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11 THE PENS AC OLA JOURNAL, WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 22 1911. MM - &ftger Ttz "Qrzzt Ccsssrvatioa Br SAIUni GAHLAND CepyS ijaa. by BszaSa -Garixod (Continued from Page Three) ' In the end the rancher promised to Co this, bat his tone was that of a bro- ken and distraught dotard. All the landmarks of bis life seemed suddenly 'lifted. I Meanwhile the sufferings of Wetber ; ford were increasing, and Cavanagh was forced to give op all hope of get l ting him down the trail next mora - Ing, and when Swenson, " the forest ; g-aard from the South Fork, knocked ' At the door to say that he had been to the valley -and that the doctor was jeoming op with Redfleld and the dis trict forester Boss thanked him, but . ordered him to go Into camp across the river and to warn everybody to keep dear of the cabin. "Put your i packages down outside the door," he lidded, "and take charge of the sltua- (Hon on the outside. Til take care of the business Inside." Wetherford was in great pain, but ;- the poison of the disease had misted " tils brain, and he no longer worried iover the possible disclosure of his lden- t!ty. At times he lost the sense of bis eurroundings and talked of his prison 3!fe or of the long ride northward. Once he rose in his bed to beat off ; the woives which be said were attack ing his pony. He was a piteous figure as he strug ; Cled thus, and it needed neither his relationship to Lee nor his bravery in caring for the Basque herder to fill f the ranger's heart with a desire to re l lieve his suffering. "Perhaps I should I fcave sent for LIze at once," he mused l .3 the light brought out the red sig , natures of the plague. Once the old man looked up with : vide, dark, unseeing eyes and mur- mured, "I don't seem to know yon." Tm a friend. My name is Cava- nagh." t . "I can't place yon," he sadly admit ted. "I feel pretty bad. If I ever get cut of this place Fm going back to the Jork. Ill get a gold mine; then I'll (ro back and make up for what Lize .as gone through, I'm. afraid to go tack now." , - a. "All right," Robs soothingly agreed. TBut you'll have to keep quiet till you pet over this fever you're suffering from." "Tf LIze weren't so far away she'd tome and nurse me. I'm pretty sick." - Swenson came back to say that probably Itedfleld and the . doctor would reach the station by noon, and thereafter, for the reason .that Cava cagh expected their coming, the hours dragged woefully. It was after 1 o'clock before Swenson announced that two teams were coming with three men and two women in them. They'll be here in half an hour." -The ranger's heart leaped.- Tra romen! Could one of them be Lee Virginia? 'What folly what sweet, desperate folly! And the other she could not be Lize, for Lize was too feeble to ride so far. "Stop them on the other side of the bridge," he com manded. "Don't let them cross the preek on any pretext." ,.As he stood in the door the Cutter of a handkerchief, the waving of a tiand, made his pulse glow and his ' eyes grow dim. , It was Virginia! Lize did not Cutter a kerchief or fwave a hand, but when Swenson stop ped the carriage at the bridge she said: o, you don't! I'm going across. I'm crolng to see Ross, and if he needs help , I'm going to roll up my sleeves and - take hold." ' Cavanagb saw her advancing, and as the came near enough for his, voice to reach her he called out: "Don't come cny closer! Stop, I tell your His . jvolce was stern. "Ton must not come Va step nearer. Go back across the dead line and stay there. No one but , the doctor shall enter this door. Now, that's final." ; "I want to help!" she protested. "I know you do, but I won't have It fThis quarantine is real, and It goes!" "But suppose you yourself get sick?" t tS "We'll cross that bridge when we I p?t to it I'm all right so far, and Til call for help when I need It." His tone was imperative, and she obeyed, grumbling about his youth and the value of his life to the service. "That's all very nice." he replied. fcut I'm In It, and I don't Intend to expose you or any one else to the con tagion." ;L Tve had It once," she asserted. ' lie looked at her and smiled In ree- ognition of her subterfuge. . "No matter; you're. aillngand might Oats Carry Disease and are & doMMts menace to life and also the rreatest destroyers or property, w Steams' Elsstiis Rat h Roach Pasta Is a sure exterminator of rats, mice, cockroaches and ail vermin. Get the resume. Money Back If It Falls Z5c and $1. CO. M Evtrrwfcsn Jiaur tutrix run cscusapA ii? rest t y Restores color to Gray or Faded hair Removes Dan druff and invigorates the Scalp Promotes a luxuriant, healthy hair growth Stops its falling out Is not a dye. J1.00 and SOe at Drag Store or direct apoa receipt of price and dealers seme. Scad 10c for ample battle. Philo Her Speeialtice Co Newark. N. J., U.S.A. EEFUSB ALL SUBSTITUTES take ltagaln7""so toddle-back. Tt's mighty good of you and of Lee to come, but there Isn't a thing you can do, and here's, the doctor," he added as he recognized the young student who passed for a physician in the Fork. , Ha .was a beardless youth of small experience and - no great cour age, and as be approached with hesi tant feet be asked: " -.