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,^,%FftNE I'. 19-1* Kin ocala and Mrs. G. C. on Firday ing of young and Reaper of Death, soul, so noble, iuence while un- _ y at large, will through the gen *• s! the soul of Mm-, away from this was slowly sink-, skies on Friday and to Ocala with: ldren from Mom \ mm ~-OL, sixteen years ago and Tie tor herself many true and Mends. She was a loving j and loving mother and a aicrhbor and friend, and her be keenly fe!t In all j Walters,was born December ig# in Newberry. South Caroling married forty-four years ago, • y oc teiuma. Ga.. to Mr. J. A. W al* ing W her husband. aT funeral of Mrs. Walters was It | Orange •crush First came Ward’s Orange-Crush. L der came Lemon-Crush and Lime-Crush. All three ae carbonated drinks of supreme quality and fruity deliciousness. Enjoy one today. & Dottles or at fountains Bottled by Coca-Cola Bot Works Ocala, Fla. m -im • I— i I have your liSlots Repaired I Prices Are Moderate B **• H. Summerlin I ELECTRIC shoe shop h | Blk. W. Courthouse | ■ | KU MBAK SERVICE STATION | ■ ■■■ PHOOD service UNITED STATES TIRES I "The E'tnomy Tire” 'j DEPENDABILITY 1 Good Tires" | ! Royal Cord-Plam-Usco ==: We have the exclusive SATISFACTION | j Chain and Nobby Ato Tires =H sales on this tire and \Ve Treat You Right NOBBY CORDS H stand behind every sale | , . for Truck Use EE . . ~ • CAES WASHED ' S Prices Are liignt , OILS accessories |j M9Stcoaipietestockin central j| PHONE 598 "* # VULCANIZING 1 HARRINGTON KALI BLOCK §| V r v .v> • • ■i.'T ••• & * V. y - - /.rvTT' T V-Dv;,-. -. X- • ••• ■viT’-: . WF J •' •• r- ’ .. viSfc'! ..-skTx .. ' ■-’jH-:- . •• held Sunday morning from the resi dence on East Trird street. The house was thronged wi.h the friends of the family who had gath ered to pay their last respect to t noble woman, who had been called to her heavenly home. Rev. C. W. White* pastor of the, Methodist church, had charge of the solemn and sacred services. He made a beautiful prayer and a few very beautiful and touching remarks, about 4 the life of Mrs. Walters, who was in the words and deeds a wonderful wife, mother, friend and neighbor. The funeral was attended by many relatives and friends from out of town and also many*from Ocala. The members of the Daughters of the Confederacy attended in a body. Never before have so many pretty flowers at a funeral. They are a silent tribute to the deceased who honored and loved by all who knew her. Her body was tenderly laid to rest' in beautiful Greenwood. Following were the pall bearers who bore the casket to the grave: Frank Harris. Jr., T. D. Lancaster, Jr., James J. Pyles. Philip G. Murphy. James Tay lor and Lester Lueus. Thus another noble life has been called away from among us. * •* % Friday night at & o'clock on June 10th the death angel came to the home of Mr. G. S. Wilson, taking away to the great beyond a beloved wife and mother. , Mrs. Wilson moved to Ocala with her husband about six years ago from Jacksonville. On account of bad health, Mrs. Wilson lived a very quiet and retired life, but the friends she made will truly miss her. She was devoted to her family ant it is in the home that she will be mostly missed. She was twice married, and leaves a husband, four sons and one daugh.. ter to mourn her passing away. Her last illness came so sudden that it was impossible for her sons to get to her bedside before death came to release her from her suffer : ing. j Her' sons. Mr. Sybald Wilson of ; Pansacola. and Mr. J. E. T. Bowden j of Waycross, Gr., arrived in time to j attend the funeral, but her other two | sons living in Waco. Texas, did not : arrive. { Her funeral took place on Sunday afternoon at three o’clock from the home on East Third street. There were many friends of the family present to pay their respect for the dead. Rev. J. J. Neighbor, rector of Grace Episcopal churclj, made a few swe t and comforting remarks, and several of Mrs. Wilson’s favorite songs were) sung by Mrs. Sara J. Manley. Mrs. R. G. Blake, Mr. Eaward Drake and Mr. Albert Gerig. Then the beauti ful casket v which was covered with a wreath of flowers, was