I ItAlwaysHelps W •ays Mrs. Bylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky., in fcw writing of her experience with Cardui, the woman's tonic. She says further: "Before 1 began to use ■Q| Cardui, my back and head would hurt so bad, I thought the pain would kill me. I was hardly able LJ to do any of my housework. After taking three bottles of CarduL I began to feel like a new woman. I soon gained 35 pounds, and now, Ido all my housework, Ififl as well as run a big water mllL Zi 1 wish every suffering woman would give kotf CARDUI I The Woman's Tonic Q a trial I still use Cardui when I feel a little bad, and it always does me good." Headache, backache, side ache, nervousness, fired, worn-out feelings, etc., are sure signs of woman ly trouble. Signs that you need Cardui, the woman's F t»'j tonic. You cannot make a mistake in trying Cardui ITJJ for your trouble. It has been helping weak, ailing women for more than fifty years. Li Get a Bott!e Today? . M BSE B 81 t ; ) T5 U SUNDAY SCHOOL. Lesson Xl.—First Quarter, For March 12, 1916. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text of the Looaen, H»b. xl, 32, to all, 2—Memory Vtrui, xli, 1, 2—Golden Teat, Hob. all, 1, 2—Commentary Pre pared by Rev. D. M. Stoarna. Tlilfi leason heroes and mar tyr* probably suggested to by the previous les son on I lie dentil of Stephen. If n word or phrase give* the key to a chapter or portion till* In certainly the "faith" chapter of the Bible, for the word Is found twenty-four lime* In thin chop ter. But we mitxt look at chapter x.iW. for the reason why of tlilx chapter, "The Just »hall live by faith," a Men fence quoted three time* In the New Tmtametit. the other two place* being Itora. I, 17; Out. 111. 11, and all three quotation* of Ilab. 11, 4. Before we I can live by faith we mn*t lie Justified 1 by faith, made JiiHt or rlichteou* (Iloni v, 1), and thnt taken u» to the llr*t "lie- j llevo" in the Bible In connection with ' righteousness (flon. *v, (!), "lie believed In the I/ord. and lie counted It to lilin for rlghleouanesa." Till* also I* |iiite| Just three time* In the New Testament (Bom. Iv, 8; Oal. 111. tl; Jim. 11, ho ■ these mu*t be very Important laying* | Our llr*t grent need In rlgliteou*nea", j the kind that flod require* and h«« provided fully lu Christ and enn lie i obtained only by faith (Bom. x, 3, 4|. | Ttien, being *nved, we mu*t glorify Ood by a rlghteou* life, and till* ul*o la by faith, for a* we have rocelvpd Chrlat Je*u* the I»rd no inuat we walk in lllm (Col. 11, 0). faith and patience are the two e*Hentlal thing* In the dal ly life of the believer, Hteadfa*tly lie holding the I/ird Je*ua, Implicitly («•- llevlng Hi* word and waiting patiently for Hl* retorn (lleti. ▼), 12, 10; x, 3537; iXU, 1-3). Faith la not what we feel or * 'Me, but U a simple truat In what the Ood of haa aalil of Jean* a* the Just Unsaved people cannot po*slbly please Ood (Bom. vlll, 8), and only by faith and oliedlence can *aved people ' please Ulm. By'believing tJen. I. I. with P*. xxxltt 1, we know how the j world was made. Abel believed that the only way for' ■ sinner to npproaeb Ood was by sncrl flee and shedding of blood as taught to ' hi* father In Hen. 111, 21. Cain did not believe Ood, and therefore his rejer tlon by Ood. Kuoch waa fully fierce.l I with Cod In everything aii.il wan wilt I ing to hear the seotllng of the uugml ly (Amos 111, 8; Jude 14, 1(1). Noah j -• believed In an approaching Judgment ; and In obedience to Ood prepared for It. Abraham did not consider himself nor Sarah nor seeming Impossibilities i but waa fully persuaded, that Ood was able and would do what lie promised (Bom. Iv, 10-21). The word of Ood [ concerning things tn come sustained Isaac and Jacob and Joseph and the parent* of Moses and Moses himself The unseen heavenly city sind the ree ompeime of the reward ware verlta ble realities to Abraham and to Moses, enabling the one to