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tall. An instantaneous explosion signaled the extermination of Hakusekl. Barely a breath later the dune opened I up like the crater of a volcano, belch- i <Q A smoke and flame to the skies. De- I (ojwlon followed detonation more | swiftly than reeling senses could reck- \ ^n. The little Island, rocked, dlsin- j ^grating. The sea, rose shouting and : , overwhelmed It. Clouds of steam oh- I " soured the debacle. When the sloop In which Baron 1 Hurokl hud embarked arrived on the icer.e, a ghastly welter of wreckage shurning in the wash was all that was i left of TAmho. <KNI> OF FIFTH KPISODK.) I How long will the Hermans stan<l j ^ Jk ?n a ,s a"'nos^ that in tliTt country today. ? thingsToingMy i in kaiser's empire After Fourteen Years in Berlin I ^..Believes the Imperial I Edifice is Cracking. I ? i 1 emova.? Tilings arc going badly in Germany and the imperial regime is threatened according to Dr. Aristhics Aguero, recalled Cuban minister to Berlin , who arrived here on his! vay to Trance. Dr. Augero said: "I bring good news. I have been 14 1 years in Berlin and you can easily realize that I have been able to thor- j oughlv study the character of our enemies. Things are going badly on j the other side of the Rhine. The fa-1 cade of the imperial edifice seems solid enough from abroad, but in reality there are cracks in it." The Cuban and Guatemalan ministers left Berlin together. They were accompanied by a German colonel who never let them out of his sight, and they were not allowed to leave their train at any station on the way to the frontier. There meat and bread curds were taken from them. Dr. Aguero declared that there was no prospect of immediate improvement in the food situation in Germany. He .-aid that no help could be expected : rom the occupied parts of Roumania : > the lack of man power made a cultivation of the fields impossible." I "Revolution." Copenhagen.?As a counter t0 the 1 rr-ther artificial indignation which j the Fan-German and conservatives] are endeavoring to excite against thel Socialists, on account of Schicele-j mann's use of the word "revolution" in the Reichstag last week the Vor-j v.-aerts prints the text of a letter sent ! to Chancellor von Bethmann-Hollweg ! by the Pan-German League in May 1915. This letter also threatens rev-| olution if the league's demand fori tweeping annexations was not met. Baron von Gehsattel, vice president of the league, in transmitting to von i .f nnn i f ^ C 4.1 1 ' i/- VII111 <41 >i i il 'JJ tut? It'ilgUC S flpeace program, spoke of indications that the government did not propose a wide enough utilization of victory. Ho declared that the immediate consequences of such a policy would be ( revolution and the overthrow of the dynasty. Copies of the letter were sent to the various federate governments. The chancellor replied that the letter and threat constituted a climax to that lack of political judgment which had often embarrassed the government's policy before the war, and that ^he Pan-German program could only b?' considered after all opponents had been completely crushed. The government's refusal to prerr.it the radical Socialist, Adolf Hoffmann, a member of the Prussian Diet < t,o attend the Stockholm conference I is connected with its attempt to fasten a charge of treason on him for his agitation among the workmen for a May day strike. < u,, Will If the Texas jack Rabbit can jump 1 into favor the billy goat ought to ' butt into the menu column with a )oud bleat.?Daily Record. fjfc STOP LEFT OVER COUGHS. Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey will stop ? that hacking cough that lingers from 1 January. The soothing pine balsams ( loosen the phlegm, heals the irritated membrane, the glycerine relieves the (. tender tissues, you breathe easier * ??t?d roughing ceases. Don't neglect j 1 a lingering cough, it is dangerous. ? Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey is antiseptic and pleasant to take, benefits young and old, get it at your druggist to-day. Formula on the bottle. 25c.?adv?No. 2? *3 SAVE GLASS BOTTLES REPLACE FRUIT JARS Remember There is a Shortage of Cans and Fruit Jars This Year. The home canning specialists of the United States Department o? Agriculture urge every houaekeepet to save bottles?especially wide-neck; ed o.ies?for putting up fiuitx and! ! 1 ? 