5 V J" i ' W.W.'V'-V"' 'A ; j" , - v. i Vr il? FOR 7 :5 jSiD Have to Keep on Until Aucyuxnost urop. now r.to. Conley Got Help. UUJiUIIJli tfafilM U n letter froin a woman Who Bad to work bat was too weak and fred,too much to continue. Kow aha r 4 Pnakfort K7.i-"I snffered somneb ;.: CtihfeiiMilf wealoieas that I could; not i n.ii' 1 11 1 . i . rVi'i . 'i' ' ItAfi'r tnv 'cram' taV : bad to hire it done. I heard to much about Lydia & Pink ham'a VegetabU Compound that I tried it. I took three bottles and I found it to be all yon claim. Now I feelas well as ever I did and am able to do all my own work acrain. . I recommend it to any woman suffering :; . ;, xrom lemale weakness. Yon may pub lish my letterif you wish." Mrs. James C30NLBr,6ltf St. Clair St.,Frankfort,Ky. c.'No woman.fuffering from any form Of female troubles' should lose hope until V che has given Lydia K PinkhaiA's Veg- etable Compound a fair trial. ; . . . : :; rThis Campus . remedy, the medicinal ? .Ingredients of, which, are derived from '.'rtiative roots and herbs, has for forty . ; yearst proved to be a most valuable tonic ,: ; r and inyjgorator of the female ogganism. ' A11 women are invited to write to the liydia S. Pinkham Medi CineCov, Iiynn Mass for special advice, it will be confidential. AGENTS AND OTH Write for oar offer on overcoats' and rain coats, See before pay. Sell ten a day. Biggest bargains ever. Get ahead of the' other fellow.. Don't pass- this -by. v NATIONAL SALES CO. 319 W. German St. Baltimore, Md. . . A. T. Ingram, Manger. IVflUTEDS i to learn barber trade. weeks required. Steady position for com- it graduates. Wonderful demand for bar . Wages while learning; free catalog; write RICHHOND BARBER COLLEGE, Richmond, Va. i h ANY: INDUSTRIOUS MAN N V: , 'av dsrotehls time to good adT&ntage selling low - pneea ttref Tn Gut Bate Tire bnalneaa is a money Makeis. BOxS non-skid cesium att&as. Small capital required. Better write me about it at once. Address &VFi Janes. 1789 Broadway, New York City WANTED Few ladies who do neat sewing. do piecework at home; good seamstress usu Ally makes 4 Oe hour. Stamp for particulars. CLASTIC TIE CO., FLETCHER, N. C. "BOUGU cn RATS'anT " No Good.. Maurice E. McLaughlin, the lawn tennis champion, was talking about a player who had failed to make good. "The .man won't train," he said.' le won't' work. He won't deny himself. His disposition is a good deal like' the tramp's: , " . "'Want a job digging potatoes? a farmer asked a tramp. Yep,' the tramp answered. If ye mean diggin' 'em out o gravy.' " , . Knows Tettertne Cures Eczema. Mocksville. N. C. X have a friend In the country here who has suffered for years with Eczema, and I told him if he used Tetterine he would soon, be relieved, for it is the only thing tnat I ever used tnat would kin it, P. S. Early. Tetterine cures Eczema, Tetter, Ring Worm, Itching Piles and every form of Scalo and Skin Disease. Tetterine 50c: Tetterine Soap 25c. At. drug-gists, or by mail from the manufacturer. The Shup trine Co., Savannah, Oa. With every mail order for Tetterine we give a box of Shuptrine'a 10c Liver Pills tree. aov. w The Traditional Wager. Tm glad my wife is in politics," remarked Mr. Growcher. "Why?" . "Maybe she will get rid of some of those freak hats she has been buying by. paying them out in election bets." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every - bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bean the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Card playing can'te very wicked, as not one heart in the deck is black. Sties, Oranulatea Eyelids, 8ore and Inflamed Kres healed promptly by the use of SOMAN XTC BALSAM. Adr. Lazy men are dead to the world, but they remain unburied. Nerves All On Edge ? Just as nerve wear is a cause of kidney weakness, so is kidney trouble a cause of nervousness. Anyone who has baak ache, nervousness, "blues," headaches, dizzy spells, urinary ills and a tired, worn feeling, would do well to try Doan's Kidney Pills. This safe, relia ble remedy is recommended by thou sands who have had relief from just such troubles. A North Carolina Case L Hxs. O. Q. Pro pest, Gaither Ave. and Eighth St., Newton, N. C. says: "I suffered from a constant, dull ache across the small of my back and . when-: ever I stooped, sharp twinges dart ed through me. I had headaches, and dizzy ' spells and spot appeared be- fnm mv ,VM. Th first box of Doan's Kidney lnis. re lieved me and I continued takine. them until I' was well. I have had- no further trouble 4n over a year.1 t ,:: 1 Get Deasfs at As? Store;' EOis a Cos