- "Are yon sure It's smallpox 7" Cavanagh smiled. "The Indications are all that way. That last Importa tion of Basques brought it probably from the steerage of the ship. I'm told they've had several cases over in tbe basin." , Tava yon been vaccinated?" Tea, when I was In the army." : Then you're all right." "I hope so." , , There was a certain comic relief In this long - distance diagnosing of a "case" by a boy, ana yet the tragic fact beneath it all was that "Wether ford was dying, a broken and dishon ored husband and father, and that his Identity must be concealed from his wife and daughter, who were much more deeply concerned over the ran ger than over the desperate condition of his patient.; "And this must con tinue to be so," Cavanagh decided. And as he stood there looking toward the girl's fair figure on the bridge he came to the final, fixed determination never to speak one word or make a elgn that might lead to the dying man's Identification. "Of what use Is 8t?"'he asked himself. "Why should even Lize be made, to suffer? Wether ford's poor misspent life la already over for her, and for Lee he Is only a dim memory." Bedfleld came near enough to see that the ranger's face, though tired, showed no sign of Illness and was re lieved. "Who. Is this old herder r ho asked. . "Hasn't ho any relatives la the country?" "He came from Texas, so be said. You're not coming in?" he broke off to say to the young physician, whom Lize had shamed into returning to the cabin. . "I suppose m have to," he protest ed weakly. . "I don't see the need of It The whole place reeks of the poison, and you might carry it away with you. Unless you Insist on coming In and are sure you can prevent further con tagion I shall oppose your entrance. Ton are In the company of others. I must consider their welfare." The young - fellow was relieved. "Well, so long as we know what It Is I can prescribe Just as well right here," he said and gave directions for the treatment, which the ranger agreed to carry out ' "I tried to bring a nurse," explained Bedfield. "but I couldn't find anybody but old Lize who would come." "I don't blame them," replied Ross. r "It isnt a nice Job, even when you've got all the conveniences." His eyes as he spoke were on the figure of Lee, who still stood on the bridge, awed and worshipful, barred of approach by, Lize. "She shall not know," he silently vowed. "Why put her through useless suffering and shame? Edward Wetherford's disor dered life Is near Its end. To betray him to his wife and daughter would be but the reopening of an old wound." He was stirred to the center of his heart by the coming of Lee Virginia, so sweet and brave and trustful. His stern mood melted as he watched her there waiting, with her face turned toward him, longing to help. "She would have come alone If necessary," he declared, with a fuller revelation of the self sacrificing depth of her love, "and she would come to my side this moment If I called her." He went back to his repulsive serv ice sustained and soothed by the little camp of faithful friends on the other side of the stream. During one of his clearest moments Wetherford repeated his wish to die a stranger. "I'm going out like the old time west, a rag of what I once was. Don't let them know. Put no name over me. Just say, 'An old cowpunch er lies here,' " Cavanagh's attempt to change his hopeless tone proved unavailing. En feebled by his hardships and his pris on life, he had little reserve force upon which to draw In fighting such an en emy. He sank soon after this little speech Into a coma which continued to hold him In Its unbroken grasp as night f elL Meantime, seeing no chance of aid ing the ranger, Redfleld and the for ester prepared to return, but Lee, re- enforced by her mother, refused to ac company them. "I shall stay here," I she said, "till he Is safely out of it- till I know that he Is beyond all dan ger." Redfleld did not urge her to return a vigorously as Dalton expected him to do, but when he understood the girl's desire to be near her lover he I took off his hat and bowed to her. i "You are entirely In the right" he J said. "Here is where you belong." Red field honored Lize for her sym pathetic support of her daughter's res olution and expressed his belief that Ross would escape the plague. "I feel . J that his splendid vigor, combined with the mountain air.- will carry "him through, even If he should prove not to be Immune. I shall run up again day after tomorrow.