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'.Y t ?S F 'i . S. * . 1,' trýi ~ , thor dern uhe pros abo ia Bhemn I SPower $ "o this is $ the the bhaking $ rpder that ttt kes the $ t i asking better." e Wleavensthefood n evenlythroughout; I ev It u p to an r m v tnebesr, mabeia t " ott gigtfullyappeott b of Ili d wholesome. ! tn termember, Calvmet a hs moderate in price ; fl kighes! t in quality, r In take e I de Situ tr 8I ~m I~ Blacks nd Polishes - l ..M. sh boots and sho5 , shine4 - -Ie, . nd " s ze 2, . I _ Aptm as p airy ican)va S _r boee look AIt Restores Dvblak hoesm . Polish with a I . ite" size 25 entU S.glot keep the kind yo want, .lM . taUl we will send y '- . BRO. & CO., atA a- l stipation ,IT~a TLEI :, k aThey do their duty. C GO 1ii S mut bear Sigamtume eHloI/ A lb cul iadl tral shoea d rsIng (CI 54 and A.ls hAnd all .. For Les 1 )bst rmairns loo . estos. BO-- . & O., I' 1 be+: er by •SMALL PRIC,. A NUTR4 lZOE AlON! BORDER iS PR PPOED IN NOTE SENT TO M' XlCAN GOVERNMENT. "Mexicans Will Drcp Factional Troub. rI If Fcreigner Make Attack," Says Rebel Leader. \Varl'uinl.ton. Not only will there be no invasion of Mlexico by AmeIOrican troopts nor nowerlng ef shrapnel into the Mexicvan or the revolutionary anmy at Juarez without specific au thority by contress, but the presi dent has proposed to President Ma dero of Mexico that a neutral zone be fixed on the Me',ican border wherein no fighting is to occur. 'his proposal went through in a special note to the Mexican governmnl-nt just about thie saitrie ti inc l'(ders weore is sued to th e Fourth Infantr} at F-rt ('rook, Onaha, to lie prepa;riod to send two ba1talins to San Antonio. t Folloiwin l c('rl it el': s w it ii sera torS and rrepr'es. Itat ves idlenit:fied wilti tie lortl t u fau'i committec Sunror the TIwo brl,ncIthos of congrlless ar1 wlt h dienlocr;itic itlders, it was gradunlily let out at the state depart mont ,Monday that the pre,-Ident \wii not .end troolis into Mexico, A.i, that there will not be any deliberate fir ing of artilelry into Melxico from this side of the border, unless congress first authorizes such acts of war. Senator I'ulberon, wh, laid, before the president a telegrtai froln T. M. I'aschaili of San Antmnio, dechlrit 1, that If trloops are sent i!nto Mexhico the lives of all Americ-,ana tihere will be put in jeopardy. The Unity i S' :ts considers, how evcr, that an unusual i.ituiltion li is i volved. Forces ha' e b)ain lande in other countries to protect Amnerianl life and property when local aunt hor ties appeared incapable of doing so, in spite of protf-sts fronm revolutioniar) factions, but not in defiance of the protests of the ttitular gos ernmloet. The question in this case, which it is believed may arise at any moment at SEl Paso and elsewhere ilong the bt)r der, is whether the dispatch of troops into Mexico merely to stop firing into American territory would coustitute an act of war from the iew point oi President Madero. American troops would, it is said, simply prevent firing and restore order, retiring when that had been accomplished. Statement From Rebels. Bauche, Chi.--The following an nouncement was sent to Juarez: "Encampment near ('iudad Juarez, February 26, 1912.-For the present I t hereby announce in the name of all the chiefs and the troops under my ! command that all guarantees extendedt to all foreigners and natives will be observed as long as there is no resist ance of any kind offered in Ciudad Juarez. If there is resistance offered we will enter th, city through blood and fire if need be. "I have placed the time of six hours from 2 o'clock Monday so that all foreigners can know our purpose. All foreigners shall be notified of this announcemlent. In case of an attack Sby foreigners (Americanis) we w ill all Sunite without distinction of political parties. "General Emillo (ampa, "('olonil Ioque (Gouulez, "Major Tomnas Ioza." SJuarez in Suspense. El Paso, Tex.--Monday niight the rebels had occupied Orozco Ilill, threo, miles west of Juaroz, oplposite the El Paso smelter. Hlundreds of camn:p fires were visible :and horses were led down to the river and watered. It is apparent that the attack will be conducted so that there will be no firing into El Paso if there is an at i tack. A report arrived from Canutillo, Tex., says that 300 Mexicans in that town were threateninig trouble and it ins was asked that troops be sent. A small detachment of Company K, ' Texas state militia, engaged in guard me ing the El Paso electric light plant, i was fired upon by persons concealed rbo behind box cars and said to be Mexi cans. Maxim silencers were used on S the guns and more than twenty shots as were fired. Would End War. Parls.