1 < - I {i re server, jeiuos, jams, ana nun juices. Saving; bottles is highly important they say, as there threatens to be a serious shortage 01' reguiai jars and preserving cans this season. The fruit products named, if sealed with corks and paraffin, can be kept even in ordinary drinking glasses by :he use of paper and paraffin. Fruit juices should be packed in ordinary small-necked bottles. Vegetables, soups, and meats, on the other hand, to keep must be seal .u by the usual fruit-jar or tin can packing methods. Reserve regular containers for foods that can not be 1 packed in bottles. A serious shortage of preserving 1 jars and tin cans is threatened. (ilass bottles?especially wide- j necked oyh's?are useful for putting! up fruits, jellies and preserves. Put up fruit juices in culinary bottles. Reserve regular preserving jars and cans for canning vegetables, soups and meats.?United StateDepartment of Agriculture. l iir ai a 12*0 urj^nij^ an members of canning clubs and others not only to can products, but to dry and evaporate all such products as apples, pumpkin, and squash. Thev advise strongly that if containers are i scare locally, those in stock should b'* used to preserve perishable products which have the highest nutritive value. Nothing should be packed in jars or cans which can be conserved effectively in other ways. Candy containers or other glass jars with screw tops or glass stoppers, and in fact any receptacle of glass, crockery, or porcelain, can be sealed with cork or paper and paraffin. Large tin canisters or tin cans with removable covers, provided the body of the container is air and water j tight, will be found usefui in canning certain fruit products. Such container a can be sterilized and their covers hermeticallv sealed in nhi/?<> with ?r?l_ der or wax. n THE PRAISE CONTINUES Everywhere We Hear (iood Reports of Doan's Kidney PilLs Conway is no exception. Every section of the U. S. resounds with, praise of Doan's Kidney Pills. Thirty thousand persons are giving testimony in their home newspapers. The sincerity of those witnesses, the fact ! that they live so near, is the best proof of the merit of Doan's. Here's a Conway wise. Mrs. G. A. Macklen, nurse. Laurel St., Conway, says: "I don't hesitate to recommend Doan's Kidney Pills. I consider them a most valuable medicine for backache, headaches, dizziness and other kidney disorders. I have often recommended Doan's Kid ney Pills and they have always given the best of results." Price i>Oc, at aH dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy?get Doan's Kidney Pills?the same that Mrs. Macklen had. Foster- Milbum Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y.?adv ? o EXPRESS HflMPANIFS MAY INCREASE RATES! New York.?Rumors that the principal express companies were about | to file with the Interstate Commerce Commission an opplication for an increase in rates were met today by a statement from the executive office of the Adams Express Company that the rates of the companies were now being analyzed "in connection with the increased cost of conducting business." Notice of Discharge. The undersigned administratrix sf the personal estate of 1. T. Bellamy, dee'd, will apply to the Judge ">f Prohntu* of Hnrrv Pftnntu of ? W- ?k_w j WVMIIVJ f w I# ??tO office at Conway, S. C. at 11 o'clock n the forenoon, on Tuesday May 1st, L917, for a final discharge as such ulministratrix. MRS. RUTH BELLAMY, Qualified Admx., of I. T Bellamy, Dcc'd. larch 30th, 1917. ? IB MBI OBJ SENATE COMMUTE SHAKES UP WAR TAX Washington, May 2<i??PYoposa!.for a 5 per cent, tax oin niuowfactur- ( ers' gross sales in many industries ] and for greatly increased! surtaxes on j big incomes were stricken out of the ; war rovnue bill today by th>e senate ; finance committee, cutting down by ' niuny millions the total revenue pro- < vidod for as the measures passed the house. i The munufacturres' sales tax was I rejected with the understanding that i other and probably lower fevies would [ be submitted later. After refusing t? accept the bouse increases surtaxes on incomes of more than $40,000. the committee approved the remainder of the income tax schedule virtually in the form in which it originally was drafted by the house ways and means committee. The decision to throw out the manufacturers' tax, which would have affected producers of motor vehicles and many forms of merchandise, was prompted by a desire to dominate the flat tax imposed upon business generally and to distribute the levy more equitably, the committeemen said. AMERICAN AIRMEN WILL BE TRAINED New York, May 2(3.?As though ii answer to Clermnny's air raid on th* British coast, plans for immediate training and equipment of 10,000 American airmen for the European front were announced here today by the United States aircraft production board through President Hawley of the Aero Club of America. CALOMEL SALIVATES AND MAKES YOU SICK Acts like dynamite on a sluggish liver and you lose a day's work. There's no reason why a person should take sickening, salivating calomel when 50 cents buys a large bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone?a perfect substitute for calomel. It is a pleasant, vegetable liquid which will start your liver just as surely as calomel, but it doesn't make you sick and can not salivate. Children and grown folks can takt Dodson's Liver Tone, because it is perfectly harmless. Calomel is a dangerous drug It ; is mercury and attacks your bones | Take a dose of nasty calomel today | and you will feel weak, sick and nau-1 seated tomorrow. Don't lose a day's- j uu?-L- To *--? " ~ ' *. ?i\r a .