carried to Greenweed where the body was laid to rest. ~ To the husband, the daughter, Mrs. Conoley to the four sons a heartful of sympathy, goes out from the city in their hour of great sorrow. TO FACE HIS MALE FACTORS Some weeks ago some unknown persons entered the home of Mr. J. P. Milton, living a few miles nor-,h of Ocala, laid violent hands upon him as an “undesirable,” took him some dis tance into the woods and maltreated him af.er the rasnTon of the old tlma THE OCALA BANNER, OCALA, FLORIDA Beat Drum —Spent Night in Prison h" V? hitting a Mg bass drum just j one resounding whack for which she spent a night in jail, a resolute black eyed girl changed the police classification of-Salva : tten Army drumming from “petty nuisance’’ to “music.” i hat was twenty-lwo years ago, and the black eyes have grown more gentle in years of service for the poor since those I battling days, bat they still twin kle when the story is told. it was Mrs. Adam Gilford, wife of he colonel now ea mm an ding tb.* New England forces of the * Salvation Army, who wielded the i drumstick and struck detiauce at the Pennsylvania blue wared policeman of the town where,she and were then stationed. Irate citizen.- had complained bitter ly of the Salvation Army and its street corner meetings and musical services, but particularly of the bass drums of the hand. Night after night the drums bad been confiscated by rhe police, but to no effect. Finally a jtolice order went out to “arrest anyone attempting 1 to best fa drum.” Following this Colonel Gifford in an effort to test the constitutionality of I the order advertised that upon a cer tain evening a monster meeting would be held and that niton that occasion Mrs. Gifford won Id bent the drum. A v anticipated, a record breaking crowd was turned out. The police re | serves were called upon to quell the riots which might ensue*- At a given signal Mrs. Gifford gave the drum a re bounding thump anti the meeting was “regulators;” they then turned him ■ loose, gave him a limited time in which to make his safe geta wav, ana warned him not to return for if he i * ha would receive much harsher treat-; j r ment. * Well, he has returned. It is said that he knows the men who commi - ted the outrage upon him and will a;, peal to the oours for porteetion and to have punishment meted out to hi* 1 offenders. Courts are estabished for the pro-i 1 teeiion of those who find so in this acair it would seem that; all law abiding citizens would be 1 found holding up ihe hands of this ‘ man who is appealing to the courts j i of justice for protection and vindi cation. - MAYOR ANDERSON WITHDRAWS HIS RESIGNATION ! Mr. Robt. L. Anderosn. Jr., for urgent public necessities has with drawn his resignation as mayor, but as soon as the reasons for its with drawal are met his resignation willj : again be handed in. He says that as. mayor he is under the charter held responsible for the proper policing; ! of the city and in pursuance of this 3 line of duty if his recommendations I" , 1 /aa. yf \ ■ JF* MRS. COLONr L AuAl'a GIFFORD, Salvationist. under way. Immediately the frail lit tle Salvation Army lassie was placed under arrest and escorted by a crowd of amused but sympathetic onlookers to the patrol wagon and thence *o the local jail, where she spent the night. ■** The case was taken before the su preme court of the state, where even tually the contention of the “Army” was sustained. Following the decision the entire I corps, led by Colonel Gifford, marched ; to the city hall to demand the drums that had been confiscated by the po lice. Twenty-eight of rhe offending “prisoners” were released in rhe cus tody of the corps. Front that date to the present none of the meetings of the Salvation Army has been disturbed by the police. Furthermore, the prece dent established has been maintained I in nearly every state in the Union. are disregarded by the council there is no other way open to him but to resign his post. COOTER POND P’.CN'C The annualApienic given by the M. W. A. Morrisotn Camp will be held at Cooter Pond one mile north of Morriston, on July the Fourth. Speak