I It Always Helps N says Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky., In ■&■ writing of her experience with Cardul,-the woman's rj tonic. She says further: "Before I -began to use WQB Cardul, my back and head would hurt so bad, I thought the pain would kill me. 1 was hardly able to do any of my housework. After taking three bottles of Cardul, I began to feel like a new woman. I soon CTI gained 35 pounds, and now, Ido all my housework, Ififl as well as run a big water mill. 1 wish every suffering woman would give CARDUI | The Woman's Tonic )gd a trial I still use Cardul when I feel a little bad, r®j and it always does me good." ififl Headache, backache, side ache, nervousness, tired, worn-out feelings, etc., are sure signs of woman ly trouble. Signs that you need Cardui, the woman's Kfl tonic. You cannot make a mistake in trying Cardui for your trouble. It has been helping weak, ailing Ififl women for more than fifty years. Get a Today! ,„ M A GENERAL MM OF THE WAS TUESDAY. Grave disturbances have broken out In Dublin. Rioters seized the post- Sfllce and cut telegraphic communica tions. Twelve persons were kl'led during the rioting, which troops from Curragh were sent In to suppress There were five fatalities among the soldiers. Arrests have beon ma !e, but the names have not been announced, A German battle "cruiser squadron raided Ixjwestoft, on the English east coast. The warships remained In tilt Vicinity for about twenty minutes, get away clear after bombarding the shore and landing hits on two British light cruisers ar.d a destroyer, which engaged them. The Russians, In their advance In Turkish Armenia, are meeting with Strong resistance from the Turks, aid ed by Germans. WEDNESDAY. Another Zeppelin raid wis made or England Tuesday night. One hundred bombs were thrown, but no casualtlci were reported. It Is announced that the casualties resulting from t el. w - stoft sea and air battle Tuesday to tailed twenty-five. There has been a halt In tho hoavj Infantry fighting Iri tho vicinity ol Dead Man's Hill, northwest of Verdun but the Germans are .vigorously em ploying artillery In tho region wesl of tho Mouse, while In tho Wcovrc region, southeast of tho fortress, tin French lines were also subjected tc big gunfire. Dublin and vicinity, whoro Sunn Fein sympathizers and others star e «n uprising have ,bfen placed tindet martial law. Bomo of the position* captured by tho rioters have beer occupied by troops hurried to thr Irish capital. Eleven Insurgents were killed In the fighting, nnd many ar rests have been made. Sir itogei Casement, leader of the Irish Sopar atlsts, may be tried for high treason • THURSDAY. The Germans aro> Vldenlnjf their or ; f- tensive activity on tho western front notably In tho Vosges. Opinion In some allied quarters Is that tho Germane may shift the attempt to b 'Ail through from Verdun to the Cham pagne or to the British line In Plan dens. Premier Asquith announces that the revolt In Dublin has spread outside the capital and that martial law ha> been proclaimed over all Ireland. Gon oral Sir John Maxwell, formerly in command of British troops in Kxypt lias'been sent to Irelsnd with plenar) powers to put down tho uprising. The revolutionists still hold a considerable part of Dublin and fighting eonttnuoi In the streets. James W. Gerard. American am baaaador at Berlin, will discuss thii country's submarine demand* In a per aonal Interview with the kaiser at ar my headquarters, for which he will leave Berlin. FRIDAY. Uprisings In Qvo counties In Ireland outside Dublin are reported to have a large number of armed men In thr Held. Arms have been sent Into Ire land In large quantities by Germar submarines, report* assert, and Brlt Ish warships have been sent to patro the coasts. ' The Oermans have shifted their of tensive on the western line for tin time being st least to the British front In Flanders, where violent fighting It In progress. There is a lull In thr . t Vardun operations. More Rusnlai troops have reached Marseilles. The British battleship Russell, Ad , mlral Freomantle'a Mediterranean fl ig ship, has been sunk by a mine. On hundred and twenty-four officers am men are missing. SATURDAY. Oeneral Towsbend, commanding the. British force beleaguered by Turks at Knt-el-Amara, on