live as a stronger and a pilgrim here *nd the other to tarn his iMick upon all the pleasures and treasures and prospect of prefer ment In Egypt. Daniel feared not the llona' den. nor Ills friend* the fiery fur nace, nor Duvld the giant fiollath, lie cause to each the living Ood wn* a glorious reality. While many are mentloued by name In thta list of people of Ood. we can not but adore the grace which men tlona lUhab among such a* theae and •ren associates her with Abraham In James U, 23-23. We wonder a* we read of Barak and not of Deborah, but we notice the words "and others" of rerae 85 aud pray for grace to be will lng to be couuted among the "other*," though not mentloued by name. The ttjratery of the suffering* of the saints W« may not understand, but we can trust the wisdom of a God of love and Walt patiently for Him to make It plain. Thl* la our faith and p*tlence. Theae all "and others" died lu fnltli. not having received the promises, but. j having aeen them afar off. were per I aoaded of them ami embraced them j (verse* 30, .H>). I believe thnt the tie llevlng ones before the debtee *nw more of resurrect lon and glory In the I cherubim within the garden of Eden i th«n many believers now see. (Write [ Ik and K., box 210 Harrlsburc, I'n. I for booklet on the cherubim.) That j the, without us should not lie made perfect seem* to me to indicate thai they, with us. nre waiting for the mnn lfeatattun of the Sons of Ood lu oui resurrection bolles (verse 4i; Bom ▼lll, 10-21). In the opening verses of chapter xll we are told that even our blesseil l.ord Himself waa austalned In Hl* suffer ! lngs by the Joy set liefore lllm. He ever lived In tlie lore of nis FntheH and In the glory of the kingdom of which He was always apeaklng and for which He la still waiting, so Pan! pray (In 11-.Tbess. 111, B, that oar hearts may be directed Into the lore if Cod and the patience of Christ (margin) As we consider Him at the tight hnud of the throne of Ood and reraeuil-er His promise that when He comes to His own throne the overcomcrs nhall be with Him there (Bev. 111, 21) sucli fort apd socb 51017 •hguUl constrain us t; .• II V - .if:. ; In-.' -I. -i -. •' '.v.. i-.. j >(■' 11'' h::( lll.ii nlo.-te, r -l- ' every 1 one fTi.it'! 1' '1 ft)lt hnpf-fvl'Trfi llitn pit J rlfieth lllm If even n■: 110 Is pure" (I John nr. S, 1: V.V Wliitcver (here tuny be 14. endure In the conflict, 11 thought of lllm w'ho endured so much for us should keep us from being weary or fulnt. , i; Scientific | Farming: W+HH I- II- H"I"H-1 11111 II 1 SPRING SOWING OF OATS. Da* a Grain Drill—How to Prepare th* 8««d Bad. IPrapnred by United States department of agriculture.) The liest way to sow outs Is with the grain drill. Drilling gives a more even stand than broadcast seeding, for nil tha seed Is covered to about the j snme depth. Iu sowing broadcast some of the seed may not be covered nt . till utid some may lie covered too dcep | ly. Germination Is better from drilled seed, and the growth Is more uniform throughout the season. In numerous I tests nt the experiment stations drilled I onts hnve oulylelded oat* sown broad-j j rust by several bushel* to tho acre. I 1 Better stands of grass and clover can ; | also be obtained lu drilled than lu I broadcast out*. I The best depth to sow oata varies with the soil and the season. In any ' case they should lie covered with half an Inch to an Inch of moist *oll. They should lie sown deeper 111 sandy soils than. In loams or clays. Deeper seed ing Is also necessary when the ground Is dry than wlien It Is moist. On the average the liest depth is from one to one and one-half (fu-lie*. Oats should lie sown ns curly In the ftprlng as It Is possible to make a good seed lied. The exact date, of course, varies with the season and with the locality. This doe* not mean that tho preparation of the Innd should J>e neg- Hi II * t 1 > I lIISKISCI 00tut STt'DBI.