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II THE "PENSACOLA JOURNAL, THURSDAY MORNING, APRIL 27, 1911. ftfl UTItATC IHCLEMEHT. WEATHER MS Hi DAY PROGRAM AS PLANNED COULD NOT BE CARRIED OUT EXER CSSES WERE HELD IN SCHOOL NO. 1 P.EV. EUGENE R.PENDLE- TON ORATOR OF DAY. Letter From Sister-in-law Probably Saved His Life. CURES WL o BLOOD INFECTIOUS Contagions Blood Poison, as the name indicates, is an infections hlood disease, of such, intense nature that once the virus gets into the circulation, no portion of the body is free The program arranged for Memorial Tav hv the Ladies' Confederate Me morial Association yesterday could not be carried out in full on account of the inpimnt wpather. However, the ex ercises at the school building: on North Hill were appropriate and Impressive. otovo nf the dead heroes had Wn covered with flowers gathered v accn and children of the sev- oi rnfoHorate societies, and the rv.n fori t a monument In Lee square was draped with Confederate bunting: nnnH wis covered with Quantities of southern flowers. It was intended that the exercises be held in the park, but when the rain continued from early morning: the teachers of school No. 1 offered that building: in which to hold the exercises and appropriately decorated It for the occasion. Southern flowers and smilax and many large and small Confederate flags, together with the pictures of southern generals were used to decor ate the halls of the school. . Mayor Reilly presided during the ex ercises of the afternoon and made an Impressive talk that was appropriate to the occasion. Rev. Mr. Brown offered a prayer asking Divine assistance for the pres ent and coming generations to always be steadfast to principle and strive to work for what is right and good. The school children sang 'Dixie" and "Tenting On the Old Camp Grounds," and Miss Mildred Kessler sweetly Bang "Maryland My Maryland." Rev. Eugene R. Pendleton was the orator of the day. His address did not contain anything that would offend the Union veterans if they had been there, but it was a talk full of love for the heroes of both sides of the conflict that fought for principles they believ ed were right. He said that it was rroper and right that In the spring time, when the season was brightest and the flowers the prettiest, the des cendents of the ones who took part in the deadly conflict should Join with the Veterans and the Daughers of the Confederacy to place flowers upon the Eraves and shedtears for those who iionor conferred anm crVit v.ra a.ro I u inocu lated with poison by a nurse who l&xectoa my p wmu "" .. I was covered with sores and ulcers from head to root, J. wa aavuea use S. 8. S. We rot some, and I im proved from the start, and a complete and perfect cure wes the result. 8. 8. 8. is the only blood remedy which reach.. Box 800, Barazuiah, Ga. I was afflicted with a terrible blood disease, which was In apota at first, but alterwarda spread all oyer my body. These broke out into aores, and it is aaay to imagine the Buffering I endured. When I had finished my firat bottla of 8. B. 8. I was 7Wy improved, and waa dellgrhted with the result. I waa aoon entirely well, and my akin waa as clear as a pieoa ofrlass. H. L. MEIBaSi 68 Clinton St., Newark, N. J. by the use of the same toilet articles or handling the The same eye witness says that he discovered, in the woda, a boy with fresh face, sitting against a pine tree, dead, with his head leaning on his shoulder, and In his hand waa clutched n fliitor nf vnnd violets. Another During the month of November, 1908, 1 one held In his dead hand a note UDOn I waa taken with pains in the back, j wnjch was written the address of his loins and legs. I could not sleep, nad ratner and the words: "I am mor- no