the Tigris, In Mean potamta, since December, has snrren dered. A British army for months ha been fighting its way up the Tlgrli t the relief of General -Townshend'i force, but although It baa won sue CMSes and worked within to twenty twenty miles of the distressed Karri aon the combination of stubborn Til k lsb resistance and flood conditions : a prevented Its further advancot News from the disturbed sections ot Ireland Is still much belated. A I. on don newspaper reports that the r!ot era In Dublin have been driven out oi * their entrenched position In Bt. Ste phen's Green by a bomb attack, aus tabling "heavy losses." That they ar» •till in control of various parts of thr city, however, seems ejrldent, an» many casualties In street fighting art reported. Another pros* . desratel gays Ores are raging In the city. P. R. R. Placea Rail Order. The long expected contract for rails tfcr the Pennsylvania railroad was placed. The amount, 205,'0f10 tons, was one of the largest ever given by the com pany. The lines east of Pittsburg): ' will take 128,000 tons the lines »Mt 80,000 ton*. GERMAN MASSES | ATTACHERDUN Fierce Drive Near Dead Man Hill Repulsed. —— / . THE LOSSES ARE ENORMOUS Teuton Guns Pound Vaux Region, But All Attacks Are Checked Paris Re ports. German troops In dense masses made a violent attack on positions cap tured by the French north of Dead Man's Mill on the Verdun front. The attack was deleated by the French, the Paris war office report says. The Germans, tho announcement states, suffered "enormous lossos." Two simultaneous counter attacks by tho Germans on a trench captured by the French north of Cunileros wore repulsed. At Hill 304 and In the Vaux region there were Incessant bombard monts. A French aerial squadron bombarded u supply and munitions station south of Thlaucourt and a tamp near Bplncourt. The official report from Hrltlsh head quarters states that near Mosslnes, ton miles south of Ypres, the Germain liberated a quantity of gas and at tacked, but wero repulsed by the Hrlt Ish artillery. At one point the Gor mans succeeded In entering the Hrlt lull trenches, but wero Immediately oxpolled.-by a bomb attack. The text of the French communlca tlon follows: "After a violent bombardment west of tho river Mouse, tho enemy, at the end of tho day, delivered a powerful attack In dense formation upon the trenches captured by us myth of Dead Man's HIM. Our curluln of fire, to gother with the lire of our machine guns caused enormous losses to the enemy and all the assaults of the Ger mans wore broken. "North of Cutnleres two Gorman counter attacks delivered at obout the fcamo hour of the day upon tho trench captured by us also wero repulsed In the course of the third endeavor at this point tho enemy, who had been successful In gaining a footing In out lines, found It Impossible to maintain his positions and was at once dilveu back with heavy losses, "There has been a violent and con tlnued bombardment of 11111 No. 304, and also In tho region of Vaux. The night passed quietly In tho Woovre district. "During the night of April 29-30 the French aeroplane squadrons throw down numerous projectiles on the rail road station and tho supply and tnu nltlons station at Sobastopol, south ol Thlaucourt; on the railroad lino at Ktaln; on lertnlu hlvouacka near Hpln court, and on the railway stations at Apremont, Grand I're, C'hallerange and Vouslore. During these operations It was noticed that numerous tires broke out and a number of explosions were effected on the railroads." PRAISE GEN.TOWNSHEND Despite Surrender to Turks Officers and Men Are Commended. The surrender of General Town shend and ulne thousand men at Kut el Aniara Is the Inevitably tragic consequence of one of the brav' est military feats In history, and It li certain that tho commander ha* made for himself a place In the gallery Of British heroes. Though for the first time in more than a century a llrltlsh army has hauled down the dag ami presented its arms to the enemy, only praise for General Townsbond and bis troops U heard In Ixmdon. With supplies prac tlcally exhausted and tho hope of aid from reinforcement* abandoned, the army held off the Turks for 143 days before It gave In. General Gorrlnge, heading a relief army of 40,000- mon, was only sixteen