FOSTLR-M1LBURN CO- BUFFALO. N.Y. WtZ2tC!: f IZr:rUn HSro vclt mi Frca Jtf Farts cf Ttr jpifse mhAsv npinrn rUa lilt UUM lltAIJtll The Happenings, of 8ven Days . Are Given . In ; Epitomized : Form for ... Quick - Readinfl. . After receiving unofficial informa- tion that, six , Americans had . lost their lives by, the sinking of the Brit ish steamship Marina, President Wil son- communicated with Secretary of State Lansing and- directed that all possible haste be taken in obtaining the facts concerning the sinking of the vessel. - DiMtnr.iT Mnnwta. v io . etnlrinv I hrv ftermfln anhmnrlnAd nf fhA Rritiab steamers Martha and Rowanmore, partly manned bjr Americans; are top I incomnlete to enable officials at the state department to form an opinion as to whether there had been a jriola-1 uon. or neutral ngnts or oi pieages i given the United States by Germany, j Secretary Lansing declined ; to ' com-. ment further than to admit that the reports jappeared more serious than the' usual routine dispatches announc- ing the destruction of belligerent merchantmen, and that full informa- tion would be awaited with interest According to 7 the Newport 1 News I agents of the sunken Marina's owners, j Donaldson line, the vessel, with some onouions in nortnern Mexico, re fifty American horse tenders aboard, yolving on the new ascendancy, of k nfisk Villa, are commanding more attention government as a transDOrt.' but was engaged in her regular trade as a freighter and carried horses for the allies as a part of her general cargo. Under such circumstances, it is point- ed out, she would be entitled to im- munity. " Great Britain's note in reply to American representations against, the commercial blacklist has been receiv-1 ed at the state department Great Britain defends her action, and con-1 tends that the British government has the right to regulate trade ac tivities in which her subjects .are en gaged. It is stated in Washington that American bankers are taking over the management of all the international revenues of Nicaragua. The department of justice and the department of labor are watching the migration of negroes from Southern labor centers to Northern centers. The department of justice has in view the I reported political activity of certain people, and the department of labor in preventing their federal employ - . . ....... - . ment service rrem Deing usea to iur- their migration schemes. At the end of the first two years' operation of the Panama canal a finan- cial survey shows that tolls amounted to .$7,411,682, which showing is very gratifying to the administration. European War West of Lutsk in Volhynta the Rus sians have taken Austro-German trenches south of Sviniusky and re- pulsed counter attacks. In Galicia the Austro-Germans have checked attacks below Stanislau and occupied Russian positions in the Narayuvka region near Halicz. The Roumanians have gained a vie- tory in the region of Szurduk pass, on the Roumanian-Transylvania frontier," according to a wiseiess message from Bucharest to Paris. The German submarine Deutschland has arrived in harbor at New London, Cknn. This is her second trip to the United States. She brought a valua- ble cargo. . The German submarine U-53, which sank five ships off the American coast In one day, has arrived safely at her German base, according to Berlin dis- patches. Replying In the EngUsh house of commons to criticisms alleging that the British foreign office was propping rmn& Montgomery, Ala., rrom At- struction of the British steamer Row King Constantino of Greece by with- lanta Ga: Tne coroner's verdict was anmore hy sheUflrd with endangering holding recognition of ex-Premier Ven- izelos, head Of the new movement in opposition to the Greek government, Lord Robert Cecil, minister of war trade, said the English government had acted throughout in closest con cert with all the allies. . . ' "The situation is as good-as possi ble, and all will be well also in the future." This is the way Field Mar shal von Hindenburg sizes up the war. Other than to say- Germany will ulti mately win, he will make no predic tion as to when the war will stop;, that, he says, rests entirely with the triple entente. The bad weather is keeping-down all operations except t bombardments on the Austro-Italian front. On the Transylvania front the Rus- uated from Princeton with President sians and Roumanians are operating Wilson in '79, heads the list . of con successfully against the Teutonic al- tributors to the Democratic campaign lies near the junction of Bukowina, tund with a total of $79,000. Tranncylvania and