appetite and 11 I stooped down, 1 wmin(1(id. Do not Brieve for me." could not straighten up. For the pain j hold ln v hand a hickory sprout :To .efmctive force unless it is promptly checked. in my back I tried several remedies of mt from the mast c Seven Pines bat- lf rsnaii hep-ins, with a tinv sore or pimple as the only several doctors, but of no avail, l tlefleld a few vears aeo where 15.000 , tU -Rn-in n short while? ita could not t any relief. My wife's men laJd down 1Ive8 on May 3Ut sister. Mrs. R. J. Black, 1424 So. Broad June lg62 7CaA nrr.ar nlrerate. itchin? rashes appear St, Philadelphia, Pa., wrote and ad- . Namele88 graves contain some of the a v "brown solotches ap- vised me to try Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- most chlvalrou9 and knightly dust that on the body the hair coXrJntZia SeaL Root, that it had cured her and several ever a 8Word n war, or made pear on the M JJfS others. I then wrote you ior a sampiej the Benate chamber ring with elo- inauus8omeuBii.viuiuuu.w.uv-.v-.t, ----- bottle, which I received by return malL quence ln peace. Even the sample brougm good results, what was the spirit which led so After taking the sample you sent me, many men f0r 8Q iong a period to huri I bought a small bottle and It began thelr llveg lnto 8uch a cajdron of fury to do me good. I bought four bottles as that? and today I am free from pains ln my I sreiv. it was no common army, on back, loins and limbs and sleep fine, either side. At a distance we may eat good and my indigestion has gone even see iSsmes more clearly than at entirely, and I surely had a bad attack I close ranse ani many a hero seems of Indigestion. I am not irouDiea taller ln death. Now that fifty years with pains in the back and limbs at of fraternal companionship have come all and feel like a new being and I and eone. the dove of peace spreads wish to state that Dr. Kilmer's 1 nlg ngg north and south, and love Swamp-Root cured me entirely of ailing conquered pride and passion, can those aliments. I we not 8ea that the heroes on both My. age is 51 years. My trade is a 8ldes c he lamenatble war are the mason; my occupation Is foreman for J common heroes of the nation? They the Birmingham Water "Works Co., were actuated by convictions as deep 2114 First Ave, I live at 2419 Fourth tnelr natures. and controlled by a Ave., Birmingham, Ala,, and will gladly 8pirtt which makes men immortal, on speak ln praise or ur. itnmer s whatever side they fall. l Daa m tinv on all llmM a a I . -. . s3Tu".-i."". i we see me Doys marcning 10 me i - . , :cnrl I thing it is the best medicine that I front under opposing flags. What that there is never any return of the old symptoms , it drives tne poison ever saw. were the convictions that led to the mmnletelv out bv purifying the blood. S. b. b. W Known every wuw ww long struggle? greatest of all blood purifiers, and for this reason it is a sure cure ior wn - - TT T'sArvllaMIT KTfcTiir S9T1C1 All V lUCU I I li - , ,-. ia, 1 It A Checking Account WortH Money Your time is money, therefore the time one loses in looking for receipted bills is so much money lost. This, of course, means a good sized leak in your income. All this trouble may be avoided by handling your funds through a checking account at The First National and paying all bills with checks. These checks are returned to you by the bank after payment has been made, and all being the same size and numbered and dated consecutively. are more easily filed away and kept than a mass 01 duis -oi clothes of an infected person. noTn?flTf4MsS!d j all sizes. One dollar or more opens an account be cleansed as quickly as possible of the destructive virus. S. S. S. has been curing Con tagious Blood Poison for more than forty