-It is said that Great Britain, France and Russia, acting together, are ready to make energetic repre Ssentations to Turkey to bring the war to an end. They only await the ad hesion of the German and Austrian governments before taking a decisive Istep. Carload of Eggs Shipped. Temple, Tex.-A solid carload of Bell County eggs was shipped by ex press Monday by a local produce firm, the destination being Boston, Mass. ing thirty dozen eggs each, or a total t of 12,000 dozen. Bonds for Street Improvements San Benito, Tex.-An election will be held at San Benito March 9 to vote on the issuance of $48,000 of bonds for street improvements. Work on Macalamized Roads. Austin, Tex.-Work has begun on the macadamizing of roads in Nolan Scounty. This is the result of the $100,000 bond issue recently voted in Sthat county. and ____________ e Corpus Christl's Building Boom. Corpus Christi, Tex.--Buildings now , nearing completion, or under contract 'We. for the immediate future, in Corpus e Christi are to the aggregate sum of $129o,ooo. HEADACHE is just a symptom. It is Nature's way of showing a derange ment of the stomach, liver or bowels. Help Nature with the best system-cleaning tonic, OXIDINE --a bottle proves. T'.e Specific for Malaria, Chs .nd Fever, and a relable remedy for o10 all dseases due to ds aodered iver, stomach, F boweis and lideys. t 06O. At Your Druagmts tXBla saaNe sUco ,O. i. Waco, Tezas. USED TO SUCH NOISE. in B ks-No; I'm a booeper it a sawmill) I think the C ura remedies are ii K SJinks--lbes that woman n the nremedies for eczema I havext flat heardnnoy you by her singhad a chingild linkho had a--No; I'm a boon its hkeepr in ait wasawmil youg. Doctor called t bll.ab CHILD'S HEAD i A MASS OF HUMOR z, "I think the CuUcura remedies are I' the best remedies for eczema I have 11ii ever heard of. My mother had a child ty ± who had a rash on its bead when It wi was real young. Doctor called i". baby e rash. He gave us medicine, but It did ti no good. In a few days the head was id a solid mass, a running sore. It was awful; the child cried continually. We had to hold him and watch him to keep him from scratching the sore.. Hrs Ills suffering was dreadful. At last i we remembered Cuticura Remedies. 11 We got a dollar bottle of Cuticura Re Ri solvent, a box of Cuticura Ointment, Sand a bar of Cuttcura Soap. We gave Sthe Resolvent as directed, washed the head with the Cuticura Soap, and ap plied the Cuticura Ointment. We had not used half before the child's head I was clear and free from eczema, and it has never come back again. is head was healthy and he had a beau tiful head of hair. I think the Cutf he cura Ointment very good for the hair. mao It makes the hair grow and prevents El· falling hair." (Signed) Mrs. Francis , Lund, Plain City, Utah, Sept. 19, 1910. re Although Cuticura Soap and Oint ,d. meat are sold evrywhere, a sample be of each, with 32-page book, will be J0o mrailed free on application to "Cuti at- cura," Dept. L, Boston. Back in Good Old Bowl Days. A man of apparent means brought two boys into a barber shop for a hair cut. While waiting for the comnple tion of the job he said: "I never sat in a barber's chair when I was a kid. My brother used to go over to the engine house and borrow the horse clippers. Then my mother would put a bowl on my head and cut around it. Until 1 was 12 years old 1 always looked like a window washer's brush." TO DRITE OUT MALARIA ANDI I I}) UP THE RTYRTEM Take the Old Standard GiOVES' TASTIEl5,`L CHIILL ToNIC. You know what you are taking. 'The formula is plainly pnntrd in every bottle, showinl itlis lwply in' ine alnd r.on I aI tasteless fonu. and the m~ist eff.ectual form b'or grown pouple and ohlldrn'u, t ceuts. A One.-Ringed Circus. "There's a ring around the moon." "I 'leis the man in It is having a circus." WH-N RUInIBEyr ItECOME N1fCEfRSAI Ai, y'lutr I es plut'h. A eI i 3I.' 'It-I'.oau , tihe Anti* sic'l"c powFt.er , ,be. .hakLn lnto the blhort, isa just lt thlntr to use. Tr' it for Blreaking In New Shoes. Sltd everywhere.25c. fantmle FIt'lRI . Addre's A.S. Ols:l.e, ite liB y, N. . Lu. 1, 'lt ac t antin sulistilul Few people wou:d jump at conclu sions if they could see their finish, TO CUIRE A COLt) IN ONE DAY Teke LAXATIVH RRBto)I) Quline Tahlet. Lrllggistsiefluld ionc If it fails i., cure. W. gIV l'S aignaturn is un ~each box. 26c. The microbe of love is often destroy ed by the germ of suspicion. Mrs. Wtnslow's soothing Byrup for Qhlidrea teething, softens the gums, reduces ndflamma SslO allays pain, cures wind colic, 25o a bottle Many a high flyer has no knowledge of aerial navigation. ak I P A N !9IubjN wt}ýSýLfY_*sw us. "hOVUNL' MME h V.in VNe*Uine ODr GE. KoM"i. Trn.. is. 4'i tHE REASON ' "° 1 Wink+---Who? Old (.loselIst ? Dinks---Ye; and it teemed to me he I l;i V W\inhs--ite always Is miserable In F' bruary. lie pays all us follows by the month, you ijunow. The Young Housewife. A 'ari'et of t:?arkot men hal rath +red In the FcVanoil tIIall market and wer,, .setu.