* LAJtD lOUU SOWIXO OAT*. looted lu order to now early Better yield* will Is- produced from seed sown In a good seed l>ed than from that oown a few day* earlier lu ground too cold and wet for the seed to germinate. In a good *eed lied the beat rate of •ceding In the corn belt 1* about two and otie-half bushel* to the acre. If tha aeed I* sown broadcast more Is nee eaaary. More seed I* required In a poor need bed than In a good one. a* fewer need* are likely to grow. A low er rate of needing may lie used for ■mall kertioled varletle* than for large keroeled one*, for there are many more of the former In a bushel. In the great plains, where the rainfall I* usually, acanty, less need should lie *own, the proper rate of seeding lielng four to Ave peck* to the acre. Hats' usually follow a cultivated | crop, such as corn or isitatoes; hence It I I* not generally necessary to plow the j land liefore sow Ing. Oat* do well on 1 fall plowed land, but If the land ha* I not lioeu plowed In the fall lietter yield* are iwuiilly produced from now . lug In a *eeil lied made by disking and i harrowing than In one made' by spring , plowing. j Oata grow bc*t In a need Usl that ha* two or three Inches of loone surface soil, but which I* Arm below that depth. Thl* 1* another reason why disking I* to lie preferred to spring plowing, for there I* not time for plow ed land to settle before tho oeed I* sown. Btill another reason why the disk la better la that a fleld can be j dlaked much more cheaply than tl can ' lie plowed, and the chea|ier way of do , Ing a Job should alwaya lie cboaen If it give* Just as good results ua the more expensive way. After nine .months of negotia tion Germany refuses to admit that the murder of Ann rieans on the high seas is illegal, llow can any one doubt that it would still be going ou but for tho Baitish j navy? ROUGH CAST HALF TIMBER DESIGN Design 093, by Glenn Saxton, Architect. Minneapolis, Minn. m r- -• • - - PRUSPECTIVB VIEW—KItOSI. A PHOTOGRAI'H. v "'■•f/i >;" 7 j I| ' V '*"» : ' i' * . ; - ■ : i INTERIOR VIEW-PEDESTALED STAIRWAY. The Interior ylew shown In this article Is taken from the reception room, looking toward the pedestaled open stairway, with Its art glass window at the side. Size of this house is 32 feet wide by 30 feet deep. It can be-bullt for about $6,400, exclusive of heating and plumbing. There Is a full base ment under the entire house. Firat story, 9 feet; second Btory, .8 feet. Red oak finish for the principal rooms In the first story, with red oak floors. Upon receipt of $1 the publisher of this paper will furnish a copy of Sax ton's book of plans, "American Dwellings," which contains over 300 de signs costing from SI,OOO to $6,000; also a book of Interiors, $1 per copy. Ideals of the Pacifists Too High to Be i Realized Outside of Utopia By Dr. JACOB GOULD SCHURMAN. President of Cornell University THE pacifist would have no army or navy at all. The militarist would have a vast army and the strongest navy in the world. I am nei ther a pacifist nor a militarist. If we lived in Utopia I should be a pacifist. But we live on this half civilized esTth, and the majority of its inhabitants are today at war with one another. Nations are dragged into the conflict against their will. America, now qs always, loves peace and ; is devoted to peaceful pursuits. But tho nations of Europe and Asia who are at war—to say nothing of Mexico—may at any time, now or later, force us to defendjhe honor of America and the lives and the rights of Americans. . ' k K n IN THIS RUDE WORLD NEITHER INNOCENCE NOR'JUSTICE NOR ANY MORAL OR SPIRITUAL PERFECTION WILL GUARANTEE A NA | TION AGAINBT ATTACK. The pacifist's ideals arc so high that they can be realized only in celestial spheres. Ojt this terrestrial globe even the most enlightened and .civilized nations must provide for themselves means of defense against the aggressions of other nations who. covet their wealth or terri tory, oppose their national policies or violate their just rights. This in exorable necessity of self defense America cannot escape. Like other nations she must protect herself. 