergO of Road Work. An Earth Road PropoHy Carod For Satisfactory In Rural Seotlone Thai Cannot Afford Bettor Typo. [Prepared by offlco of public roads.] That full value may be received for the money appropriated for road pur poses and tbat the beat reaulta obtain able may be secured It la essential tbat the right mad shall be placed In charge of road .work. He should be selected not only because he actually knows more about good roads than any other person In ,tbe community, but also because be Can get the best re sults from the money furnished. It Is not sufficient, however, to let the mat ter rest with the appolntownt of a road overseer. He should receive the whole hearted support of the communi ty In the work. It should be seen to that under the conditions and with the •' DBAXKJI2VO A* BABTH BOAD. money furnished tbe community is get ting what it baa a right to expect in the way of road improvement It is well to remember that if for any rea son an Incompetent man Is placed in charge of tbe work the responsibility for failure rests upon the community. There should be no other consideration therefore in selecting a road overseer than that of securing a man with the ability to porform the duties required It should be realized that good roads have much to do with the prosperity of a community and tbat united ac tion In the right direction is the surest and quickest way to secure them. Where the road overseer has had but little experience In road work or where some new and difficult problem is pre sented to the experienced man the of fice of public roads and rural engineer ing of the department. of agriculture when requested will offer advice and suggestions for carrying on the work and how best to overcome the diffi culties. To secure s satisfactory road of any type it is absolutely necessary to re member: First, drainage; second, drain age, and, third, drainage. Tbe earth road, properly cared for, will answer satisfactorily for tbe traffic of many rural sections that cannot afford the better types of roads, but tbe earth road must be well drained. After this fact is well understood two other re quirements may be taken up—the lo cation of the road and the reduction of grades to a general average of 5 per cent With the exception of sandy roads, which are easiest for traveling when damp, all roads must have propet side ditches to carry away the surface wa ter. In order to lead this surface wa ter to the ditch the road surface must have a crown, or rounded roof, highest In tbe center and sloping toward the side ditches. A very easy and satisfac tory way to keep earth, clay and gravel roads crowned by the use of tbe split log drag Is explained In Farmers' Bulletin 607, copies of which may be obtained upon application to the department. After the road has been crowned and the crown Is kept In condition by the wise use of the road drag 1| should be seen to tlist ditches are kept free from weeds, etc.. and that they are deep enough to carry off the water which runs into them. In most cases a wide, shallow ditch is best Deep ditches are dangerous to traffle. At spaces of every few hundred feet along the road way a culvert of some kind should be placed to carry away the water which has gathered In the ditches. A road properly built generally will not have an average grade of more than 5 per cent. By "per cent of grade" Is meant the number of feet the road rises or "cllmba" for every 100 feet of Its length. On n road of 1 per cent grade the horses need pull the load up a rise t>f only 1 foot for every 100 feet they travel. It baa been found that where a horse ran pull a full load on level ground he is able to pull only one-half that load on a S per cent grade and only one-fourth that load on a 1C per cent grade. More trips must bt made to and from market on a road ' with just one bad hill In order to hanl the an me amount that can be haulrl tt one trip on a level roait For Clvlo Betterment. The American Civic association, through its city planning committee, is directing a campaign for the adoption by American towns and cities of com prehenslve city planning for their fu ture physical development. At a re cent conference of the committee a plan of action via adopted which pro poses an educational propaganda to be conducted In all parts of the Uulted States to make clear to city officials the ln|>ortancc of adopting orderly and systematic methods, comprehended by city planning, in substitution for tbe old hit and mlsa methods. While 10S cities bar* taken Initial steps by tbe creation of city plan com missions, generally speaking tbe coun try at large, it U said, has ouly a vague knowledge of all tbat city planning comprehends or all that it bas accom plished. ancient times and In toodern times. Has the Habti ! "la she a brlder I "An Inveterate one."