Roumanla, and to Qver a million dollars has been sub the south near Campulung, and in the anriri tn th rum'nmMn PAmnaien Jiul valley have gained successes over t""5"1 Bad weather is hampering opera- tlons in Macedonia, but the Serbians, it is announced in Paris, have made progress in the Cerna ben4 and the French have occupied a monastery west of Presb lake. The.torpedomg of the Greek, steam er Angheliki, near Piraeus, with many Greeks aboard, was "without warning, it is stated in Athens, Greece. This action is 'taken to indicate that- since the capture of Constahza by the Ger mans, submarines have procured ' a new supply of benzine, enabling them to resume operations In. the Mediter ranean. ': " . : Following up ' their adtantae the British -captured . another' German: trench 4October29: hortheast, - Les Boeufa.. in .the Somme ! reeion. while the;Prench made fresh. advances near Saillyaillisel and . Biaches. ; Heayy. artillery activity - against ; the British positons is being icarrieds cut by the Germans In the Les -Boeufs Rector and leisewnere. , , . According to Berlin, another heary. Kussian Offensive against the German lines along the Stokhod river in Vol hynia has been put down by the Ger man curtain of fire. Petrograd w ports ; successful, recohnoissatrfes. . by the Russians .along the River Starok; a tributary, of the Stokhod. In the region -of. Verdun,; where the French made their,; spectacular. 'drive over a wide front nOrth and northeast of Verdun, they are holding the ground aespue me vicious counter auacKS dfUvered, particularly In the regions of .Haudromont and Douaumont and east of the Fumin wood and north of UHeuOlB, Mexican wews .-( , . wenerai uarranzanas xnrown nis bat 11140 th presidential ring In Mex- Mco and says that if he is eledted he W1" "ut UU1 ,oey a.w luaseu, me mwo. - It is announced in Mexico City that Generals Gonzales and Obregon have "taken an oath of allegiance to General Carrahza. " Twenty men, principally warehouse- men, have been executed in Mexico City during the past week for alleged participating in robbing the ! freight consignments through fraudulent bills OI facing. y. - than at any time since the border, raids, which resulted in the dispatch of the American punitive -expedition, Washington officials make no effort to disguise their opinion that the Mex- lean-American commission sitting at Atlantic City cannot he expected to ar- rive at a satisfactory solution of the border problems until the situation in Chihuahua has been clarified. In official Washington, it is the concensus of opinion that there Is in tie likelihood of a reduction of the force guarding the international boun dary between Mexico and the United States. The military movements- of , Fran cisco Villa are taken in some quar ters as the shadow 'of the downfall of the de facto government Domestic Charles Tazex Russell ("Pastor Rus sell"), the famous Brooklyn preach- er, died aboard an Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe train at Pampa, Texas, near Canadian. His death is attrib- 1 uted. to heart disease. v j.. . .,... i At least one hundred persons were injured at Ensley, Ala., when two street cars in which they were riding telescoped in a head-on collision. '.So far as ascertained no one was serious- iy hurt Mrs.' Mary Fairbank, mother of the Republican nominee for vice presi dent Charles W. Fairbanks, is dead, at the age of 87, in Indianapolis, Ind. Reports from all sections of Vir- ginia tell of large quantities of liquor being stored for future use. Prohibi- tion went into effect in that state on November 1. In Richmond hundreds of delivery wagons formed an almost ceaseless procession and thousands of gallons have been delivered to pri- vae homes. , The Louisiana supreme court in a Ldecision holds that the editor or pub- Usher of a newspaper cannot be tried on cnarSesof criminal libel excepting m curxs oi me pansn vcoumy j wnere the newspaper is printed. Viscount Sat6, the ney Japanese ambassador, presented his credentials to President Wilson at Long Branch, N. J., where the president is at pres- I ent located. The body of a youth, apparently 17 years old, believed to be that of J. B., Christian of Tallahassee, Fla. was Iouna m.me man tar oi a waiu r-. inai ne mai0 ma aeam uy Buiiuv;- tion. "-eyuoAican campaign conuriuuuouo "pee;u inclusive. louu ?1.667.757-29t according to the national committee's report of receipts and dis bursements made public by Cornelius N. Bliss, Jr., treasurer of the commit tee. At - Philadelphia the new 10-cent pieces have been put into circulation for the first