miles, away, but the Turkish cordon drawn a ro»» the Tl gris valley was too strong for him to penetrate In time to save General Townshrnd from surrender. The offi cial announcement of the war utlb f Is as follows: "After a resistance protracted for 143 days and conducted with'a gallant ry and fortitude that will be forovc memorahle. General Townshenrt has been compelled by final exhaustion of his supplies to surrender. Retire d> lug so lie destroyed his guns and mu nitions. The forceunder him cor si Us of 2970 British troops of all.ranks and sonrlces and some 6000 Indian troops and their followers." General Townshend's army origin ally numbered -about 35,000 men. and It Is therefore apparent that he lost 25,000 before he surrendered. Natural Result. "What bii|>|ieiied xvbeii her father put bis foot down on the matchV" "Why, what always happens when you put your foot down on a match? There was an explosion."— Kansas City Journal. IRISH CHIEFS ALL GIVE IN Revolt In Ireland Ovar and 1000 Are Prisoners. TROOPS CGItTRCL CUDUh The Casualty List May Exceed 50( on Both Sides —s6o,ooo,ooo Damage Done. Official announ-emant was made It London that all the revolutl >nl it lead ers In Dublin have ij..ir.e:r ore I. The Ennlscortiiy revolutionists alst have uncondltiona'ly surrendered, ac cording to a later oiHtlai aneo ince ment. One thousand i-rls ners we e taken In Dublin Sunday, the announce nient added, it was a'.Ho offlclaillj stated that 489 of the Dublin ~rlson era had been nont to England. A message frqm Kingstown, Irclind, says the main b>dy of the H nn Fell, rioters gave tip Sunday. The e wai considerable flgliUu* tlircnjr'n it tht day In Dublin a el t ,e a ibur *, an,! this wait cape! I'iliy S' vi.rv »' Balls bridge, outside niniln. The rev.rfu tlonlsts In the Colhv.e of Ku us aur rendered. A proclamation Issued by "Provlu lonal President" Piarse, advising the surrender of all his followers, reads: "In order to prevent, the lurthei slaughter of unarmed mcople, and ID the hope of saving the lives of oui followers, who are surrounded and hopelessly outnumbered, the member* of the provisional government at'head quarters have agreed to unconditional surrender, and the commanders of all tho units of the republican forceß will order their tollowers to lay down theli arms. (Signed) "PUARSE." *A telegram from Dublin to the Even lng News says: "The last stronghold to be taken was Jacobs' factory, which was sur roundod. Cut off from the center oi the city, the beleaguered Insurgent! had not heard of the capitulation ol their chiefß. They kept up a delsu tory fusillade from the rooiß and wlu dows and finally were ihtbdued by a battery of artillery." The Kingstown correspondent of the Chronicle says several English officer* were shot In the back by women. One officer was killed by a woman whe struck him In the bead with a rifle. It Is Impossible to estimate accu rately the loss throughout the zones of lighting in the southeastern and western parts of Ireland, but It Is ex pected to exceed $50,000,000. There was much looting. One correspondent describes fcenes In Dublin in which poor women whose' ragged clothing was partly hidden by greasy shawls, wore diamond tiaras in their ha r These had been stolen from Jewelry shops Into which the insurrectionist* broke to get material for street barrl cades. James Connolly, commander In-cblel of the "Republican" army, originally was reported killed, but a later des patch says he wiut wounded In Hit thigh. Although offii lal figures as to casu sltles are lacking, despatches arc b - ginning to speak of "erorm us looses " It Is be'leveS the ins'jultiei up tr Saturday wero In execs. of 500. Afte. tho revolutionists evacs ated Ht. S e phen's Green, there were m* re thai' 100 wounded Sinn Kelners In the near by building ol the College of Bui :«ons Two officers and more than a d re' British soldiers fell while storming » stronghold near Pembroke and l.ans downe roads* Inside the boJles ol nineteen Sinn Kelners wero 'nund Three soldiers were killed while cap turlng the former residence of Pro fessor Arthur Palmer, In Haddington road. . A young officer living near Dublin, who arrived on an Irish mall beat, tolj of clrcumstanclal report* of the finding of the bodies of two German officer* with the