years. It goes right down into the circulation, and removes every particle of the poison. While curing the disease S. S. S. add3 richness and nourishing powers to the blood, and a person -who is cured by the use of S. S. S. will find that every portion of the system has been benefited by the treat ment. S. S. S. cures so penecuy Yours truly. J. T. MANLET, Birmingham, "Ala. Jefferson County State of Alabama. Personally appeared before me, M. It is impossible to understand men talons Blood Poison. Write for our Home Treatment boox. anu uuy Hire those unlens we are will in ir to ad- I i.fi - A-drm, fM. R 55 S is for sale at urUET Stores. - - - - - u ira Mil v irr vuu maw 1 1 rii' w www- . . - " THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, UA. mit the heroism, whether mixed with mistaken or misunderstood purposes or not. That which made the army of A. Layet, a Notary Public ln and forthe south great was the character of said county ln said state, J. T. juamey i lta s0ldlery. They were not hirelings. who was made known to me, and who some of the best cavalier blood of being by me duly sworn deposes and the earth. They felt that they were saya that the above statements are repelling an Invader, and the boys in true. M. A. LAYET, Notary Public. Letter to Dr. Kilmer A Co., Blnghamton, N. Y. blue, as they shouldered their muskets and wheeled into line toward the south to meet them, felt that they were call ed upon to conquer a rebel foe. Pas sion had been excited by the leaders for forty years before, and now the line is drawn and each feels he must act. Here is the way they felt: A memphls mothers prayer for a boy of fifteen as he went to the front: "God bless my darling, venturous boy Whereer his feet may stray; Prove What Swamp-Root Will Da For Yob Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham- ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also re- ceive God bless the sacred, righteous cause tion. telling all about the kidneys and God bless the little arm 'round which Mission Gallery Swings With galvanized chain, $3.50 bladder. When writing, be sure ana mention the Dally Journal. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores. JO-4K3oihMfar Tkiimmuai. 7m. wMm SSBBBnaSBBaSIBBaBBPWaaEa. I My wristlet went not tight. Strengthen it, Lord, 'till it become A David's in the fight. always do. and it has not been the soldier who has kept the sore open, Their's is a different spirit. formed battle array along the line of go 7msng, so bright, so fair, so brave, Lg he lay deSDerately wounded In the northern Virginia, the dogwood was in i t0 thee, Oh! God above I wilderness, parching with thirst, and bloom, the violet lifted her head in theji leave the charge to shield and save Imoanine. a confederate officer crawled sylvan woods, tne azaieas spreaa gur- i Tne aoi Cf my love. geous patches of coloring over hill and j Qne more to battle for the right dale, and ln the far south cotton was 1 of free men to be free. over the works in the very teeth of danger, and filling his canteen at a branch, quenched the thirst of the upon me as maror v. v . . . I a . . . . . SJ!! t-.Lad!eS' Confederate m-t;; coon pick- th- thaJ M? ?rngmPl Memorial Association to preside upon Sy f ately wounded, and believing that he mis occasion. I . ' . " c " J "" "1C prjC ana mieht nntliv. m , hi nw in ixrinV'Aa a j . im mn nn t n nnH.A..iii .. - v mvtiiiiiK. winxiiprpn "The exercises today under the SnW ln WlntCr h&Ve mantled ov the coming personality of Its lllus- manding his pay. "What is that you've got there V asked the soldier in ap parent alarm. "A pistol." said his host, "and you must settle; you can not go away with my dinner in that fashion Much relieved, the soldier drew back and pulling a big army