- I shall be very anxious. What a nuisance that the telephone line is not extended to this point Ross has been Insisting on its value for months." Lee saw the doctor go with some dismay. Young as he was, he was at least a reed to cling to in case the grisly terror seized upon the ranger. "Mr. Redfleld. can't you send a real doctor? It seems so horrible to be left here without Instructions." The forester, before going, again be sought Cavanagh -not to abandon his work In the forestry service and Inti mated that at the proper time ad vancement would be offered him. "Th whole policy Is but beginning," saiaf be, "and a practical ranger with your experience and education will prove of greatest value." To this Roes made reply: "At the moment I feel that no promise of ad vancement could keep me In this coun try of grafters, poachers and assassins. I'm weary of it and all it stands for. However, if I could aid in extending the supervision of the public ranges and In stopping forever this murder an4 burning that go on outside the' forestry domain I might remain in the west" "Would yon accept the supervlsor ehip of the Washakie forest?" demand ed Dalton. Taken by surprise, he stammered, "1 might but am I the man?" ' "You are. Your experience fits you for a position where the fight is hot The Washakie forest is even more a bone of contention than this. We have laid out the lines of division between the sheep and the cows, and it will take a man to enforce our regulations. You will havVthe support of the bent citizens. They will all rally, with you as leader, and so end the warfare there." "It , can never end till Uncle Sam puts rangers over every section of pub lic lands and lays out the grazing lines as we have done in this forest re torted Cavanagh. . 1 know, but to get that require a revolution In the whole order or things." Then his fine young face lighted tip. "But we'll get It Public sentiment Is coming our way. The old order Is already so eaten away that only Its shell remains." "It may be. If these assassins are punished I shall feel hopeful of the change," "I shall recommend yon for the su pervisors hip of the Washakie forest" concluded Dalton decisively. "And so goodby and good luck." England, his blood relatives, even the Redfields, seemed very remote to the ranger as he stood In his door that night and watched the sparkle of Swenson's campfire through the trees. With the realization that there waited a brave girl of the type that loves sin gle heartedly, ready to sacrifice every thing to the welfare of her Idealized subject he felt unworthy, selfish, vain. "If I should fail sick she would In sist on nursing me. For her sake I must give Swenson the most rigid or ders not to allow her, no matter what happens, to approach. I will not have her touched by this thing." Beside the blaze Lee and her mother sat for the most part In silence, with nothing to do but to wait the issue of the struggle going on in the cabin, so near and yet so inaccessible to their wllL, It was as if a magic wan, crys tal clear, yet impenetrable, shut them away from the man whose quiet hero- Ism was the subject of their constant thought It was marvelous, as the dusk fell and the air nipped keen, to see bow Lize Wetherford renewed her youth. The excitement seemed to have given her a fresh hold on life. - She was wearied, but by no means weakened, by her ride and ate heartily of the rude fare which Swenson set before her. "This Is what I needed," she ex ultantly said '"the open air and these trout I feel ten years younger al ready. Manys the night I've camped on the range with your father with nothing but a purp tent to cover us both and the wolves howling round tis. I'd feel pretty fairly gay If it wasn't for Ross over there in that cabin playing nurse and cook all by bis lonesomeness." Lee expressed a deep satisfaction from the fact of their nearness. "If he is Hi we can help him," she reiter ated. There was a touch of frost In the air as they went to their beds, and, though she shivered, Lize was undis mayed. "There's nothing the matter with my heart," she exulted. "I don't believe there was anything really seri ous the matter with me, anyway. I reckon I was Just naturally grouchy and worried over you and Ross." Continued Next Sunday. There is a DIFFERENCE between OUR work and the "other fellow'" Let us PROVE it BOSTON SHOE SHOP, 8 and 10 "W. Romana St Mistress (engaging servant) I hope you know your place? " Servant Oh, yes, mum. The last four girls you had told me all about it London Opinion. More Property Destroyed In the south every year by rata mice, roaches and other vermin than can be calculated. It would mean millions of dollars to the people of the southern states if every one, of these pests could be removed. The moat efficient remedy la demanded. Our famous rat pofeon. on the market a years, never fall. It attracts rata and other vermin by Its odor. Drives them outside to die. It la Maurer'e Rat and Roach Paste. Certain death for rata. mice, roaehea. 10 ana X cents a box. AH druga-Iata. Insist on Uaurera. The la-no -substitute. HER AGE 72, BUT APPETITE GOOD Lady in Thayer Enjoys Bet ter Health Than Many Women Who Are j Much Younger. Thayer, Kans. "I was so nervous, I could not sleep," says Mrs. Emma J. Hickman, of this place, "I had wo manly troubles for many years, and tried different remedies, without re lief. Since I began to take Cardui. I have been greatly benefited. Cardu! is a precious medicine. I am stronger than I have been for years. I have a good appetite, sleep good, and the tired feeling I had Is almost gone. Cardui Is a nerve healer. I advise all nervous ladles to take K. The medicine has certainly helped me. My health is good, although I am 72 years old. I talk to my lady frlend3 about Cardui, for it is a splendid medi cine for women." 