dead In Sackvllle street. "When I left Dublin at six o'clock Saturday evening," a traveler said, "almost all ot Sackvllle street had been burned, and Henry street, adjs cent, was razed by the military hand grenades. "Nelson's pillar, opposite the post office, used by the revolutionists as a refuge, was also destroyed by 6-lncb guns." An Inventory IIBS been made of all the foodstuff* at the disposal of the authorities and committees have been act up In various districts to superln tend the distribution. As there Is vir tually no money In Dublin, foo l vouch era will bt> Issued cither on the pay mcnt of a small sum or the promise to pay when possible. Deserving cases will bo handled through free depots. Europe's Big Munition Bill. Europe's' purchases of war ma tarlals In the United States to tailed three hundred and forty million dollars at the end of the flrst twenty month* of war. Figures assembled In the bureau of foreign sad domestic commerce show the heaviest month was March last, when more than flfty million dollars' worth of munitions left American ports. $4,604,139 for U. 8. Printing. Paper used by the government print lng office lost year cost $1,2.18,759, and aalarles and wage* at the printing of fice amounted to |3,SS,6SO. \VK HAVK THE KAIt LI EST, Bio gent, high clnsa Strawberry grown. Also tbo Best one or the ever bearing kinds; bears the best fla vored berries from Spring until the snow flies. Free Booklet. Wake field Plant Farm, Charlotte, North Carolina. I'febOt There are 1 »Ut of good women in tho world in spite of the men, and vice versa. *uu Know What Vuu Are Taking When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic because the formula 1* plainly printed on ever? bottle showing that it la Iron and Qui nine in a tasteless form. No cure, no pay.—soc. adv CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In UM For Ov*r 30 Years SUN PARLOR IN HALF TIMBER PLAN. Deslfn 006-D. by Glenn L. Suton, Architect, Minneapolis, Minn. jMimetimßM ■ ' f ' - ifi '~ ■* * * ** K " m PERSPECTIVE VIEW—FUOM A PHOTOGRAPH. Hb _»* > &;,-//; ■> v. INTERIOR VIEW-SUN PAItLOU. The hud parlor Is a combination sun room and porch that can be used all the year around. The sun parlor shown here has radiation, for use In the Winter, and windows that can be screened for summer. There Is only 0110 French door, because the location of the fireplace will not allow swing doors. Full basement under the entire house, with coal bin underneath the sun room. Bun room Is finished In oak, with oak floors. The first story Is 9 feet high; second story 8 feet, with a fair sized attic abovo same. Size over the main part Is 20 feet wide by 28 feet deep. Cost to build, exclusive of heating and plumbing, about $3,800. Upon receipt of $1 tho publisher of this paper will furnish a copy of Sax ton's book of plans, "American Dwellings," which contains over 800 designs costing from SI,OOO to $0,000; also a book of Interiors, $1 per copy. MINERS GAIN WAGE INCREASE Peace is Likely by Tentativ Agreement. WIN RIGHT TO OBGANIZ Workers Abandon "Closed Shop" and "Check Off"—Granted an Eight Hour Day. Wage concessions which would In crease the inthraclie mine workers pay roll by approximately $9,000,00( in the next four years, are offered in the tentative agreement reached by a Joint subcommittee of operators and miners in New York, it was learned The agreement. It was predicted b> both sides, in all probability will b€ accepted by the trl-district board rep resenting the miners. Tho agreement, II accepted by th€ trl-state board and ratified by the miners' convention at Pottsvllle, Pa, will be signed jointly by the operatori and the United Mine Workers o: America. The forme/ agreement wai signed by the mine lender* for th miners. The representatives of the mlnerf said that the new agreement, whlct will cover a fo ir year period, "mean.' the biggest triumph In point of con cession* ever obtained by the miners.' The operators for tue first time hav« granted to the miners the right to or ganize for bettering the conditions In the coal fields, the leaders assert ed. v . ' The Inerenjic In wages virtually amounts to' fifteen and a half pet cent for nay workers, according tc the miners, who pointed out that tlx granting oL the demand for an eight hour lnseaa of a