pistol, said "Oh, come around now, and we'll set tle. Im used to them, and cannon too, but my friend, you liked to have scared me, I thought that was a stom ach-pump.' Fifty years ago the whole country was in awful suspense. City was call ing to city, village to village, neigh borhood to neighborhood for news of Lee and Grant. Toward the close of the struggle the strain was intense. Here and there a lamp blinks in deserted, elm-shaded street, and in the dooryard of a little home on the back road off among the fields the boy who went from that home was off in Vir ginia a dog bays lonely. The half way querulous, potential, rumbling of the city has died down, "midnight clangs from the clocks in the steeples,' and the midnight editors of the great dallies in New York, Philadelphia Boston and Chicago are still holding jCktheir issues, hoping that the next ,.!Kf, fat. ODerating teleeranh num me oia army of the First National Bank of Pensacola, Florida. Designated Depository of the United States. C. BRENT, W. S. KEYSER. W. J. FORBrE President. Vice-President. . THOS. W. BRENT, Ass't Cashier. W. N. ROBERTS.. i Directors F. C. Brent, W. A. Blount, W. h. Knowies, w. j. roru, Knowles Hyer, Thos. W. Brent. , THE CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK PENSACOLA L. HILTON GREEN, President. WM. FISHER, Vice-President MANSFIELD MORENO, Asst-Cashler. A general banking business conducted on a safe and conservative basts. J. S. REESE. President R. M. CART, Vice-President J. W. DORR ' Cashier. The Peoples National Bank of Pensacola DIRECTORS... --'T23 J. J. HOOTON, R. M. CART, t. 3. REEVES. T. E. WELLES. W. A. D'ALEMBERTE, J. S. REESE. V. DeC. KESSLER, A General Banking Business Transacted and Accounts Solicited; Ships' Dlsbura ir-ents given Special Attention. Poto- words of religious comfort and in-j r - V-"" uuuer lne Brave nf : trioua rhfoi ru " ' h I7smr rT r n a v-r r r i i ' v waau uuts inn lion rr i nuuerL r. i ,aa nroa i . . . Association Is rSS ytha. most of them und onerously endowed by naturlm h iJ t'&M tribute iaia tn th , " . twenty-two. and we of todar hv i- most bountiful mood. He . ges under.lle th march of glory. mac. Mr. Lincoln could not sleon at midnight asks Dana, assistant sec- iAtonr a. . a a . i . - . w "ci I i Jirppa unriafifA . i- - m i - j vj. vvttr. in en nrrwrr tribute oaid to thOR ,- y, iwemy-two. and we of today have al- mosi oountlful mood. He wfl., on - OI ory. Rr..t D. -n.. epcl8 today .rsth. mor, an. wopernr were aacriflced in .M Pln of war. wind, 1 . .'ZT ., al- That d.v had hTt Pensacola State Bank DESIGNATED CITY DEPOSITORY Will Appreciate Your Account W. A BLOUNT, JR., F. E. BRAWXER, Vice-Pres. A. E. JlAKV. ' '" Cashier. i i - l - ' V ' ----- "' " ''"y. ..j . u. ... ..n I .in ii. .a,;ry .... VJ. th fl.r.- -4 r"-". - was m.fo. . wr winamg its way back towarH ai. Anai ay nad been a dis "KfiuiiiKne uus year ior tne reason I . . DuUSSiC W1 moaern times: I men, ana as he rnHe . . astroim nno tv,i A. . . that it 1 tfc D. . , - have forrotten th h.i ' upon the bark- r t do met Dy cars, and in this v. Wtt ine crisis of niversarv of 7h. T'tT and the upheaval of down his line. 1,7, .m m! .UP,.an.a train mourning of thousand, of ZZl " Wa.s the Longstreet "-"O VU1UCU- . - nuivui . . IIlUOTni- I VnilnH.i1 . . . I W BUS BllOt QOWn hV hD . eracy fifty years ago-that terrible "owea ,n the wake of that conflict. laD'e courage, his Christian char, n Li" 8,ea "" was forp floTO struggle. the Civil war. beean wh.oh " is well, let it pass! but aa it Inspired confidence a uettaeneQ on,Jr rumbling of the " - rJ. I.Mia reacnea m8 de- lasted for four long years the heroism mind ln the call of the futnr. u after cheer from his wafon wheel3 they jolted over ruts '27 "m?n .