11KAYE.V GKANT SUE MAY AIR WAYS HE ABLE TO KKSIKT AtiUIMCSSiON! SHE CERTAIN LY WILL NIiVEK BE THE AG(JHESSOI(. by Bringing Nations ** " | Closer Together, J Will End Wars |&jg| ■ By NIKOLA TESLA. Famous Electrician "S.. IDO not subscribe to the theory that you can make war impossible by making it too terrible. All wars, and especially the present conflict, hare shown that you CANNOT MAKE THE STRUGGLE TOO FRIGHTFUL FOB THOSE PARTICIPATING IN IT. New and deadly explosives, poison gas, aeroplanes, forty-two centimeter guns and the like cannot convince men that they should not fight one another. NO SOONER IS AN ENGINE OF DEATH INVENTED THAN ANOTHER INVENTION COMES ALONG THAT ACTS AS AN ANTIDOTE. The deadly engine of war makes a scientific appeal, not an intellectual or mental appeal—that is, poison gas docs not educate a man to the point where he can understand his foe and so forgive the tatter's short comings instead of choking him for them. If you want to prevent war you must educate the various peoples up to the point where they will ultimately understand each other's ways and points of jiew. WI SHALL MAK« A MENTAL APPEAL THROUGH THI AGENCY OF ELECTRICITY. THE SCIENTIST WILL EVENTUALLY ANNIHILATE DISTANCE. THE VARIOUS RACES WILL BE BROUGHT INTO SUCH MARVELOUSLY CLOSE CONTACT WITH ONE ANOTHER THAT THE LANGUAGES WILL EVEN TEND TO MERGE INTO ONE. AT LtfABT, THERE WILL PROBABLY BE AN ATTEMPT TO ADOPT SOME COMMON LANGUAGE. GERMANS WILL UNDERSTAND THE WAYS OP ENGLISH MEN, AND VICE VERSA. WITH KNOWLEDGE, DISTRUST AND HATRED WILL DISAPPEAR. YOU WILL PIND THAT WHERE PEOPLE BECOME CLOSELY ACQUAINTED THEY DO NOT READILY FIGHT. AH inspiration. Lionel ws« m ■ matinee with his fa ther, and when a trapes* acrobat fall •d to catcl) tbe object at which be flew through Ibe air and fell sprawling Into Ibe nft tbe IMJJT wnt greatly excited. "They are never hurt." explained bU fattier. "It Ui a regular trick to make fjucb a nil** once or twice to .give ibe udlen'-e an Idea of Ibe difficulty of tbe feat and thereby Intensify tbe ap plause when It bus been successfully performed." l.ionel thought » moment and tben. With a bright xiiillp. siiid: "Pupa, do you think I could make n hit with in} teacher b.v following tbln circus stunt an J intoslag my lensous once In awWlei"—l*»ck. Glhoe-JJjr wife nerer htant her tern !*r. ■ Oitihd-Hsw lo you account for It? (Sllilw—Bho keep* It In rnx-h constant one It liax n> chance to get lout.—New IInM il IterlMer • ■ ♦ . .« TRY SMILING. , Scowling and growling will make a man old; Monay and fame at tha boat ara baguiling. Don't be auepln'oue and eelfieh and cold; Try emilinp. —John Eaten Cooke, | flj■ - I, I Wofken Should Receive a Share In Surplus Earnings of Business By CEORCE W. PERKINS, Capi ww 1 BELIEVE that wherever possible the general method of compcn ! sating the worker should be as follows: Say to the employee: "it takes so much money to pay the j fixed charges of this business for a year. You rc cdve your ■■■■ wages as com pensation for . "? helping to earn - the afore-aid f. J fixed charge*. If at the end of the year said v X fixed charges are' earned and >#»-' i - anyt hi n g is f | ear i] e(1 over I. an (I a I>"n v e I them, then, in I addition to your ; Photo by American Wages, J'Otl will Pres> Amaeliti'Hi. receive 11 Jier- Q. w. PERKINS. centage of gakf surplus of earn ings." Wherever possible this sur plus should be distributed in the form of a security of some kind con nected with the business in ques tion, with the understanding that the security is to be retained by the employee fpr a fixed but reasonable length of time. This, you see, places the wofker in the position of being an actual partner. HE IS DRAWING OUT OF THE BUSINESS ALL THE TIME A CER TAIN BUM OF