nine-hour day added twelve and a half per cent to the three per cent Increase for day work ers and tho seven per cent Increase for contract minors embodied in th« proposed new contract. The confessions made by the sub committee of the miners regardlni the recognition of the union were tli« "closed shop" and the "check oil.' The operators stood firm on the lsstlt they had raised that to create s "closed shop" and constitute them selves the collecting agents for the union would be un-American snd de trimental to their Interests. Other concessions granted were tb» readjustment of classifications of en gincor» and a seven potent increast In their waxen; tbe providing of a ma chine mining male governing the ba lie payment to all classes of labor em pltTycd In that work, with tbe addei clause that no contract for machlnt mining can be made for lea* that day ratea. There were also provlstoni made foi overtime work and Increaalng the rate of pay for emergency labor. The work of tbe conciliation board In settling grlevancea also will bo arranged, sc that decisions may be more speedily obtained. As to the prices of powder and othei miners' supplies sold by the coal com panles, no agreement was reached. II Is understood, however, the operator! have guaranteed that no more than a fair profit shall be realized. Hsroea Qet Medals. Five Phlladelphlans were awarded madals by tbe Carnegie Hero Fund commission at Its sprlug meeting in Pittsburgh, Pa. Two of them lost their llvee in th famous Creamer rescue at Atlantic City last summer. They were Charles o. Matlock, Jr., and Pblllp Arnolds, Jr. Seven other Pennsylvania neroes one In New Jersey and one In Mary land, won medals. The commission recognized a total of flfly-two acts of heroism In varl ous parts of the country. In ten caset silver medals were awarded, and In forty-two cases bronze medals,- Nine teen of the heroes lost their lives, and to the dependents of ten of these, pen Bions aggregating |GOGO a year were granted; and to the dependents ot eight others who lost their lives, sum totalling (6000, to be applied, subject to the direction of the commission In various ways, were granted. Among the awards were: Louis A. Benolst, Pottstown, Pa., for saving A. Pandely Pattlson, a play mate, from drowning, at Biloxi, Miss. June 11, 1913. George W. Frehafer, Schuylkill Ha ven, I'a., a crossing watchman, foi saving Katie A. Brjwn, aged seven, from being Killed by a train at Schuyl kill Haven, June 27, 1913. J. Opliar Howell, Pnrt Deposit, Md., for helping to save M. Lllli n Creamer from drowning at Atlantic City, June 20-, 1915. Meat Animals Star. The prices of meat animals continue to rise, an average Increase of 4.3 pet cant from March 15 to April 15 hav lng been announced by the depart ment of agriculture In Washington. Prices being paid to producers foi bogs, cattle, sheep and chickens on April 15 averaged about 19.1 per cent higher than a year ago, 6.1 per cent higher than two years ago, and 14.4 par cent higher than the average ol the last tlx years on that date. Accuse Qlrl of Arson. Btate authorities caused the a rest ol Btata Barnlck, a 14-year old Perry county, Pa„ girl, who confessed to burning her father's barn because he refused to permit her to marry sixty year-old John Smith. The girl says she burned the build ing because Smith threatened to burn both house and barn Is she dtd not. Smith has been arrested also. Both are- in Newe Bloomfield jail. Mr*. Rogers Not Guilty. The Jury In the case of Mrs. Ida Snitfen Rogers, in New York, who was charged with the murder of her two children, brought In a verdict of not guilty, on the grounds of insanity. Her defence was that she was tem porarily insane because .Loriys Elton Rogers, the father of the children, had not divorced the woman then his wile. Rogers haa since been divorced and has married the defendant. British Warship Mined. An official statement in 1/ondon says that the battleship Russel, Captain William Bowden Smith, R. N., flying the flag of Rear Admiral Free mantle, struck.a mine in'the Mediter ranean and was sunk. The admiral, twenty-four officers and 676 men were saved. There arc about 124 officers and men missing. Reading Girl Bride at Fourteen, The youngest bride In Reading, Pa., In a long period, Eva Wurst, fourteen