*jiWUlllUl OI lJOdSOn'S | Liver Tone instead and you wili wake up feeling great. No mort | biliousness, constipation, sluggish -1 ness, headache, coated tongue or! 1 sour stomach. Your druggist says if you don't find Dodson's Liver Tone acts better than horrible calo-, mel your money is wai-ting for you. ?adv I W Meant One reason why we alwa to buy to suit the needs of the j Carolina. Another reason we lead i: t ! ?- ? uuymg in ine way ot the lowest kets for the goods the people i Another reason is that w always done, that the public is We mean to lead. ViSIT US AT OUR S DUSENBUF Toddville, UD, COKWAT, 8. 0. HELP UNCLE SAM I BY GETTING BUNDS -Two and a half millions- irt the! wuse of Liberty", is the slo^pjt thati has been sent out to South Carolinians everywhere by the- Liberty, Bond Committee of South Carolina, in an effort to place the state'.'*?jaota of; p;ar bonds upon the mark-* -withou' delay. June -r>th, registration duv. is tin linte chosen for the big thiive. It i i t> be Liberty Loan clay, ?*n which, every man and woman imthe .-date { with a single dollar to invent will b? called ujwn to rally to the rapport of; the government and finance the war. Only a small proportion of men will have to register, anul o?t~ these a much smaller number will have to g<. to the battle front; but practically every citi/.en of the state- can do hi:bit by buying a fifty dollar bond. Owing to the stupondbas size of the hvun,-?So,000.000,000? it will require subscriptions from ri?:h and pooi | alike. Already the rich men of the country are subscribing by the milliens; but it will lake much more! than this. Kvery farmer, large am' small, every rr.erchajvt, clerk, bankei and stenographer a ho has a dollai above actual livi C4? expenses is exported to buy at least a fifty dollai bond. The people of the farms and country districts must unite with the poopic of the cities in subscribing, o; else the Man will he a failure. Some of the rich men of the country are taking millions; and it is equally a important for the small farmers and merchants to take their hundreds. K. W. Robertson, of Columbia chairman of the committee appointed by the Federal Reserve Rank to push the sale of the bonds in South Carolina, said yesterday: "If there is one special message that the Liberty Bond committee would impress upon the people of South Carolina it is that while money is not more important than men, it is absolutely necessary that the citizens of our commonwealth support with, their treasure the men who must be sent abroad to face the enemy on the firing line." J. Pope Matthews, also of the committee, said: "The government, as a giant corporation, has undertaken a gigantic project, and the men and women of America are called upon to become stockholders in the corporation. It is purely a matter of investment, and dividends are payable, not only in money, but also in life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." C. H. Barron, a third member of the committee, said: "Liberty Bond Day has got to be one of the big day? in South Carolina. There must be no defeats on the battle front because Americans have failed to do their duty by buying bonds. Every man in the state is going to rally to the flag on June the 5th and do his duty." o So It Seems. Ex-Premier Viviani and Marsha! Joffre have not been so burdened by the cares of war as to forget the gentle art of kissing.?Evening Post. o No one can expect to be excused from doing his or her part in the war. Let each one do his part in one way or another. They are all important. e o Lead i ys lead is that we know what people of this section of South ; s that we do some careful . prices to be had on the martvant and need. e believe now, as we have v/iiuucu iu a dvjudi U UtJdt. TORE. tv & co. ; S. C.l ANOTHER CffiSP OF PEACE RUMORS German Reply, to Spain Sat- 1 isfies Premier on Patricio Incident. Another crop peace rumors ha> made its appearance. Repoi-ts t'roin ali kinds of source**, unofficial, semiofficial, "inspired" and the like, tell o' offers from. Au stria to Russia. Germany to Russia anil Austria ami Germany to th?s collective Kntente i powers. The unnamed diplomats wh< j apparently infest Switzerland ar-i j* lllliwilil 1 I V '11'tiv^ V...* * 1 - -- -,i: ^ \ n vr, k/ui nit-11" i> lunnin;; tangible or authentic to show what these repot tss are worth. The latest Clorman-Spanish crisis has subsided vkitli the receipt by Madrid of assurances front Berlin whici Hremiei Brieto announces as salis factory. (.termany promises to re I sp.ect Spain's rights in her territ-?ria1 i waters, but. the text of the communication is not made pii -lic. The recalled Cuban minister 'it* Ber ! li?. report.* that matters are going badly at homo with the Hermans and I sees cracks in the imperial edifice and there, are fresh reports ot strikes ! i i Hungary. There seems litt'e quei tion that the food problem is an acute , one for the Central powers, but ini formats >n is too meager to permit i . 