MONEY FOR HIS LIVING EXPENSEB IN THE FORM OF WAGES AND LEAVING IN THE BUSINEBB HIS SURPLUS. • ' Public Opinion Should Devise Means to Pre vent Railway Strikes Br HOWARD ELLIOTT, Ctulrnun of the Board of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad MUST not public opinion devise some means that will make impossible even the concep tion of a plan to paralyze the entire railway system of the country ? Today labor says, "I can do with my own as I like, and if I want t6 stop work that is my business." ONLY A FEW YEARB AGO CAPI TAL SAID THE BAME ABOUT VA RIOUS UNJUST DISCRIMINATIONS AND UNFAIR PRACTICEB, AND THE PUBLIC BTOPPED IT. Does not a man when he elects to earn his living by working for a public service corporation enter into a moral obligation to the public to keep that corporation at work pend ing a dispute over wages and work ing conditions un£il that dispute is settled in an orderly manner? Should that obligation be made not simply a moral one, but a hu mane, patriotic and even legal one? : - Country Needs a Navy Suflc ent For its Defense By S. StANTOOD ME: KIN, Pies' idcut of tit: National Security League, Incorporated ® THERE is a crisis in national pre paredness. This means there is a crisis in the affairs of the nation. We want a navy sufficient for our defense. Wo want it now and demand its construction on sci~ i entitle, businesslike, economic lines under the direction of the best equipped man in the country, and we CANNOT BELIEVE IN ANY ONE'S CONVICTIONS IN FA VOR OF PREPAREDNESS WHO DOES NOT RECOGNIZE THE GOOD SENSE OF THIS DECLA RATION. Congress won't act unless certaii of the views of those they represen and the people of this country a quite clear as to certain matte, » among others that they have spe a good deal for defense in the pas and got little for it, and if they are to spend more they want to be sure that tliey #lll get full value and that the best guarantee of thia. re sult is in proper control of expendi ture by the master workmen of in dustry. OOOD INTENTIONS CAN NEVER SUPPLANT EXPERIENCE AND TECHNICAL SKILL. Th» PnttiMt Ft.t A Swiss professor states that not one woman tn a score has a perfect foot, owing to the wearing of high heeled boots snd pointed toe shoes. Russian. German. American. Austrian and Dutch women, be says, have broad feet, while those of Englishwomen are too narrow to fulfill classical and health; conditions. The women of the Latin races, excluding Frenchwomen, bare the best formed and therefore the prettiest feet, the professor saya.— London Mall. The fishing schooner Mary C. Santos, with 23 men on board, wai« blown up in Boston harbor by an explosion of gasoline. Two members of the crew wtre killed and ten injured. The bill to repeal the free sugar clause of the tariff law was favora bly reported to the House of Con gtesH Monday by the unanimous vole of the wu>4 and ut«auß com mittee. BP9lmfflr -'I- I' vjfr P H*' *®f M m tr £ 1 : I - ' ' \ . A - ,1 • S? \ .1 j | §§ii I I: y lA • I -«4'd j i- - "ys . A SPRING NOVELTY. Tills la one of the very newest sport 1 auits—a saffron colored silk Jersey cut ) on beautiful lines. The skirt closes down the front with big brown novel ty buttons, as does the single breasted loose coat. Please notice bow smart are the collar and cuffs of brown glas ed leather, which Is also used to face the silt pockets. The string belt Is an other interesting feature. With this elegant outfit goes a brown chip sailor | simply trimmed with a soft bow and band of satin ribbon. The whole de sign speaks of simple elegance. Wall Cooler For Butter. A convenient cooler for butter, milk and other perishable products can be made* in any well as shown by the drawing. It consists of a bottomless box placed on the well platform and provided at the top with two hinged ! doors. Inside extending across the box are a pair of bars. On these by means of hooks (No. 9 wire will do) hang deep palls similar to