years old, daughter or Charles Wurst, became the wife of Joteph Hauger, twenty-two years old, aoo of Robert Hauger. Rev. Monsig nor George Bornemann officiated. Find Diamond in Carp. While fishing In the Juniata river, near Frankstown, Pa., Mike Balonlsky, an Austrian quarryman, caught a carp and found a SIOO diamond ring Inside of It. The "sparkler" was discovered while ha waa cleaning the Ash. Pruaaian Losses to Date, 2,518,264. Latest casualty lists pubUsheJ in Germany Increase to 2,518,264 the total of Prussian losses during the war. This total Includes killed, wounded and missing. It does not comprise the losses of the Saxon, Bavarian or Wuertemberg armies. GENERAL TOWN3HEND I =1" British Commander Who Surren- | dered to Turk* at Kut. Hfei Vttm "**£ * v'*'** y Photo by Amertc.-in FVob? A»»odatlon. SUNDAY. ' Leaders of the revolt In Dublin a-« surrendering freely and uncoDditlon ally and Beverai Jiundrel prisoners have been taken, it is oTflc-iailly an Uounced. Messengers are being sent to vari on 8 parts of Ireland rr dor ins; the lead ers of the revolt in the county dls trlcts to surrender. Pearse and Con nolly, leaders of the revolt, wer« wounded when captured. French report the capture of a Ger man trench on Dead Man's Hill, witb fifty-three prisoners, while the Oer mans report the repulse of a .French attack. Russians report heavy fighting witfc the Austrians north of Mouravltz and the capture of over 600 prisoners. Mormon Colony Is Burned. The houses of the Morm n coltny at Chnlchupa, in the mountains, 25 miles from Madera, Mexico, have been de stroyed by fire, believed to have been started by Mexicans. Chuichupa was abandoned some time ago by the Mor mons, because of the danger to which the colonists were exposed Irom ban dits. Lincoln, Spy, Must Go Back. The supreme court In Washing ton held that Ignatius Timothy TTI blch Lincoln, former member of the British parliament and confessed spy, must go back to England for trial on a charge of forgery. Kills Two on Trial Trip. Two men were killed and three In jured when a new Philadelphia & Reading locomotive, on a trial trip, ploughed through a crowd of laborers near Auburn, Pa. GENERAL MARKETS PHILADELPHIA. FLOUR quiet; winter clear, $4.85®>5.10; city mills, $6.5006.75. RYE FLOUR—Steady; per barrel, $5&5.5ff. WHEAT firm: N. 2 red, 11.13® 1.16. CORN quiet: No. 2 yellow, 82@ g2^4c. OATS quiet: No. 2 white, 51@51%c. POULTRY: Live steady; hens, 19@ 20c.; old roosters, 12@13c. Dressed Steady; choice fowls, 22c.; old roos ters. 16c. BUTTER firm: Fancy creamery, 88c. per lb. EGGS steady: Selected 27@29c.; nearby, 26c.; western, 26c. Live Stock Quotations. CHICAGO.—HOGS—S(IIOc. higher. Mixed and butchers, $9.60@19' good heavy, $9.7»@10; rough heavy, s9.6sffi 9.70; light, 59.40@10; pigs, $8.10@9.35; bulk. >5.75© 9.95. CATTLE —Steady. Beeves, $7.75® 10; cows and heifers, $8.95@/9.15; stockers and feeders, $6.60® 8.50; Tex ans, $7.50® 9; calves, $7.50@,9. SHEEP —Weak. Native and west ern. $6.15© 8.50; lambs, $9.10011.60. r l9 6 MAY 19161 ISUNImOWTTUE IWEDiTHU IrRI ISAT I |l|2|s|4|s|6l IBJ9IOIIIII i4i5!16171f1920 |2Bg9fejilj ~m I His Secret Died With Him. One mun gave up his life In the search for ■ new explosive a few years ago. He was a scientist named Wqr tenberger. He had spent years of his life In the midst of awful perils In search of a new explosive. He found one at lust which the experiments of the United States government experts satisfied them was even more power ful than dynamite. The government offered Wartenberger $1,000,000 for his invention, provided he could perfect a method of firing the fearful stuff by means of electricity instead of a fuse. While he was engaged In these experi ments an explosion occurred which killed the unfortunate Inventor.—San Francisco Chronicle. Love For an Hour. What Is it that uiukex people so much better company at a masquerade than under any other circumstance? in the circle of the black mask and the domino we have no name, no past, no futnre, no self to live up to or down to and the mood that is uppermost need never Impose Itself upon a later mood. We can be spontaneous and genulna. No wonder we are good company! For on the whole our spontaneous Impulses are kindly and gay. We are almost ready to love our fel low men for an hour if we are not thereby committing ourselves to loviug them for a lifetime.