time, ahout one hundred and eighty thousand . dollars' worth being distributed to banks and trust companies. John Sebastian Little, 65 years old, former governor of Arkansas and for mer congressman from that state, is dead at Little Rock. , PlovolnnH TT TSriH era wVin or a a prnrl- fundf pf which $261,846 was sent In in dollar amounts. " Gold amounung to fifteen million dollars was deposited at the New York assay office .by the fiscal agents of British -government: This makes Wi.nf tiRnnnonnn tim far thi ' r years from the British and. allied In terests.' ' , ' . ; ' ,'; ',, Announcement is.made in New York that Ameficah bankers have - floated aiiew loan ot $300,000,000 for the Brit- ishr Empire. , . It .will bear: jtn.terest- at ..ties. DOctor Servtn denied uny com--the fate 0f ive and" ii half ;per cent,x pliclty InrtHe piVt. DoctcSeiMh, and; is payable in, two. installments.- who is a Spanish-Cm erican phi sician. The number of ' contributors to the was released on hi s own recognlzanct Democratic campaign fund Is given out" o await prellmina-y heariugv ; 1 1 1 ti 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 i U 1 1 1 i VKjezzr in MJUnn isc v-. ' ORINQ8 "TEN MILLION - DOLLARS 0RTH QF I-DYE8, , DRUGS. JEWELS; ETC CAPT. KOENIG TELLS OE TRIP Waa in "Quiet," But Thrilling Voyage. Defles Allies' . "Blockade '.That Does Not, Block." Hopes to Make Another Trip During Year. : r l New' London, ConnTen million dollars' worth of dyestuffs and drugs and it was said possibly stocks; bonds an precious stones" comprise the cargo of the German submarine merchantman Deutschland. according to a statement by. Capt. Paul Koenig, commander of the craft The Deutschland is in this port aft er having succeeded in making a sec ond voyage ' from a German port to the Aiperlcan K coast despite . the watchfulness of British and French war vessels. -"I must keep up this-traffic alone for the, present that is; the Deutsch land niust" he said. "fa. a fortnight I shall be gone, I hope, to return be fore the end of . the year." It was ; possible, . the navigator stated, that other , merchant subma- rines wpulds be built by that time In a .summary of his voyage, just completed, Captain Keonig, who re turned with- decorations from Ger man royalty as marks of recognition fpr his pioneer voyage, said this was ?a quiet trip." " Recital of its inci dents, however, , developed matters of lively Interest The Deutschland did not lie 'on the ocean floor this time, as in - the voyage which ended at Baltimore last July. The submarine instead varied the monotony of its sailing under water or on the sur face with occasional dodges beneath vessels identified as warships of bel ligerent nationality or thought to be Seven times, Captain Koenig said, he maneuvered in this way. iThe last time' was off Nantucket when he sighted a "four-funneled steamer" and dived beneath her. "The storms gave us more trouble than this so-called blockade," he con tlntiAd "Wb wam TtAHAt hv hftaw southwest gales for days, and they were .with us most of theiway across. Fogs also hindered us. we might as we&liavebeen submerged J the, weath erwas so thick at times.' During the trip of 4,500 miles the Deutschland traveled under water less Miin. 1AA' tMdaa OR T itiAllM hlV uiau 4.vv ca, v buuiuu iuiii ih, Captain Koenig said. "They call it blockade. You can judge how much it blocks," the skip per exclaimed. CONFLICTING ELEMENTS IN MARINA LOSS ARI3E. Issue Threatens to Fall Into Technical Discussion of Whether Germany Has Violated Pledges to U. 8. Washington.-'-So many conflicting elemehts have appeared in the de struction of the British steamer Ma rina by a German submarine, with loss of American lives, that the inci- Vieilt threatens-to fall Into a technical discussion rather than a deanut la- sue of whether Germany has violated her pledges to the United States. It became apparent that much which is essential to p determination of the responsibility remains undis closed, if indeed the United States, Germany or 'Great Britain are in possession of the full facts. It appeared certain, however, that no move will be maile by the United stotes until the Ge.