those used | for deep setting cream. Inside one wr.T/t cooLi.u loiiu.u'm.H. of these palls a#e pfacetl dinner plates ami soim'W'ltal metal rlhgs for holdljis butlT iu fair r.i'.ctl quiiil ities. The oiler pail Is fur milk. When filled I lie palls are lowered Into the well as indi aCeJ. . -They may or may not rest in UlO wafer. If desired the pail used for solids may be made with perforated bottom and top so there Will be §»• free tlren'ation of cool air around the batter or* other material i aside. The** r.sav lie of any conveni ent sire pfi-. ! nslon is leu or twelve i : -r dhi'V.tder and eight een to i , r i:ie!ies deep. The coliara , '.» a t least an inch smaller J i x, Intend. one and a half li I 1 e fiend preferable. The ho? «! ~ ' ' • 1 feeF'lilsll, two feet wide ar.d ,"Veif inches across. It slv> 11 have a lateh and a padlock if there I - danger of Its lielna visited l>y people who have 110 business on the premises. Preferably the palls should be hung on metal rods ralhet than by cords or chains. This will fa cilitate raising and lowering. In the drawing a is a hinged leg which hangs from the front b and drops to the floor against the side of the l*>x, thus making b Into a table. The front!' locks on the top c. The rings whlctKflt over the plates t* the cans are shown at d. , l»i tn* Direction. "The wise thing to do nowadays Is to invest your money In a going con cern." "Tes, and It's also a wise thing to first find ont which way the concern Is going."—Jndge. Calomel Dynamites A Sluggish Liver ___ f Crashes into sour bile, mak- ' ing you sick and you loose a day's work. Calomel salivates! It's mercury, Calomel acts like dynamite on a' sluggish liver. When calomel comes in contact with sour bile it. crashes Into it causing griping and I nausea. > 11 you feel bilious, headachy, con- ( stipated and all knocked out, Just go to your druggist and get a 60c bottle o! Doason's Liver Tone, j which is a harmless vegetable 1 substitute for dangerous calomel. • Take a spoonful and it it doesn't | start your liver and straighten vou j up better and quicker than nasty calomel, and without makinjf you 1 sick, you iust go and get your ( > money back. j 1 II you take calomel today you'll | 1 be sick and nauseated tomorrow;. | besodes it may salivate you, while I , if you take JDodson's Liver Tone] you will wr. ice up feeling greit, full [ of ambition and ready for work or I play. It's hartnlesa, pleasant andl , safe to give to children; they like] V it. a*V. if "7 . . Children Cry for Fletcher's The Kind Yon Have Always Bought, and which has been In nte for over 80 years, has borne the signature of - and has been made under his per /7( sonal supervision since Its infancy. /-ccccJuM. 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 infant and Children —Experience against Experiment* What is CASTOR IA Castorla Is a harmless snbstltnte for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other TS'arcotio substance. Its ape is its guarantee. It destroys Worms nnd allays Fcverishness. For more than thirty years it ,i .. ' lias 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, glviftTf healthy and natural sleep* The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought ' TH.OKMTAUI. COMPANY.*.WYdKCTV. i ' ; : ■ ill fbo ye ads deputation m a rnoldsM BALSAII Werrented To Core L SUMMER SICKNESSES BYI Graham Drag Co. I Tlot is the Answehjiv £- r* NEW INTERNATIONAL TK Mobmh Rn Brerf day In roar talk and reodlnf. a% home, on the atrec&car, In the office, shop and school you like If question the mean ing of some jmw word. A friend aiki: 'what make* mortar hardens Yon aeek the locatioa of Lock Katrims or the pronun ciation of JuMtm. What Is tvkitt coat? Thia New Creation answera all kinds of qneatlona in Language, Hiatorr. Biography. Fiction, Foreign Worda, Tradea, Arta and Sciences, with 400,000 I •000 llliaetrattoM, I Cast *400,000. /ffflEllKvV i 2700 Picas. (Omfir; The