&Tmy went r- and bravery displayed by the southern but fitting we pause for a while each Providence was against the confed- Tht nT' , eene bAZSSl T soldiers can never be forimtt n sprinsr to dron a v eracv. and w u.. n. The masses of the soldiery who . Derore APPOmattox,C where the a - va a v I - -- v x luc KIM-VVKI " vuAa IIUL IIMVS i T T r aw I I niirra 1 t trrn . . is indeUbUy written in the pages of fresh young lives laid on the altar w,8e- Vhat was it but the spirt of r f the n both 8ides ,n gray 5 ' n Wl tlstry. of their country, and nlare a wrMh Destiny which twic . ;!l-r 61 not go in defense of slavery 8 n-l'. . . . t v.tiory or aeainst It. w i .v. -11"5 asis or peace and union uiui icucb uver mp mm na nr tl-. K "urn me sonincrn nrma ix . i . . loyuuoo iu liic i . , ... " mattox court house In 1865 the south- roes of that war. Immanent, by taking fCt -T. la" of the,r county to defend its honor. .IT 'Z,,!1 nd of that 'mmor ern soldiers returned to their homes to Nearly all of those w, Jackson, and aaain. .UT- " .ine ,ssue was made by leaders and not ..Ta' .ine ruture. is just the find them devastated and their fl.w. Tha tw " .TT., Utrivw t . "rae bY the soldiery. Lincoln ftAr-o, "V"" inai 11 18 In every other hr ? PJS.tetS"! ,ald, and and the,r and grachllTrTn of their Twn mTn? inS Bre iiiuumiuinie conrae i are ntnn nv om,.n . ... i i r noof rnv . i ... . ."uiiioua ui nit; i - " winies learned to respect each other as brave men as we but with characteristic of the southern rTem natlnr-- ""i".. ' . "Umen" or. tn. they began life anew, confront A Lnrt. "'' ear patriotic almost lnsnrTnonnhi ... ..rr l sreat rupture as ocpresslon a::".." eni orothers to fight brothers -- v- a iuii uui mir i ri ma nvn m t the dark days of reconstruction whicS The war which beWn In hi, Listed until 1876. when South Carolina, of the J . ? 81 Was one Louisiana and Florida nrcJtaS 2. J1d8PteIy fought of all hi moaern timoo Tn - w A lUCi) VII xnemseives free. Independent, and sov siaies Dy tne wia of their yeopie at tne polls. "For nearly three decades after the Civil war the south made very little progress, out since that time a new south. Phoenix-like, has sprung from me asnes or tne old south, and peace . peruy smiles upon us from all aides. "It must be a source of much grati- wars life and money surpassed anything the naa ever seen. The north put ."raxly mree million men In fh. a AkV'AUa ouuui, aooui 700,000 men undrr HJII,B. ana 674,628 men were Vin mortally wounded or died before thl v-umeaeraie army had 325 onft iifii, nair or the pnllat buried before the close of the war. The DREADFUL WEAKNESS soldiery. Lincoln afterwards Ir. "v. 18 m every other human compressed it into one word "Emanci- xt ' nameI3r' mutual respect. f ana an tne world said, ,. .0 muu van oe ouiit upon "Amen!" uisirust, and when we rom- It was not the north and south en- 2?,? rate the death of our own heroes gaged over that question, but the V south, we must not begrudge aeatn-grapple of two mighty world- T . ine DOys of the north, and forces, and this was the last debatlns place of those two forces. Slavery was doomed before the first shot was ever fired on Fort Sumter. There was mingled with that spirit or nerce courage a grim sense of hu- as we wind a laurel wreath around the tombs of Lee and Jackson, we "lul De unwilling to place frap rant rnxp ar ...w - ouUtui;rn jasmine over graves or. Grant and Lilcoln. Let yatL go, ana race the living prespnt Could Not Raise Head From w.ho made a vel,ernent speech in favor ULll I of Secession In n-klV, K u ..