4 For more than BO years, Cardui has been wonderfully successful in reliev ing women of all ages from pain and sickness caused by womanly troubles. The herbs, and other vegetable in gredients, used in the manufacture of Cardui, the woman's tonic, have a spe cific healing, soothing, building, rem edial action, on the womanly organs and constitution. ' Cardui acts as a general tonic for weak, tired, worn-out women, who find life a daily grind, that1 sometimes seems unbearable. Cardui builds womanly health and strength quickly and permanently. Just try it Your druggist has It N. B. Write to: Ladles Advisory DepU Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanoors, Tenn. tor Special Instructions, and 64 page bookv T'Home Treatment for Women," sent in plain wrapper, on request. , A NEW YORK STREET WHERE SPENDERS LtVE A THOROUGHFARE LITTLE KNOWN TO FAME THAT IS A8 REMARKABLE IN ITS WAY AS WALL STREET, , OR BROAD WAY. New York, March 2 L Wall Street is the place where the New Yorkers make money the fastest but It has Us coun terpart uptown In a section of a street equally limited In extent where money is spent with equal facility and rapidi ty. This is not as might be expected a part of Broadway or Fifth avenue, but the portion of Forty-fourth street lying between the two more famous thoroughfares. "Within this narrow space two blocks in extent foregather every day men and women whose In dividual yearly Incomes surpass . the largest fortunes of a hundred years ago. What the total of their com bined fortunes may be no one has at temtped to estimate, but it must be so large as to be reckoned only in bil lions. In the part of Forty-fourth street Just mentioned are many of the resorts where these money princes take their pleasure. It is the home of clubdom, of great hotels and luxurious restaur ants, where daring the season there Is a continual succession of dinners. luncheons, suppers and balls In the giving of which cost is not considered. except to outdo some previous enter tainment In lavish extravagance. Among the wealthy and exclusive clubs that line this street with valuations anywhere between $1,000,000 and $10, 000,000 each, is the St Nicholas, which admits no one who is not the descend ant of a New Yorker resident In the city prior to 1785. Membership in this organization is almost the only thing on Forty-fourth 6treet that money can not buy. Nothing but conclusive proof of descent from the eld city fathers will obtain admission, and names like those of Van Reneselaer, Astor, Liv ingston, De Peyster, Pell and Stuyve sant dominate its register. The Racquet Club. Not far away, though fronting on the next street is the Racquet Club, the favorite resort of wealthy sporting men. Among its eight hundred mem bers are the Vanderbilts, from William K. to Reginald: the Goulds, John Jacob and William Waldorf Astor, Clarence II. Mackay, Payne Whitney, the Bel monts, and many others In the same set to whom a $1,000 supper is a mat ter of no moment whatever. The money spent annually on sport by the members of this club Is estimated at more than $5,000,000. Most of these men also belong to the New York Yacht Club, which occupies a magnifi cent building close byr and counts J. P. Morgan. C. Oliver Iselin, Lewis Cass Ledyard and many others of wealth and prominence among Its members. No less than $30,000,000 is represented in the yachts owned by members of this club. The club houeos of Harvard and Yale occupy opposite sides of the street and close ty are the Academy of Medicine and the building occupied by the Bar Association. Upon the rolls of these associations and the college clubs are to be found the names of some of the brighest men In the na tion, such as Theodore Roosevelt Eli hu Root Joseph Choete, Paul D. Crawath. William Travers Jerome and the most prominent medical men In the country, men who earn their for tunes by the practice of their profes sion, judges, congressmen, diplomats and statesmen who are known all over the union. In this street too. Is the home oX the Lambs. Some of them are wealthy, but more are richer In brains than In money, though they spend the latter when they have it with an open handedness equal to that of any of the milllonarles around them. The City Club, where many of the Important re form movements that have Influenced the political history of New York have had their inception, is located in Forty-fourth street and almost across from it is tha Phi Gamma Delta Club, made up of members of that college fraternity. At opposite ends of these two short blocks in which is concentrated so much of the lavish expenditure of wealthy New Yorkers are located three of the most celebrated establishments in the country devoted to public en tertainment At the Broadway corner Is