ing, music, base ball! and other amuse ments will be the attractions of the day. ♦< ♦ ! OPEN NOSTRILS! END I !a COLD OR CATARRH I How To Get Relief When Head x and Nose are Stuffed Up. Count fifty! Your cold in head or catarrh disappears. Your clogged nos trils will open, the air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe freely. No more snuffling, hawking, mucous discharge, dryness or headache; i no struggling for breath at night. ; Get a small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm from your druggist and apply ai little of this fragrant antiseptic cream in your nostrils. It penetrates through f every air passage of the head, soothing and healing the swollen or inflamed I mucous membrane, giving you instant relief. Head colds and catarrh yield like magic. Don’t stay stuffed-up and miserable. Relief is sure. | Ready for | S Inspection I 1 $ | | jjf Hart, Schaffner and Marx clothing | for the man and young man, Guar- 8 || anteed to give Satisfaction., t v *5 . $ $ Men’s, Ladies’ and Children’s Bath- g v # ing Suits and Hosiery. $ & g y $ Trunks. Bags and Suits Cases. g P $ When in need of anything for the ¥ | Man or Boy, come see us. We are $ fi $ 8 always glad to show our goods. | I | H. A, Waterman | | “The Haberdasher” § OCALA FLORIDA ] A #- i V M IT4 ©MOT ©Of WATEIk HF ¥OO ©IESIII A EOS¥ COMPUEHON .. I Says we can't help but took better and feel better after an inside bath. , • i ’ " . | - To look one's best and feel one's best is to enjoy an inside bath each morn ing to flush from the system the pre-, vious day’s waste, sour fermentations and poisonous toxins before it is ab sorbed into the blood. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves behind a cer tain amount of incombustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and > drink taken each day leave in the ali mentary organs a certain amount of indigestible material, which if not eliminated, form toxins and poisons which are then sucked into the blood through the very ducts which are in • tended to suck in only nourishment 1 to sustain the body. ( .( If you want to see the glow of healthy bloom in your cheeks, to see : I your skin get clearer and clearer, you J are told to drink every morning upon ! arising, a glass of hot water with a " teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in. it, which is a harmless means of wash ings the waste material and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, thus cleansing, sweetening and ' j purifying the entire alimentary tract,* before putting more food into, the stom j ach. Men and women with sallow skins, ! I liver spots, pimples or pallid com plexion, also those who wake up with a coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others who are bothered with headaches, bilious spells, aeid stomach or constipation should begin this phos phated hot water drinking and are assured of very pronounced results in 1 I one or two weeks. A quarter pound of limestone phos phate costs very little at the drug store but is sufficient to demonstrate i that just as soap and hot water i cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin on the outside, so hot water and i j limestone phosphate act on the inside [! organs. We must always consider that l internal sanitation is vastly more im < portant than outside cleanliness, be- L cause the skin pores do not absorb I impurities into the blood, while the bowel pores do. , * 666 cures Bilious % Fever.-—6-13-201. Subscribe to the Ocala Banner. * ———— fc ViVas?S?SSSBSBB?BSSSBBSBBBSSBBSBSSSSBSBBBaa Buy Coal Now! IT WILL ' I Save you money. Supply work for needy miners. Furnish business for the railroads Avert coal shortage next Winter. Start the wheels of induatry. STEAM COAL DOMESTIC COAU Buy direct from the mines in car load lots. Prices Reasonable Write us. Pratt Consolidated Coal Company Birmingham Alabama sSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSBSSSSSSSSBBSBSBSSSS£SSSSSi*BSSW a^ George Mac Kay & Cos. Funeral Directors, Embalmers Two Licensed Embalmers Motor Funeral Cars Private Morgue and Chapel OAY PHONE 47—NIGHT PHONE 515 G. B. Overton, Mgr.