-r. we can whip them with snuirt-euns!" After the war was, over, and old soldier fication and consolation to these aged north b.urIe 359,528 men. There were '"f1' o Know that their comrades Z, ' uu oail,ea rougnt. wiut ineir lives fifty years I armies lost tnree per cent ago upon the altar of patriotism, thai Dattle, the Union army lost five per . memories are still revered and ; w w"ue ine confederate army lost Pillow, Says Jennie B. Kir- .by, of Valley Heights, Va., Till I Took Cardui. mor. Before the war, I had an uncle "? budd,n future. Let our ban- i ' ana a common patriot- oiiu mere is too much at stake to remmaea nim of his sspeech. uoon ! which he Instantly replied, "We could, out tney would not fight that way." At tne Dattle of Gettysburg a Dutch man lost a valued cow. He went to me neaaquarters of General Gordon I - M alley Heights, Va. "My family confederacy, and made com- id CURE FOR czema The McMillan Auction Co. Sales Solicited. ADDRESS A. M. McMillan, Auctioneer No. 115 S. Palafox Street. SEE THE SEEGER" are euu rfcverea and I v-onieaerate army lost I "Sms, vs. iy ramily I , , . wm- ,-,, held sacred, and will continue to be so ?en Per ce"t- In the batOe of Gettys- doctor." writes Jenle B. KIrby "said 1 1 fit ,General Gordon heard h,m and edmonso v I k T?1 by A" C long ,southem blood flows in th e bu were killed and had chane. o, TfM He CS Judge Pike wounaed. In that olt m ave mm an order on Genera Grant fnr "u" regiment, the First Minnesota. lnt fr about 9 months- tlfi amount Going slowly away, the eighty-two per cent In vma. nr, "I ad a bad spell this sorinir anH Dutchman returned after a little re- and missing, and one Confederal was so weak I muMn't k.- flection, having decided that an order wV5? twenty-Bllth North Carolina, off the pillow ti6m-seven per cent. At Waterloo the loss was ten per - . '"C cina ui our people. "It gives me much pleasure to in troduce to you a gentleman who is ana iavorabiy known to a large number of you. the Rev. Eugene R. x-cauieion, tne orator of the day" Mr. Pendleton's Address. Mr. Pendleton spoke as follows My Friends and Fellow Countrymen- in tne spring of '61 when the boys me yard walks and "Just Say" It Means Original and Gsnulr.a MALTED MILK The Food-drink for AH Ages. More healthful than Tea or Coffee. Agrees with the weakest digestion. Delicious, invigorating and nutritious. Rich milk, malted grain, powder form. A quick lunch prepared in a minute, Take no substitute, Askf orHORUCK'S, C Others are imitations, - w "CttU from a confederate on th M.r.i cent. At Marengo, fourteen per cent i ine wilderness and Spottsylvania me joss was rorty per cent. Seventy officers out of the Confed "v, I1U omcers out of the -"ern army were killed. One northern sun-Ivor, named Klr says: "On my arrival at the hci about 2 p. m. I was carried throng an entrance to a large tent, on each side of which lay human lesrs nnd arms, resembling piles of stove wood the blood only excepted. All Arori were dead and wounded men rr,o the latter dying. The surgeons, with gleaming, sometimes bloody knives and Instruments, were buav nr . V44V11 or. i was soon laid on Doara operating table formed." Another writer says: "The mn,- before the battle of the Wilderness the clover was wavlnar Iwneoth , . . . . . " ' scuiie breeze, the birds were singing sweetly and nature was ln her sunniest mood' After the battle, the field was blue not with the gentian, the blue of au tumn flower, but with our boys." a rough and chloro- eral at that stace wonlr! not- v. vnrth "I commenced to take Cardui in I face Value, snrl nrmintpHno- nA I - J UUU April and have now used three bottles. asaln, and finding no encouragement. Pike is but one of wiousanos. which we have received at- .nllf. rreat rative powers of Lenoir s Eczema Remedy: fSV on my fet and lees SEEGER ml. f ,uI pePle erywhere hare f kn2w that- from a hygienic standpoint, the refrigerator Is thennit Important Item ln borne furnishing Tht Is