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PURE FOOD GROCERY ' “THE HOME OF PURE FOOD” ) ! SOLE AGENTS FOR GOlJDEN GATE COFFEES, TEAS, SPICES AND EXTRACTS The Best Line on Earth l . ' CAN GOODS Tomatoes, No. 3 IHa 1 can for.• U b Tomatoes, No. 2 1 R a 1 can for 8c, two cans.... I ub Hominy per can 8c 2 cans 15c Kraut, 1 n n 1 can for .* Ub Kraut, 3 cans OR a 1 can for .tub Corn per can 8c, 2 cans 1 Ra for .I ub Peas, Leader IHa 1 can for .I Uv, Columbia Peas 1Ra | 1 can for .I V'w 2 can QRa Primrose 1 can for . Little Lima beans 1 can for . Asparigus Tips per can. Pumpkins per can .’. Sweet Potatoes per can. 2 cans for . Wax Beans per can . _ SALMON. i Fancy Red Salmon OKn 1 lb. can flat. Zuu SPAGHETTI AND CHILLI. 1-2 lb. 'can flat ^ jjp 1 lb. can tall in»> for.lUb 1 lb- can Tuna fish oru for.4UU I 1 pound can 0^ I for .f.Ub 2 pound can for.L....I Lb Chilli and Rice No. 1 can .^.Ul» Barrel Vinegar . OCo per gallon . £db \ i . BAKING!jpnwi^ER. . . 'fJ-% .£db .aub 0 «■ Uu d 1 n *ph iu en «Du Bob White QK 10 lb. bucket.iUO 5 pound bucket KA for .idU 50 pound can lard A A for .^fiTU MOLASSAS. Green Label Velva 7A 1 gallon bucket .■ I V 1-2 gallons bucket 97 for .id I Red Label Velva CA 1 gallon bucket .iUU 1-2 gallon bucket 90 for .id£ Penford £A 1 gallon bucket.idv 1-2 gallons OK for .i£d Red Label Karo KA 1 gallon for .idU 1-2 gallons OK fo‘r .iZd COFFEE. No. 1 guaranteed Pea berry, per lb. Good Rio Grand . per pound . Full Head Rice per pound . Navy beans HQ per pound .iUU Lima beans 10 per pound .* * v Black Eye Peas 00 per pound .«UU DRIED FRUIT. Evaporated apples per pound . Evaporated peaches 10 per pound .• IU Evaporated prunes per pound. Blue Label Karo 1 gallon . 1-2 gallon 00 for .*LO LAUNDRY. 8 bars Silk Soap OK for .iLO 6 bars Crystal White OK for . 6 bars Naptha soap OK for .i£ii 6 pkg. washing powder OK for . .iL\i 7 boxes Cel. Starch OK for .iLxl Lump Starch AC per pound .iUu Lino-white, 10 3 packages for .i IU MACARONIA AND CHEESE Macaroni AQ per package .lUU Spaggetti AQ per package .lUU Cream cheese A A per pound .iZu Extra Cream Butter OK per pound ......iJii Best grade Hams AA,, per pound.ZUu Best grade breakfast ba con, whole piece per lb...UUb Sliced OEp per pound . vuu Best boiled ham per pound .*.iwu FEED. Chops 1 7K per sack ..I if u Wheat bran 1 ME per sack ..I /tu Mixed Feed 1 RK per sck .liUU Oats \ per bushel.v...i Free Delivery _1 E SUNSHINE CAKES AND CRACKERS Phone ^8 EXCLUSIVELY VICE PRESIDENT AT HOT SPRINGS “Sois of Virginia, Not of Cowardly Blood,” Says Mr. Marshal ct Hot Spring-. Hot Springs, July 5.—“I %in never going to fight until the President of the United States tells me that I oughi to fight, and I pray to God that he will never tell me that T ought to fight. I owe something to the President, which I will gladly pay. He’s my chieftain. For myself, and I hope for you. In lltes^ trying times, let the President of the Vnited States tell us when it is time to got mad. He patient and be forebearing, and you will understand that a son of Virginia at the head of the nation will never be false to tradi tion or found cf cowardly blood.” This expression from \ ice Presi dent Marshall before a large assem bly this afternoon brought fortli rounds of applause. He had come to Hot Springs to celebrate with the Moose Lodge and a large audlencp gathered at the Oaklawn pavilion to hear his address. Mrs. Marshall accompanied him and they will prooably remain here ton days. Mr. Marsha’l spoke on "The Dual Citizenship.” He took an emphatic stand for a citizenship which would interest itself and assert itself in all affairs of life. Harshall Slumbers, Despite Deception. Little Rock, July 5.—Vice President Marshall slept through the reception arranged for him by Little Rock Citi zens upon his arrival here this morn ing from St. 1 ouis, enroute to Hot Springs, to he the principal speaker at an Independence Day celebration ar ranged by the Hot Springs Moose lodge. When the vice president’s train ar rived there was a rush of "leading citizens,” including Governor George W. Hays, Mayor C. E. Taylor, others state and city officials, members of the Arkansas supreme court and citi zens, but the guest of honor slum bered peacefully through the noise made by 500 or more persons, who de • sired to shake his hand. The special remained here but ten minutes and the vice president, accompanied by Mrs. Marshall, slumbered on to the yapor City. j MARGARITA FISCHER and HARRY POLLARD IN “ THE QUEST | -—- Five part mutual MASTERpiCTURt Produced by Americao, AT THE ROYAL THEATRE MONDAY, .ILLY 12. ... .1. M ITU.El) TO KEEI* MOKE HOLS Or. Morgan Sajs the Number Will Net Consume Corn Crop. I _ j Little Hock, July 4.