the Hotel Astor with its multitude of restaurants and private dining rooms, including the largest hotel room In the world In which the greatest publio dinners held In the city take place; " Here, from beginning to end of the winter ' season, occurs a long suc cession of dinners In which the most prominent men in the country partici pate as guests and speakers. Fre quently a dozen of these dinners are going on' at the same time under the one roof." - During- the present season President Taft ex-President Roosevelt .three of the justices of the supreme court and scores of other national leaders of thought and action have delivered im portant addresses here at banquets, the combined cost of which during a season mounts well up toward the mil lion mark, a single dinner representing frequently' an expenditure of tens of thousands of dollars. At the other boundary of the short stretch of pavement constituting what may appropriately be termed "the street of spenders," two restaurants of International reputation Delmonlco's and Sherry's face each other. Both are centres of lavish entertainment of costly dinners and of other social af fairs In which the members of the "iOO" vie with one another. While Forty-second street still main tains the record for having the largest number of theatres of any one In New York, Forty-fourth Is a close second with no less than six playhouses. In cluding the largest one in the city. The audiences which these attract add not a little to the sum total expended daily In this street of nimble dol lars. Money Is the Keynote. In fact the keynote of this stret is money. In every club elaborate deco ration and luxurious appointments In dicate the personal extravagance which distinguishes a large proportion of the members. . Only a wealthy can can af ford to belong to the more expensive ones, for, in order to "keep up his end," a member must throw away his dollars with both hands and he does It More than $1,000,000 Is annually spent upon wines and cigars alone in Forty-fourth street It Is said that the club dues here amount to over $750,000 a year. J. P. Morgan, who belongs to fewer clubs than many other prominent New York ers, pays $7,000 In dues annually. W. Gould Brokaw Is a member of twenty five clubs, Foxhall Keen of twenty, Au gust Belmont of thirty-two, an so on. each man paying from $5,000 to $10, 000 a year merely to belong to the clubs, some of which he may hardly visit And, withall the money they Bpend upon themselves, they do not by any means stint their wives and daughters. Inasmuch as a rough esti mate of the value of the dresses and diamonds worn by the women who frequent the Hotel Astor, Sherry's and Delmonlco's any evening during the season gives a result of between $8, 000.000 and $10,000,000.' - Figuratively speaking. Forty-fourth street is paved with gold.' Years ago it was occupied by stables, sheds and ramshackle buildings, but these have given place to palatial structures. In twenty-five years larld here has appre ciated In value nearly ten-fold and it still goes on Increasing year by year. . From Broadway to Fifth avenue the distance Is but a third of a mile, but the person on foot has difficulty mak ing way along the awning-covered sidewalks, through crowds; of dlnners out theatre-goers and their attend ants, while the electric cabs, automo biles and carriages form double lines along this narrow way through a won derland of luxury. It Is estimated that 10,200 vehicles pass through this street each day, and 10,000 of this number apparently are there between the hours of six and twelve each night when The Cause of Colds Good Advice Regarding the Prevention of Coughs ; and Colds. If people would only fortify and strengthen the system, the majority rf cases of coughs, colds and pneumonia might be avoided. These troubles are frequently due to weakness, which produces a catarrhal condition of the mucous membrane, which is an Inter nal skin of the body. When this skin is weakened it becomes easily infected with germs which cause many of the diseases to which flesh Is heir. Healthy mucous membranes are essential safe guards of the body's general health. We have a remedy which we honest ly believe to be unsurpassed In excel lence for the prevention of coughi, colds and all catarrhal conditions. It is the prescription of a famous physi cian, who has an enviable reputation of thirty years of cures gained througn the use of this formula. We promise to make no charge for the medicine should It fail to do as we claim. We urge everybody who has need of such a medicine to try Rexall Mucu-Tone. It stands to reason that we could not afford to make such statemerts and give our own personal guarantee to this remedy If we were not prepared to prove the reasonableness of our claim in - every particular, and we see no reason why any one should hesitate to accept our offer and try It We have two sizes of Rexall Mucu-Tone, prlc 50 cents and $1.00. Sometimes a 60 cent bottle Is sufficient to give marked relief. As a general thing the most chronic case Is relieved with an aver age of three