why you will find the """sxun- Jfhat 9rinaI and Only Patented' SIPHON REFRIGERATOR ' ' X - . f- - i - Its patented air siphon is a positiv. assurance of purity of food supply. - It is not enough that foods be' kept cold An old-fashioned ice box will do. that-but it will not keep them pure. V Circulation of air is just .entf.l s tee. fJuS where the "Seeger" excel!, for its siphon renders stagnant air im possibleit compels circulation. - It forces all Impurities, odors and moisture from the provision chamber ana Wh:re .th6y are onde,ei and carried off through the drain The action of the patented Is so certain that milk, butter. ?ruU and vegetables can be kept In the sama compartment without taint. - thZl J?" ,be S'ad J'onstrate these advantages to you if you will It does me so much good. I saw it waa helping me before I had taken half the first bottle. Now I can work all day. "I think Cardui is the best medicine j in the world, for women who suffer rrom female troubles. I have not taken a dose of any medicine but Cardui for j months and am feeling very well." broke out in a half wail at his loss, j x nil never naa sucn a cow l What r ..- as dat I haf ben married twW t U,. it' eczema Remedy did nothing that" wSuldve VlSif1 VntU H IITDOMVI O 5-"S jB, GERSON & CO,, THIESEN BLDO. ouia noi give dat cow for bof of dem YOU, vomans: After the surrender, a half-starved soldier from the trenches at Vicksburg began his weary march home, but was so weak from hunger he despaired of making it, until he came In sight of Jmonson it will do for o other medicine is needed. hi N- m . . Cardui. for weakness, loss of annetite Z ZTf "! !w C.Dance tired feeline fomoi. o? S.l ' I v lwo me" lur aays " -'m uiBLress, i and LENOIR'S ECZEMA REMEDY Is an absolute and positive cure for s?u v amcu in ajiu eai aown at 1 ",-'-,-", uiu ail SKin iuoo. n ilia q"K1a TIim. V... Vi 1 I .... I llPVOa fmmAtLl.. . . However, if you are taking anv other "Am a -D1U wit r " c. il. ppH58. tte skln medicine rardni win Bnt wBiUi iu edi, ana to ---.w.w.i6 iooq ana builds up U bS rathtr hein u tatrte with order, and to eat again, until his ap- MZ and hthy cuticle: P ii, uui ratner neip it. I .I j ., I Cloans .j As a general tnni- mc a aypt-tuscu. Hereupon ne "c parts with tar a encral tonic, for weak women. sanntwAH i,n t ,o.. ... or pure castile Rnnn . t aressea mm by saying. "Well mv . causea by rubbine . ' . anairrlend how miirh" "A Hnii x,-"J"o. miaotr nnthlnw r .. r n . I " ....-v.j, .jwuiiuj, iui ou years, nas been I half -rrArJ?"0?: - .- I explained that he was without money. I "cij v.iuuui in rtniir I v.. i . . i - rr. ... . for prescription purposes, but "M" "S .t" -Tuia Send Lv "pontaias 2 1-2 times , . . ..... . . . - I - - "vv- oie, i.nis enrunatea the hotel -keeper who drew a small pistol and held It defi antly half hid behind the counter, de- AGENCY FOR BABCOCK BUGGIES. Complete Line of Farm Wagon, and Light Delivery Wagon,. WM. JOHNSON & SON HARDWARE DEPARTMENT. or .1 1.. mi - -. . I PRIP.P EJr, . I 4 . found that would tako it r,i " "-pu- suiaier tnen ' -,,u ' mi THE DRUG . 1 wouia UiKe "s place. explained that h. -DH xcithnt STORF Don't Fail to Visit THE MILLINERY DEPARTMENT at thi, store, now .how.ng a compline of Gage Broth eri- -fa, lor.Mad. OLIVER DRY GOODS COMPANY PALAFOX AND INTENDENCIA V.TlI-lw ' PHONE 750. druggist sells Cardui, In original bot ties. Try a bottle today. Prepared Only By CAWTHON-COLEMAN CO., Selma, Alabama. waste a single drop of patriotic blood in fratricidal war. And after alL "When a patriot dies must he die in the battle, "Where the cannon's loud roar is his only death rattle? Xo, there's a warfare, where none but the morally bfave Stand nobly and firmly" their country to save. ' 'Tl8 'tnd OP""m' WtCT c