-Louisville Cou-' fler Journnl SUBSCRIBE FOB THK QLB AN BR, |I.H ▲ YBAR It ; ff T I W\ in -v," HMa j A RECEPTION FROCK. For the matron is this graceful gown developed in black satin, with a charm ing ovordrape of chantllly lace. The skirt is cut rather short In front, exer cising the freedom of skirt hems on party frocks, while tbe train. Instead of springing casually from almost any point In the back. Is a harmonious de velopment of the aklrt drapery itself. Black Jet gives tbe girdle and shoulder banding. It Is almost unnecessary to add that this beautiful frock was de signed by Hot. Callot No Sounder Currency to Be Conceived Than Federal Reserve Bank By Representative CARTER GLASS oi Virginia OUR old banking system was one to make us the scoff of Europe. WE PROSPERED NOT BECAUSE OF THAT BYBTEM, BUT IN BPITE OF IT. BUT WITH THE FEDERAL RESERVE BANK THERE IS NO SOUND ER CURRENCY / nations, and it CARTER GLASS. created scarce ly a ripple. We could lend as much more if we wanted to. The federal reserve act is a legislative miracle. COMMERCE INSTEAD OP STOCK GAMBLING SHOULD HAVE THE BENEFITS OP PROSPERITY, AND THAT IS WHAT THIS BILL PROVIDES. Pedagogue. The word "pedagogue," as applied to schoolteachers, is from a Greek word, paldagogos, compounded of pais, boy and agogos, leader; hence paldagogos, leader of boys.* In ancient Greece the paldagogos was not strictly an In structor, but a domestic slave who looked after the boys of a family, took them to and from school and kept them off the streets. Tbe boys were put In bis charge at tbe age of six, and he probably sat with them in school Although bis position was simply tbat of a trusted servant It came In time to be applied to the teacher, though al ways with a slurring or contemptuous significance. Ever Salivated by Calomel! Horrble! Calomel is Quicksilver and Acts like Dynamite on Your Kidneys. Calomel loses you a day I You know what calomel ia. It's mer cury; quicksilver. Calomel is dan- Jerous. It crashes into your bile ynamite, cramping and sickening you. Calomel attacks the bones and should never be put into your system. When you feel bilious, sluggish, constipated and %)1 knocked out, and feel that you "need a dose of dangerous calomel, Just remember that your druggist sells for 60c a large bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone, which is entirely vegetable and pleasant to take and is a per fect substitute for calomel. It is guaranteed to start your liver without stirring you up inside, and cannot salivate. Don't take Calomel ! It makes Sou sick next day; it loses you a ay's work. Dod son'a Liver Tone . straightens you right up and you feel great. Give it to the children : because it Is perfectly harmless ana doeant gripe. , adv. ' Children Cry for Fletcher's V . The Kind Ton Have Always Bought, and which has been ln use for ore* 30 years* has borne the signature of _Sf - and has been made under his per- J sonol supervision since Its Infancy. M*vV3T S-cZZeJUAC, Allow no one to deceive yon In this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Jnst-as-good '* are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of infMifa and Children—Experience against Experiment, What is CASTORIA Castorla Is a harmless snbititnte for Castor Oil, Pare*, gorlc, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It 1s pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotlo substance. Its age Is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more thaii thirty years K has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS the Signature of (2 In Dse For Over 30 Years The Kind Yeu Have Always Bought fto YEAHS RLPUTATICN fl » RNO^DSM BAILS AI L BY| Graham Drag Co. I I "Here is tiie Answcni ft R WEBSTERS R NEW INTERNATIONAL I THE MEMMM-WEBSTBI Every day In your talk and reading, at | home, on the street car* in the office, shop and school you likely question the mean ing; of some new word. A friend asks: { 'What makes mortar harden?" You seek the location of LochKatrinsor the pronun- I ciation of Jujutnu What la white coal? This New Creation answers all kinds of questions In Lanruaire,History, Biofrraphy. Fiction, Foreiim Words, Trades, Arts and Sciences, with Mnml mutkoritg. 