large bottles. You can obtain Rexall Remedies in Pensacola only at our store. The Rexall Store Tha Ctrstal Pharmacy, Brent Bldg. "Cured Neuralgia Pain' take pleas ure 1Q writing to vou that I had a neuralgia pain in my arm for five years, and I used your Liniment for one week and was completely cured. I recommend your Liniment very highly." Mrs. J. McGraw, 1216 Mandeville St, New Orleans, La. Cured Quinsy Sore Throat Mr. Hexry L. Caulk, of 1242 Wilson St, Wilmington, DeL, writes : "I bought a bot tle of Sloan's Liniment for the quinsy sore throat and it cured me. I shall always keep a bottle in the house." JLQAM' IIMMIIT gives instant relief from rheu matism, lumba go, sciatica, neu ralgia, croup, sore throat, ton silitis, hoarse ness and chest pains. Pr!oes,25a50o.&1XO Sloan's feook on horeea, cattle, sheep and poultry seat free. Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Sasa, TT.8.A. the clubs, the dining palaces, the ball rooms and the Astor combination of all are in full swing. No one walks here but those who serve, or those who are but passing through. Those for whom this street exists, as It is touch foot to ground only where the latter Is paved with velvet and although jiany of the feet that only touch the velvet are large and many more unbeautiful, all are shod in shining leather and most bear a weight which Is made up of solid gold would not equal the fortunes of - the persons they bear. RACE SUICIDE Is not nearly the menace to Increase In population that deaths among In fants are. Eight out of ten of these deaths are directly or Indirectly caused by bowel troubles. McOee's Baby EHx'r cures diarrhoea, dysentery, sour stom ach and all Infant ailments of this na ture, 'Just the thing for teething babies. Price 25o and 50o per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Peter Miller ; Pronounced Insane Peter Miller, the negro who was taken to the police station Mondav night for safe keeping, and who had been acting queerly for some days, was yesterday afternoon examined by a lunacy commission and declared to be J insane. ' ' j He is stni In the city Jail, but will be turned over to the county author- i ties and sent to the asylum as soon as arrangements can be made. The Usual Role. Charles II. Schyb, fn recent. In terview In New "Torl TToiited1 out the folly of Ignorant Bpetetjon. "The average manfttgv no knowl edge of finance," he satdtfiJhas no busi ness to speculate. Let htm do so, and his case is Jones' all over aealn. "Jones stepped In at a garage one ; morning to see about selling off h'.s two automobiles. 1 heard you've been speculating on the stock exchange, Mr. Jones,' the agent said, politely. "Yes,' said Jones. "Now, these car, understand, can be had cheap for cash.' "Were you a bull or a bear, sir? asked the agent "Neither said Jones,' gruffly. 1 was an ass.'" Detroit Free Press. Tp&iQ,b Edge Mounted Grindstone A rrlndstooe ! valuable according- to He usability. A one man grindstone is almost necessary. This grindstone is mounted accurately with ban axle bearings and baU crank bearinga. The double treadle enables you to run this stone easily and do any kind of grinding. Tbere are no pins nor loose parts and a3 castings are malleable iron. Try this the first time you come in the store H. W. GIBBS HDW. CO. ', Thlesen Building.' Iff 4 13 rv Aire OUR present agricul tural products have not been equaled in bulk or value during the world's history. And crops are the basis of all business. We have the raw products; we have the mills to make and the railroads to distribute the finished products. There is not a single, good reason on earth for bad business this year. Yet many men are fear ing a business depression. Why ? Allan L. Benson tells why in Pearson's Magazine now ont'sale. His article shows how utterly needless are "hard times" now or at any other time. It outlines one way (which you may or may not like) . forpre venting our frequent ' ' business depressions. ' ' Here is information which . you can use. It will be particularly inter esting if you are worried about s the business outlook. 1 1 r In tlis same issue of tie maga zine another article explains the astonishing conditions in American coal mines shows how coal-mine owners for about S cents a ton take chances which kill or maim 7,000 men a year. The story of Robert Reid, " Painter of the Joy f Life," Is told by David Graham Phillips. Joseph Fels, millionaire, ' explains what he meant when he said all rich Americans were robbers; he speaks plainly. A fourth article gives the common-sense cure for baldness, shows what to do when you begin to lose your hair. For entertain ment simply the magazine contains three other articles, and Seven Time Destroying Stories Magazine for Ap r i 1 TThat cured him of Eating? "He started a flirtation with a lady who turned out to be selling an ency clopedia at $2C0 a eef Louisville Court er-Journal. Have your Shoes repaired by tho same SYSTEM by which they were made. WE are the ONLY Shop in Pensacola using the GOODYEAJt WELT SYSTEM. BOSTON SHQ SHOP. S and 10 W. Horn ana St . 4' i