The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, May 23, 1912, Image 4
I GIVEN THE SEATS
t; ! *?
BARNWELL DELEGATION FROM
CHARLESTON SEATED
GRACE FACTION OUSTED
Th? Credentials Committee Hear*
luid Decides an Important Mat tor,
Incidentally Straightening Out an
Important Oonteot from the City
of Charleston.
Thirty-eix of a possible forty-two
members of tho credentials committofl
r\f th? fitnla n/nnftprntlc Pnnvfin.
tlon, in session Wednesday in Colum- {
bia, voted to seat the delegation from 1
Charleston, headed by the Hon. Joseph
W. Barnwell, and none voted to
Beat what became known as the Kinkier
delegation, that one headed by
JYlajor Daniel L. Sinkler. Two members
of the committee voted to seat
neither delegation and four members
did not vote.
After hearing testimony and argn- !
ments for two hours, the credentials :
committee refused to go into exocu
tive session or to even debate among
themselves the merits of the con- !
testing claims, but Immediately call- ;
ed for a vote by roll-call, with the
result that the connnlttee'B reoom- i
mendation to the Convention is that
the delegation from Charleston head- !
ed by the Hon. Joseph YY'. Barnwell,
together with the various ofTlcers elected
by the Convention presided over
by Mr. Barnwell, are the legally
elected delegates and officers, and
that the "Barnwell" delegates be
seated as members of the State Democratic
Convention.
This recommendation was adopted
unanimously by the Convention
and the Barnwell delegation was
seated. The vote on the recommendation
to seat one or the other of
the Charleston delegations was as
follows:
Those voting to seat the Barnwell
delegation: W. P. Greene, Abbeville;
George L. Toole, Aiken; M. L. Honham,
Anderson; W. L. Riley, Bamberg;
W. A. All, Barnwell; R R. Legare,
Beaufort; R. G. Causey, Berkeley;
W. 8. Hall, Cherokee; J. Lyles
Glenn, Chester; J. C. Rivers, Chesterfield;
O. C. Scarborough, Clarendon;
H. A. Willis, Colleton; D. R.
Coker, Darlington; E. R. Hamer,
Dillon; J. A. Hlers, Dorchester; A.
E. Padgett, Edgefield; J. E. McDonald,
Fairfield; A. H. Williams, Florence;
H. J. Haynosworth, Greenville;
W. If. Nicholson, Greenwood; J. W.
Manuel, Hampton; J. O. Norton,
Horry; W. It. Hough, Kershaw; D.
R. Williams, Lanoaster; D. M. Cros- (
son, Lexington; George It. Reeves,
Marion; D. D. McColl, Marlboro; C.
M. Walker, Oconee; J?os. L. Sims, Orangeburg;
E. P. McCravy, Pickens;
\V. W. Ray, Richland; J. M, Forrest, '
Saluda; S. T. D. Lancaster, Spartanburg;
Richard D. Lee, Sumter; L.
J. Browning, Union; LeRoy Lee, Williamsburg.
j
Those voting that neither dolocatioii
be seated were: B. Frank Kelley
of Lee, and C. E. Spencer of York.
Those not voting at all were: 11. C.
Paulling, Calhoun; E. F. Hammond,
Jasper; John M. Cannon, Laurens, 1
and A. H. Hawkins, of Newberry.
The credentials committee, constituted
by a member of each uncontested
delegation, named by that delegation,
took up the contest from
Charleston County at three o'clock
and at live o'clock the vote was taken,
the Convention proper taking a
recess twice in order to give time for
the arguments by representatives of
each side. Consequently, the greater I
part of the day's session was consumed
by the Charleston contest.
It Wfts tho absorbing feature of the
day's session, and tho climax of the
whole proceedings came just a few
minutes beforo the vote was taken,
When Mr. M. Rutledgo Rivers, attorney
for tho Barnwell delegation, road
a letter from Senator Benjamin Ryan
Tillman, assuring him of his support !
In the present Convention and denouncing
the tactics of the opposing
faction In Charleston.