-,. th, I rohable famine in butter, w'hn a pr'atty young worn ;.i, wh m)l thitv adJtlu -ol!i to hb' a nx " holUl'ife, interruptled tho ceonversa tion by a s5atem.'n' that she had conme "to buy semne butter." I 's ish to get three pouds," she "Roll butter, ma'am the Indlivhidnti in cti:trg\ of the butter and cheese Etall asked politely. "No." lanlswered the shopper prom p' vy, "we wish to oat it on toast; no si - domn have rolls."-loston Journal. Many things may come to the man who waits, but better things come to the chan who ,wa1,s on himself. "Bul" Durham Smoke Curls Up From Millions of Pipes Every day new smokers discover "Bull" Durham. There is something about it that all smokers hanker for, whether for the friendly pipe or rolled into a "Bull" Durham cigarette. Once smokers taste its delicious flavor they go on smoking it forever. Nothing else seems to satisfy the man who once tries SGENUINE . "BULL DURHAM SMOKING TOBACCO ` alp; Forty "rollings" in each 5c muslin sack e ~ ~ The flavor that has pleased three generations-that, , e '-- ' is still pleasing millions of smokers-is the pure, whole some, natural "Bull" Durham flavor unchanged by man ufacturing processes. There is nothing artificial about "Bull" Durham. It contains no coloring, no dressing, no adulterants of any kind. It comes to you in the plain Lt t muslin sack just as generous Nature made it. e- Try this grand old tobacco today. See for yourself why so many million men prefer it-why men smoke more n I of it than of all other high-grade tobaccos combined. See o why they go on smoking it year after year--and will not be satisfied with anything else. Sold by practically every tobacco dealer in the U. S. A book of "papers" free wit; each 5c muslin sack Ii 'iI 0 '4 -5·I ~~I - til~~zieha~~1~r ~ ~ PY ~ ··8y~rqr~eR_, Time is incalculably long, and every day is a vessel into which very much may be poured, if one will really fill it up.-Goethe. We often wonder what lawyers would do for a living if there actual ly was a fool killer. Stronr ih!t/y 1o7en I ("t. pit. I i lyt't.f I I t ih (J ite a . r nt . r.;i, c e d; n/ ro sr.o wa t i -.-' J_ Id !1 i , y f.r.. it , r h .,r'e :ir a: ta ii} a.. ,'td f r.J . fr a .t, t :, I.,J-'1, ', . ct li. hr Cd /l- 1 ., Tr. Piercr's oFa rite Prescriptiona (Cures the s canneeti eznd ddorders of women. It acts directly uon the ,iklcute and important C- ,rans concernted in mitbertioudt, maLing them healthy, ýtrong, vigorous, sir Jo and elastic. "favorilte rtetription'' banisthes the indispositions of the period of expectancy and makts auhby's advent easy and almost painless. It quickens er;d titalizes the feminine (,rgans, and insures a healtriv at.d roibust baby. Thousands of women have tcsti;ed to its marvelous merits. It Makes Weak torlren Strong. It Makes Sick! Women Well. I lonest druggists do not offer tbttututes, and urge them upon you as " just as good." Accept no stcret :rosruin in place of this nun-secret remedy. It contains mnt a drop of ali.hl,l ani ,nt a grain of habit-furming or injurious dnrug. Is a pure glyceric r.?rusct f iea.hng, native American roots. From Nature's Garden NATURE IS TI !. HOME OF EVERY INGREDIENT OF GRANDMA'S TEA GRANDMA'S TEA j a Netu:c's Remedy; it acts mildly and alg mo harmony with ntature GRANDMA'S TEA purthes the tipod - pure blood means a rtoy conqlexinn GRANDMA'S TEA cure' tonstlJpahin and all irregularities of the bowels GRANDMA'S TEA is pretrihed by doctors in every case where tndigt tion, weak stomach and a t,,rwid liver are indicated. AT ALL DRUGGISTS, 25c. Reduce The Feed Bill-Improve The Animals Horses and Mules do more work; COWS give more and bheier Milk and Bltter; Sheep and Goats grow Getter f, u Hens liir inure "ern.. and all w we as Cattle and Hogs take vn i' :. fl-h and fat', and devrlop mre raydly and keep nla better he m.titu and .orl tir:lu whet. fie or. Cottonseed Meal and Cottonseed Hulls For Breeding or Nursing Stock, Marue, Cowe, ,r.wi or Ewens. It Is espeela.s valuable, Much t,eticr Ular lias, far eheraer than corn. Write for free liooklet eouataulng much valuable tuformation to Feeders and Stock kaisers to THE BUREAU OF PUBLICITY Interatete Cottonseed Crushers Aasoclatlion Si(8 Aftai .utreet, Dallas., Texas Special Offer to Printers SThis paper is printed from ink made in Savannah, Ga. by the SOUTHERI OIL & INK CO., Savannah, Ga. Price 6 cents per pound, F. O. B. Savannah. Your patronage solicited.