only dictionary with ? the M 0 divided pap*— char- £ A r acteriicd aa 'AStroke of MaPapffUMw '• jjglWMK fi On thin, opaque, Jong, mX/rnSJIIKII India paper. What to o_''a- MM/I/Mi fj/M 1 faction to own the Aferriaut Wwml MWj I Webster in a form ao light Wmj/flj Lfl/ mjll I and so convenient to aaeljgW/ffKf tjllMOlf One half the thiclcneaa andsmUHM Hi™//// weight of Regular Edition. JMKS[|tt On strong book paper. Wt I jPmßhi jSffl lbs. SUe ISHxX y yfrf||( M Write for apMlMa pa#M, (I j uiL:..dimuiiii. F- gn Yea e Women? | »Cardui The Woman's Tonic FOR SALE AT All DRU66ISTS y« ■■■■■■■■■■■ , Jealousy. Jenlous.v l a asr:tiptlnn bred with in tlit* Hfri) * '--v] house of litvp when all It* win 'v « n-ns ealed When wp are Je: 'on i p in xiiui our-etvo* up In a sliu '«V .| |irir!i: y „ r tltiiiil mlwr linens. W" W-.IM smile one Mil 111 our. selves. We fr that ir we >|mii Mi doors mid let 'it the nrrent of other affection or I • wind, of |«i;>er >' Interest oiy ■ li .-e ,-r | v.- • awept una.' \ v. o :th in n OUS not only of her 1:1- ''flu !■- r but of bin w "»l; Hil l f' lMi of I glon. Tlilw i-mc" window* cUw I ahe looki- »l" bonse of yond them cxpanc*. "We're got to cut down expeu e announced Mr. Riverside. "and I lliin wtfll begin liy giving up our box «• the opera." "Ob. Henry, you aurely wouldn't think of doing that!" protested hi. wife. "Why not? If my bnHlncss keeps ou aa rotten as It Is now I won't be able to buy yon any new gowns, and there la no use paying rent for a show wh> dow when -yon haven't got anv good' to show."— Pittsburgh ChrunMe Rain Hats In Korsa. Korea la a country of strange bead dresses, but perhaps the most curloua headgear df ail are the Immense rain hata worn by the farmers' wives while working in the fields during the rainy aeaaon. These extraordinary coverings 1 •re often aa much aa seven feet long and Ave feet broad and protect the body aa effectively as any umbrella could do. ( Itch relieved in 20 minutes by Woodford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fall*. Said by Graham Drug Co, ■ (M. ftind model, •ketcho. or plioto. and do- ■ ■ acrtption for PRE! SEARCH ud Wt ■ ■ 70a Oar frM booklet, tell how, whu to ln»m« ■ >1- I Mid mts 700 mooey. Writ, tod.7. ID. SWIFT &CO.I 1 PATBNT LAWYERS, ■ RE YOU O DATE ar H you are not tht News af j hebtbr is Subscribe lor it nee and it will keep you abrea tlie times. Pull Assoeiated Press dispatch the news—foreign, d«- estic, national, state and loc;e • 1 the time Daily Newt" and Observer * rr year, 3.50 for 6 mos Weekly North Carolinian * cr vear, 50c lor 6 mos. BWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO.. Raleigh. N C .* The North Carolinian and The Ilamance Gleani'.u will be sen tor one year lot Two Dollars. in advance Apply at The jLEanek ihci Giattam, N. C. THE " T ~~'X Ctiarkdue i>aily uosetver subscription Hates liany .... St).OU g IJiajuy and surnlay t> uu - - - - a.OO P iiie Stiiii-Vv eekly Oostrver Tues. aau r riuay - 1.00 The Chariotie Daily Observer, ia ! sued daily Mutl duoUay to ttie lead* nig newspaper between \\ abuiag toii, U. c., aud Aiiauta, Ua. it gives ail uie lk Wo ui iiorin Caro lina bealdes the complete Abaociat ea Preas Service. The Semi-Weekly Observer, is aued on Tuesday and t riUay lor v i per year gives tue reider a full report ol the week's news. i'ije leading semi-weekly ol the State. 1 Address ail ordera to OBSERVER CO. UHAKUII It, ID. C. ;■ Dtiiii i r full is -maderful Rui: rented thousands i Hayes Drug Co. LIVES OF CHRISTIAN MIMSTERN This book, entitled -an above contains over 200 memoirs of Min miens In the Christian Churc) with historical references. Ai Interesting volume—nicely print ed ftnd bound. Price per copy: cloth, $2.00; gilt top, $2.60. Bj mail 20c extra. Orders may b» sent to P. J. Kbbnodlc, 1012 E. Marshall St., _ Richmond, Va. Orders may be left at this office. " ■ . : '.*i^

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