Appoal had been made by Mayor
Grace, In his argument beforo the
committee, to tho attitude of .Senator
Tillman as against Mr. George
Von Kolnitz, a tnomber of tho present
Barnwell faction, conveyed In a
letter dated July, 1902. Reserving
Senator Tillman's letter to Sheriff
(Martin, Qf Charleston, written a few
days after tho recent County
' Convention. Mr. Rivers introduced
It at what was regarded by all keen
obsorvers as the psychological moment,
and its reading called forth
prolonged cheers from both the galleries
and members of the Convention
who were present In the hall at
the time, and It may be stated that
the Hall of the House of Representatives
was crowded.
Observen of contests of various
kinds pronounced the conduct of the
case at this particular point a master
stroke on the part of Mr. Rivers, and
one of the very neatest of climaxes
to any argument. The letter read by
Mr. Rivers, in reply to statements
that had been made with reference
I to the attitude of Senator Tillman,
was read only because of the use of
the name of Senator Tillman. Mr.
Msrtia was averse to the ase of the
'' ''
THEY MADE RICH HAUL
MASKED BANDITS HOLD UP AND
HOD EXPRESS TRAIN.
Said to Have Cotton As Much as Two
Hundred Thousand Dollars from
tho Company's Safe.
A rich haul, variously estimated
at from $35,000 to $zou,000, was
made ny two masked bandits, who
early Wednesday morning held up
the Queen and Crescent New York
Limited truln No. 2, near Oklahoma,
a flag station eight miles south of
Hattiesburg, 'Miss., and blew open
tho safe of tho Southern Express
car.
hJxpross company omciaiH ueny
that the sum obtained aggregated
anything like tho latter figure, but
declined to make any estimate of the
loss. The bandits, who are belloved
to be the pair who held up the
Mobile and Ohio train, at Corinth,
Miss., in February, made their escape
and are still at large.
When Sheriff Bennett, of Perry
County, reached the scene of the
hold up with bloodhounds about day
light, the trail of the robbers was
taken up by the dogs. This led them
to tho junction of the New Orleans
and Northeastern Railroad and a
tap line road, where the trail was
lost. It is believed tho men boarded
a freight train at this junction. Four
men are reported to have been seen
leaving tho freight train when it
arrived at ITattiesburg a few hours
after the holdup, but the authorities
have been unable to locate the suspected
quartette.
The hold-up of the train was affected
in a true wild Western manner,
but notwithstanding a generous
flourishing of weapons, not a short
was fired. The passengers were not
molested.
When the train was passing the
flag station, Okahola, the two masked
bandits climbed over the tender, and
with drawn revolvers, called out to
engineer Maher and his fireman,
"Obey orders." The engineer Immediately
throw on his brakes, saying,
"I'll stop right now."
"No," said one of the bandits,
"pull on around, the curve and stop
when I tell you to stop." After the
train had turned the curve above
Okahola, the engineer was given the
command to Btop and complied very
promptly. !
With guns pointed at their heads,
the engineer and fireman were then
marched back to the baggage car
and the former was ordered to call
the express messenger. When Messenger
D. A. Gray, of Chattanooga,
stepped to the door of his car he
looked nto the muzzle of a pistol and
did not hesitate to obey the orders
to get down.
FIST FIGHT IN COURT.
Lawyers "Scrap" During Trial of Alleged
Embezzler.
Attorneys engaged in a fist fight
in Federal Court at Abingdon, Va.,
Monday afternoon during argument
In the case of Walter I). Sutherland,
former cashier of the First National
Bank, of Clintwood, Va., on trial for
embezzlement and absconding. United
States District Attorney Barnes
Gillespie became so incensed at a remark
by Attorney Holladay .Sutherland,
counsel for the defense, that he
sprang toward him and dealt him a
blow in tho forehead with his fist.
Sutherland, who is a relative of the
prisoner, is said to have condemned
the district attorney's method of examining
witnesses as unfair and this
is believed to have led to the assault.
Judge McDowell Imposed fines.
LAST IIOPB IS CiONB.