400,000 Ward*. BKSi.V 1 •000 llluatratloaa, JBKvnSs I 2700V 00,000 * S The only dictionary with * f§ the new divided pape, —char- IV g acterised as "AStrnko of Vfe* Ihdte Papar EiMaK >' M* jjWMffi On thin, opaque, jwn*, WSjU JKJjfjmt -India paper. What a ai fc 's- mnKfl H H'm\\\ faction to own the Mmrrimm Wmj L 7 Ijjm / h Webster in a form ao light J aj/fWj and so convenient to nsel smlfß 1 w||uA//'/ One half the thickness and) t\l\W weight of Regular Edition. MfiV v^SIII On strong book paper, Wt, t 14H1 be. SiseUHzOMx f ytj l fl I P | I Are Vm a Warn? m Cardui Tfie Woman's Tonic FOR SALE AT ALL OROBBSTS n Bay Rum. Bay rum is manufactured from the dried leaves of Pimento acrls. Bay mm is procured by distillation, . and this' in a very simple manner. The leaves are picked from the trees and then dried. In this state they ate placed in the retort, which is then fill ed with water, and the process of dis tillation Is carried on. The vapor is then condensed in the usual way and forms what is known as "bay oil," a very small quantity of which is re quired for each puncheon of rum. Talking Machine,. As nearly as can be determined the original talking machine—the real pre cursor of the phonograph— was the so called "phonautograpb," Invented by Leon Scott In 1857. But the first real reproduction of sound was achieved by Thomas A. Edison In. 187 C. He may. with perfect justice, be called the "fa ther of the talking machine."—New York American. A PITHY SERMON. Hera ia about the pithieat aer mon that waa ever preached: "Our ingreaa Into life ia naked and bare, our pregreaa through life ia trouble and care, our egreaa out of it wa know not wherej but. doing well here, we shall do welt there. I could not tell more by preaching a year." EASILY PROVED. "Do you believe in love at first sight?" "Of course I do. There's by, for instance. Do "you suppose his wife would ever have tnarrlea him if she had taken a second look at hi* face?" I trade marks and copyright* obtained or no H fee. Bind model, sketches or pliotos and da» ■ scrtptlon for FREE BEAROH and report ■ on patentability. Bank referenoee. PATENT* BUILD FORTUNE* Jot ■ you. Oar free booklets tell how, what to Invest ■ and aare you money. Write today. D. SWIFT &CO.I PATENT LAWYERS, ■ 303Seventt^tj^j^hln^oB^CjB ARE YOU UP f TO DATE B If yon are not the NBWS AN* OBERYER is. Subscribe for it at once and it will keep you abreast ot the times. Full AssoeiatedPress dispatch es. Ml the news—foreign, do mestic, national, state and local all the time. Daily New? and Observer $7 - per year, 3.50 for 6 mos. Weekly North Carolinian £1 per year, 50c for 6 mos. SEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO., RALBIGH, N. cr The North Carolinian and THE ALAMANCE GLEANER will be sena tor one year for Two Dollars. Cash in advance. Apply at T&B GLEANER office. Graham, N. C. THE Charlotte Dally Observer Subscription Rates Daily - - - - 96.00 Dally and Sunday 800 Sunday - - - - 2.00 The Semi-Weekly Observer Tues. and Friday - 1.00 The Charlotte Daily Observer, Is sued daily and Sunday la the lead ing newspaper between Washing ton, D. C., .and Atlanta, Ua. it gives all the news ol North Caro lina besides the complete Associat ed Press Service. The Semi-Weekly Observer, Is sued on Tuesday and Friday for $1 per year gives the reader a full report of the week's news. The leading semi-weekly of the State. 1 Address all orders to OBSERVER CO. CHARLOTTE,HI. C. I DO YOU WANT k NEW SiOMACK? If you do "Digestoneine" will give you one. For lull particulars regard ing this wonderful Remedy which has benefited thousands, apply to Hayes Drug Co. st LIVES OF CHRISTIAN MINISTERS This book, entitled as above, contains over 200 memoirs of Min isters in the Christian Church with historical references. An interesting volume—nicely print ed and bound. Price per copy: cloth, $2.00; gilt top, 12.60, By mail 20c extra. Orders may b* sent to 7 P. J. KKBNODLE, 1012 E. Marshall St., Richmond, Va, Orders may be left at this office.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view