1 judgment as l<> what effect it may I hav.?r on the military situation. liii THINKS SUBMARINE IS LAYING MINES Danish Captain Tells of Suspicious Circumstances Off Hatteras. New York.?The skipper of a Danish steamship which arrived here today with sugar from Cuba had a mystery story t0 tell involving the possible presence of a submarine and a mine off Cape Hatteras. His ship was 33 miles north by east from Diamond Shoals lightship on May If), the Danish captain said, when wreckage was sighted. For thirty miles this extended, casks and white painted boards and other debris indicating a vessel had met a violent end. A cylindrical tank, six feet long and a foot in diameter, galvanized, with peculiar end attachments and ; with II />Imi!" 41. ? 4? ? ....... u'iiiiwi v.IUUI1 ?.mi Lilt" LI)J) SUt'THCC, attracted the captain's attention and he steered toward it. An officer ughtcd about that time what appear jed to be a spar sticking about IS inches out of the water. As the Danish vessel neared :t, this object slowly submerged. Some distance to starboard a British steamship was . : proceeding northward. The Danish skipper suspected he might be in the presence of a mine I laying submarine which, having destioyed one vessel, was lying in wait for the Briton t<> starboard, and lie at once ordered full steam ahead. Read the Story in this Paper, Esass* A photoplay without an equal 'WntstyrnonCasde Dtvtmi. AtafAtewn tfovnon to dm^rkm AwW h INTRKN ATIONAI to P A T H E ggvgat BGIUANS' BI6 ffilVE NETS MORE ADVANCE Cfcrfoma's Brilliant Offensive Against Austrians Continues Unchecked SR1MGS HIS FORCES CLOSER TO TRIEST DXial Monarchy's Line Gives Way, Assailants Capturing Fortified Positions. (Ifii. C'udonia's brilliant offensive continues unchecked, each day finding the Italian line projecting a little farther down the Carso plateau to. ward 'I*liest. The Austrian line gave way again ?n Friday between Castagnavizza ami the (lull* of Triesti, the advancing Italian troops carrying another heav;ly fortified position ami capturing an additional h,.~>00 men. Their capture; '11 the offensive beginning May 11 now total 'J2.-11 The Italian right flank, resting on :'.,i coast. Itas passed the mouth of the i'imavo river, while the centre the army in this sector has been pushed beyond Jumaino. the advance i king in the heights between Florida r and Medeazzo. The right wing is operating around Castaguavizza and has taken additional trenches there. In the region north of tliorizia the Italian forces are maintaining their gains scored last week on the captured heights taken as a preliminary t) the present determined drive for Triest in the coast sector. Heavy Austrian attacks in the Vodice area were repulsed and in the Plava sector the Austrians were pushed still farther back. Seventy-six persons were killed and 174 injured in Dover or' Folkestone* England, early Friday evening in the most ambitious raid on England yet made by German aircraft. Of the killed 27 were women and 2:1 children. Ot the injured 43 were women and children. There were lb aircraft in the raid, probably all airplanes as no Zeppelins are mentioned in the report. Which of the places suffered most severely is not disclosed by Hrit ish official reports but 60 bombs were showered upon one of the communities. The bombs, w hich were of large size, cut a swath across the city are! killed many persons who were in the chief business thoroughfare. At one *pot in this street 16 women, eight men and nine children were killed. The aircraft passed over the community in four sections with intervt.ls between them, each dropping its share of bombs. On their return across the English hannel the German raiders were atracked by air squadrons of the royal navy air service from Dunkirk anl hroe of them, all airplanes, were .hot down. This was the second Ger man air raid on England within three H it v vi German artillery is displaying incvcased activity against the British in he sector of the Arras battle front from the Soarpe river south to Croisselles. The French announce new progress on the Champagne front and the repulse of two German counterattacks against the French salients east and west of Corny. The German war office states that the army groups of the German crown prince captured 545 officers and men and 15 machine guns in an attack on the French trenches on the ChemindcjuDames, south of Pargny. lu adds that French attacks on a three mile front south of N'auroy, in th<> western Champagne, were repulsed. Russian troops frustrated a Turkish attempt to dislodge them from sou m o! van, on the Caucasus front. CLEAR YOl R SKIN IN SPRING.. Spring house cleaning means clean ing inside and outside. Hull pimply skin is an aftermath of winter inactivity. Flush your intestines with x mild taxative and clean out the accumulated wastes, easy to Like, they do not gripe. Dr. King's New Life Pills will clear your complexion and brighten your eye. Try Dr. Kind's New Life Fills to-night and throw off the sluggish winter shell. At druggisLs, 25c.? (adv. 2.) *-\ Folly Island. Folly island is about the best nenie that we know of for a blind tiger booze depot.? Florence Times.