- -The retention J of hogs in Arkansas rather than the . sale of them to other states this | time, is recommended by Dr. C. M. Morgan, agent of animal husbandry, United States Department of Agricul ture, who returned to Little Rck yes terday form a trip though north Ark ansas. Dr. Morgan said that one firm of stock buyers in Fulton county bad ^hipped 10,000 hogs to Xorthern mar kets in the last two years. “With a bumper crop of corn farm ers should keep every one of their hogs and if posible buy more,, he said. ! “CatfJe for feeding can be bought lat er, but at the rate hogs are being sold, I they will be very scarce by the time the corn is harvested. The firm ini Fulton county is only one of many in j north Arkansas which handles hogs extensively. They have to immunize for cholera before they can be taken across the line into Missouri, and this causes the young and unfattened hog» tOjCost more to the farmer proportion ately than they would if fattened on the farm and then sold.” I ' / OPIE READ TO LEI "IT iE Humorist Will Appear on I'uauratjna Platform at Texarkana. Texarkana, July 2.—Texarkana’s Chautauqua this year will he during the week beginning July 26. A rep resentative of the Redpath-Horner Co., which will furnish the amusements, spent yesterday in the city arranging details. Among the attractions will tie Gov. R. R. Glenn of North Carolina, and the noted humorist, Opie Read, former edi tor of the Arkansas Gazette, and later editor and owner of the Arkansas T-atf'er, also published at Lr'itle Rock. Opie Read lias made several visits to Texarkana in f< mer days, the most notable of which was more than 30 years upo, when he same here t,o get marr ed. -o Presbyterian Mission. The Missionary Society of the Pres byterian church met at the home of Mrs. C. Y. Trice on Wednesday after noon, June doth, with twelve members present. A very interesting program on "Mission Schools” was presentee under the leadership of Mrs. Curran. After a spirited business session, re freshments of pineapple sherbet ^and wafers were served. f A WAR CRANK WOUNDS MORGAN Assailant, Captured After Hard Strug gle: Placed Bomb in Capital. Dallas, Texas Man. Glencove, X. V., J. P. Morman, iieaa of the banking house of J. P. Morgan & Co., was shot twice today at his country home near here by Frank Holt, a native American, a former student and instructor at Cornell uni versity, and who was ito have become lhe head of the department of French in the Southwestern Methodist univrr sity at uaiias, Texas, next rail. Doth shots took effect near the hip. A surgeon's bulletin issued from ills bedside late today stated there were no unfavorable symptoms and that Mr. Morgan was resting easily. Holt was overpowered by Morgan Fiske, the butler in the Morgan house hold, who grappled with him in the hallway. He was locked In Ja!l here, and from his cell issued a written statement saying that he intended no harm to Mr. Morgan, but had come to GJencove to' persuade the banker to st<v; the shipment of munitions of war. He went into the Morgan home he said, with a pistol in his hand and a stick of dynamite in his pocket, In tending to remain there till Mr. Mor gan “did something.” Another loaded pistol was found in Holt’s pocket and more dynamite was in a suit case which he had taken to the Morgan house. In addition, there were numerous newspaper clippings in the suit case, all nearing on the European war. Admits to Placing Bomb . Holt is the man who set the bomb tha* exploded in the United States capitcl at Washington last night. In a statement made to Justice Lvw ster and Thomas Tunney, head of the bomb and anarchist squad of the New York City detective buerau, Holt con fessed setting the bomb, and describ ed it in detail. As a missile of terror, it was said to be unique in the annals of the New York police department. “I made this bomb,” Holt Is quoted as having said in confesr’on, “with three sticks of dynamite, some match heads and a bottle of sulphuric aetd.” “Pretty slick,” commented Captain Tunney. “I don’t see how you did it.’’ Holt says that h© wanted to show how terrible the European war was. AGED CITIZEN DIES Airs. Amanda Gregory Died Afonduy June 28tli. Mrs. Amanda Gregory, mother of Mrs. M. I., Smith, who lives on the Ashdown and Richmond pike, died ar the home of her daughter Monday, June 28th. She had been ill for some time and her death was not unexpect ed, since she had reached such mature years. Mrs. Gregory was born in Lin coln county, Tenn., in 1827. She bore 12 children to keep alive after her, the i ideals which she held dear. Of these only five are now living. X. J. Greg ory of Ola, Ark., A. H. Gregory o' Popular Grove, Ark., T. B. Gregory of Holly Grove, Ark., and Mrs. M. I., I Smith of Ashdown.- She also leaves 146 grandchildren and 35 great grand children. The funeral services were held from the home of her daughter, the Rev. John D. Freeman Jr. conducting the [services. Burial was in the old Bap tist cemetery. _r*_ I DESTITUTION IN FLOOD DISTRICT Red Cross Commission Says 121 Bowie County Families Are in Need. _ Texarkana, July 3.—C.M. Hubbard of the American Red Cross Society, who came here at the suggestion of the War Department, to investigate conditions among the food sufferers along R,ed Rive, Bowie county, north of here, made a report to the Texark anna Board of Trade yesterday after noon. He said he had inspected the en tire stricken section and had found 121 | families, nearly all of them negroes, In jretual want for the necessities of life. All these families were tenants on the river plantations and their crops I have been swept away by the repeated overflows this spring. They are in debt for supplies and having no se curity to offer, are unable to obtain further cridit. The Board of Trade an nounced that arrangements would as i once be made to raise funds to relieve the distressed people, without asking for any outside assistance. -o J. H. MOSS, PROPRIETOF OF REED HOTEL ON TRIAL. Circuit Court convened Monday morning and the trial of ,T. H. Moss, Proprietor of the Reed Hotel, com mensed for his part of the patronage of public. Give him a trial.—J. H. Moss. 64-2t advt. GEX. HUERTA Mexican General Relieved to Crossed Mexican Border. K1 Paso, Texas, July 3.—Pascual who has been under surveillance of United States authorities, has /disap peared. He is not in the house d where six men have been guarding him. The authorities, however, have not yet abandoned hope of recapturing him if he attempts to escape across the border into Mexico, jj Word of Orozod’s disappearance j reached federal headquarters early to I day. Officers were rushed to the Orozco residence. A thorough search was made, but no trace cf the man could be found. It was believed mat Orzoco slipped away between midnight and daylight. Immediately following /the discov ery of Orozco's disappearance, Gen eral Huerta and five cf his party were probably will be stationed around fae rearrested, on a federal warrant is ! sued at San Antonio, charging con spiracy to violate the neutrality laws | of the United States by attempting to launch a revolutionary movement j in Mexico. Commissioner Oliver fixed the bond of each defendant at $15,000, despite the fact that R. E. Crawford, assistant United States district attor ney, asked that Huerta’s bond be set at $100,000 and the bond of each of the others at $15,000. General Huerta and the live arrest ed with his failed to secure bond and shortly after 5 b’elock were taken to the county jail. * -o TORPEDO SUNK ARMENIAN Ambassador Page Says Armenian was Suuk by a Torpedo, Not a Mine. Washington, D. C. July 3.—Ambas sador Page cabled this morning that the British steamer Armenian was sunk by a submarine with the loss of several American lives. He further reported that the vessel had been “requistioned” by Great Brl tian, but that the requistion was can celled before she sailed on her last trip. -o Click Two Tears With Indigestion. “Two years ago I was greatly benefited through using two or three bottles of Cham berlain's Tablets,” writes Mrs. S. A. Keller, Elida, Ohio. “Before taking them 1 was lick for two years with indigestion.’’ Sold by Boyer Drug Store.—Advertisement. r