—Pittsburgh Press. ♦ THINK OF OTHERS. If you think how much suffer ing and poverty there are In the world you Will fall down upon your knees snd, instead of re pining at one affliction, will be thankful for the many blessings that are yours.—Sir Willism Temple. fe-^CASTORIA I I or Infants and Children. mrSfn™ Mothers Know li!CASTuW| Genuine Castoria Air IBS Tff BBS VARCOTIC. I ALr 1 "SSf (a For Over TL . „ v Thirty Years Exact Copy of Wrapper. TMI OCMTAUII OOMMNT, NCW VORH cmr. AN MODEL This sport skirt from Paris la a smart combination of bine velours de lalne and Scotch plaid In narrow blue and buff. The front and back paneled effect and novelty pockets -which hang from the belt are very chic. With this handsome skirt Is worn a buff silk shirt waist Hard an the Proofreader. Getting typographical errors oat of dictionaries Is a task beside which that little Augean stable affair of Her cules was an afternoon snap. When the Oxford edition of the Bible was published the proofs were read and reread ten times. Then a reward of $250 was offered to any one who should find a typographical blunder. * @ne was found In the first chapter of Genesis. Dictionary proofreading is •▼en more difficult than Bible proof reading. There Is a tradition that a man who read proofs of the Lord's Prayer for that Oxford edition went Insane out of fear lest he made a blunder In It— Philadelphia Ledger. Sears*. "Has he a sense of humor?" "Yes, Indeed. He can see a Joke on the other fellow right off the bat" "That Isn't sufficient What I'm look ing for is a mnn who can see the hu mor of a Joke on himself." "Yoo've got a long search. If there are any such men in this town 1 haven't run across them."—Detroit Free Press. ARE YOU UP r TO DATE " If you are not the NEWS AIT OBEHVEH is. Subscribe for it at once and it will keep yon abreast of the times. Fall Associated Press 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 (or 6 mos. NEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO. RALBIGH, N. C. The North Carolinian and THB ALAMANCE GLEANER will be sen' for one year for Two Dollars. Cash in advance. Apply at THE GLEANER office. Graham, N. C. Small Store-house For Rent. Well located close to the best trade in Graham. Price reasonable and building ready (or occupancy now. J. M. McCRACKEN,, SSnovtt. Graham, N. C. I Ars Ywi a Woman? i 8 Canliii I The Woman's Tonic I FOR SALE AT ALL I ■ to YEABS REPUTATION M U ARNOLD'SM A BALSAI ■ warranted To Curo _ ■ ■ALL SUMMER SICKNESSES BY| I' .Gratism Drag Co. I I iiO VOU WANT A NEW STOMACH? I I If you do "Digestoneine" will give I I you one. For full particulars regard-1 I ing this wonderful Remedy which I | has benefited thousands, apply to | Hayes Drug Co. I Very Serious It la • very serious matter to aak tor one medicine and have the wrong one given you. For this reason we urge you in buying to be careful to get the genuine— BLAck-DraugHT liver Medicine ITha reputation of this ot.t, relia ble medicine, for constipation, in digestion and liver trouble, in firm ly established. It docs not imitate other medicines. It 1a better than others, or it would not be the fa vorite liver powder, with » larger Bale than ad others combined. SOU) IN TOWN P2 I trade marks and copyright* obtained or no ■ fee. Bend model, sketche* or photoa and de- H tcrlption for FREE SEARCH and report ■ on patentability. Bank referenoaa. PATENTS BUILD PORTUNM for ■ you. Oar free booklets tell how, what to inrnt ■ and nave yon money. Write today. D. SWIFT CO.] PATENT LAWYERS, 303 Seventh St., Washlsgton, D. C.J THE Charlotte Dally Observer Subscription Rates Dally - - - - $6.00 Dally and Sunday 800 Sunday - - - - 2.00 The Semi-Weekly Observer Tucs. and Friday - 1.00 - o —— The Charlotte Daily Observer, la sued dally and Sunday la the lead ing newspaper between Washing ton, D. C„ and Atlanta, Ga. It &ives all the news ol North Caro na besides the complete Associat ed Preaa Service. The Semi-Weekly Observer, la sued on Tuesday and Friday for U per year gives the render a lull report of the week's neva. The Buu - OBSERVER CO. CHARLOTTE, W. C. * ' JOB I PMNINQ* I DONB AT THIS OFFICE. I % OIVB US A TRIAL.

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