-man version" of .fh. afair, as well an that of the de- of Americans, has been setfured. The only positive developments were thft actIon of Cpunt Ton BernB. torff, the German iimbassador, In apklllg Mb government. to forward full details by wireless and the Issuance of a statement by. Se :retary Lansing, that the Investigation would be In no wise delayed becauso there Is a poli tical campaign in prcgress. OFFICIALS SURPRISED AT REVOKING DECISIOfl. Washington. Ar".ministration ohM cials were, surprised-when informed- that the Mexican- American Commis sion had revoked i.s decision to make Washington -its 'meeting place. Ar rangements had been perfected to ac commodate the commisioners here and the Bureau oi' Pan-American Re publics had been chosen for the meet ing place. Failure '"o agree . on horder difficulties have diucouraged 'state de- Part.raent pljlcials. CON8PIRACY TO MD REBELS IN MEXICO LEADS TO ' AN. A P REST. Tucson, Ariz. pr. G.. R. Seryin, a naturalized Ainencan, was arretted here charged tv' conspiracy; to . exr port arms to;revolMMonists in Mexico: "Warrants alsq werii issued for a num--ber ;dt other perscus. Anas ; and" am munition were'seiei "by thV authori- Rdsy edieeks, fright vv teeth gbbd appetitea;a ves" :-f ih& reward for i thfe regular use benefit a& Scalbd Ttahtr-licpt ntaht Write .Willi Wrifiley Co. v. Chicago,, for free copy of the'. Wrifder Gum-ption Book; - ' c'(B1fo&vJ M affile? SARDINIA'S SAINTS' DAYS Each Village HasNta. Annual Festival, When It Celebrates the Birthday . of Its Patron. Each "pease" or village of Sardinia has its annual festival to celebrate the birthday of its own particular saint or some other church feast. The most renowned of these is the "festa" of "Saint Efisld,' the national feast of the Island. . The ceremony is in the form of a procession from Cagliari, the chief city of Pula, a village nine miles away, with the return to Cagliari. The was an omaai m me army oi .iacietian, and for ;hjs conversion to Christianity was beheaded at Pula. At midday .on May 1 the procession leaves ' and returns on the evening of May 4. It is composed of a cavalcade of horsemen, all in the costume of the ancient Sardinian militia, escorting the lmaSe-of the saint, -which is preceded u uiusitians piaymg ine lanneaoas, an 1 9 1 a m Instrument made of thee or four reeds of different lengths and resembling the pipe of ancient times. , , A "Solemn Warning; ' "Do you think our republic is in dan ger?" "Certainly not," replied Senator Sor- erhum. "It is reasonablv safp now. All I say Is that I shudder ;to think of whaf &J befdP I should hap- pen not to be re-elected." North Dakota has $4,000,000 worth of. land set apart as school, endow ment, , ;'' , ,; When The Doctor Quit1 tt many tea or coffee drink- ers find themselves in the grip.of a MhaDit and think they can't. But they cant easily r-by changing to the ; delicious, pure roo&drink' : , : This fine cereal beveraffe contarnar Iiuq nourUtojmt but no eine,- as ! do tea fd coiree 1 Postum makes ?ibr com- r. . v f OTtJ lvtriiV arid elency.' "There a Reason" Says POSTUM of ;.ria" . -. as eyes. ffi3$Hl" v Whyrahe Wahtedt.f "Algy, I . want ; you to, buy . me a book. . "I am glad , you are hecomlng: liter ary, my dear." ' ( ; , "Fudget vl This article says one way to aaiulw goodcaarge;! prac tice balancing a book on' your Louisville" Courier JoliriaL " r To Drive Out lUhrU ' And Bead Upe System Take, the Old Standard-GLOVE S TASTELESS chill TONIC You know what von are taking,es the formula is printed oq every label, showing it is Quinine and Iron in a tasteless fok-m. The Quinine .drives put , malaria, the Iron builds up the Sfstem. ' 50 cents.' ........ - .- .. k j, . . . " No ' Need id' Say Anything. Pat What ilid 'Polly ' say vf hen Ar thur proposed to hejT , . Clares-Nothing : she aiicepfed him. v K . Wright's Indian Vegetable- Pills tare stood tie test of time. Test tbem yourself How. Send tor sample to 373 Pearl street, J?. Y-Adr. . Cuba- anntmllyi Imports j about 600, 000,000 feet of lumber. . 1 :L; -HsbVb Osrs" is rusnuaUM to terrible ItehlBc. It la eom-. posaded for tat purpose and; yoer Bosif wlU be promptly If Hnnfe cWre ff all? to jiorue lick, Bcsma,Tttr. King Worm . or ear otaer skla ste ae pox. X-or sale try all disc stoves A. B. Bldirtj Utile!: tt;, ShraaajH. la completely waahed out of the aystem by ten gals, (three weeks) of the cele brated Shivar, Mineral . Water, costing only two dollara. Tastes fine; positively guaranteed by money back,' on. retorn oi the two loaned carboys, should you report .no benefit." Ilehtion your ex press office-F ; Address , 1 1- , V: w Shiver Oprlag, Bex 2. Shelf on. S.C bman7anta 0 'HO? Viuetved to water for cooch stops pIvie cataxrlvuksntSosraad InfTiai r?TiiiiM fn.T.f Lw-ffw:. r PMdiaai tZL:C. fwktiar years, for7naU catsTrh, ore tnrosif mnH nmtm m tllAlU UAL3AM ""u0'1 prnwrmttoa ef oarit. Elp toerUaatesaadn& p ... BeeatTtGr7er Faded HalrJ pleasure! WRAPPED je -. 4 , m Si II I. v

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