(Joy. Foss Refuses to Rnterfere With
Death Sentence*
Clarence V. T. Rlcheson's last
hope of escaping the death chair
l next week for the murder of Avis
: Linnell, of Hymella, expired Thursday
night, when Governor Fobs, at
Boston announced that he would not
refer Rlcheson's petition for communication
of sentence to tho executive
council. The statement from
the Governor followed closely the
filing of tho reports of the special
insanity commission, which declared
tho condemned man sane, although
subject to fits of hysterical
insanity. The commissisiou found
that Richeson was sane at tho time
of the murder and that he is sane
at present.
? ? ?
Notorious Presidential Contest,
Considering that tho present presidential
contest is becoming notorious
for tho bickerings, charges and
counter charges some candidates are
making it might bo well to prohibit
presidential candidates writing manifestoes
or making speoches. Also
any and every man having his eye on
some high political office should abstain
from all correspondence.. Letters
have an ugly habit of coming Into
the open when least desirod
letter and declined to give ft out
for publication, even in part, except
when urged that it was part of the
committee's record.
1
TURNED A TRAITOR
TO THE SOUTH TO GAIN THE SUPPORT
OF THE NORTH
FORFEITS HIS SUPPORT
?
Congressman Witherspoon, of Mississippi,
Declares that Congressman
Underwood Has I'roved Disloyal to
the South by Voting to Have Her
Klections Supervised by Coverament.
The Washington correspondent ot
The State says that Congressman Oscar
Underwood, in voting against the
Barlett amendment to the constitutional
amendment for the popular
election of senators, offered In the
house Monday, which practically nullifies
the Brlstow amendment placed
on the original measure In the senate,
repudiated every claim that he
might have had for support from
Southerners on sectional grounds in
Ills race for the presidential nomination,
was the statement of Congressman
Samuel A. Witherspoon of Mississippi
Monday afternoon. Until
Monday Congressman Witherspoon
has been a staunch supporter of Mr.
Underwood for the presidential nomination.
The Mississippi congressman declared
that a representative of the
people who voted on a public measure
not on the principle he saw involved,
but merely for political expediency
could never have his supI..
n f nn ftila
put L 111 il ii&ill 1U1 rtLIJ v_/11 UllO
ground, he said, he had eliminated
Speaker Clark after the MIssourian's
vote for the Sherwood pension bill,
although at the beginning of the campaign
he had been disposed to support
Mr. Clark.
"With Clark eliminated as a man
whom the Democratic party could
with Justice or wisdom make their
nominee, and whom the American
people would vote for, if nominated,
I gave my wholehearted support to
Oscar Underwood," said Mr. Withorspoon,
who It might be said in passing
has never held any political office
except as member of congress
for two terms.
\
"But to-day Underwood turned his
back on every Southern tradition and
voted for a measure which strikes at
the very heart of white supremacy
in tho South. A Southern of long
residence, he knows the dangers that
once assailed free government in the
South because of suffrage power that
was put into tho hands of the negro.
He knows how the negro worked tremendous
evil in Southern politics as
well as any man in congress. He
knows as well as any man in congress
how these evils are once more made
possible bv the Bristow amendment
to the constitutional amendment for'
the popular election of senators,
which places the power for the supervision
and direction of Southern govern
ment.
"And yet he voted for this Bristow
amendment by voting against the
Bartlett amendment which repudi
atos it. Ho deliberately turned his
bark on the claims of the South for
protection against n^gro suffrage evils
of the past. Underwood's strongest
plea for support in the only States
i*n which he has made a fight for delegates
has been "the South for a
Southerner.' This sectional plea has
been exploited more widely than any
other by his friends and managers.
"Thinking himself sure of practically
all the strength he hoped to
get in the South, he deliberately repudiated
this claim for Southern support,
and voted as he did purely in a
repugnant attempt to gain support in
the North, lie was playing politics
and gave no thought to principal or
love for the South. His only thought
was to get votes in tho North, whore
as yet he has no votes. From the
standpoint of disregard of principal
and subservience to political expediency
alone, this vote is in the same
class with Clark's pension vote. It
was worse than Clark's pension vote
in that Clark has never made any
pica for strength in the south as separate
from tho North."
'Mr. Witherspoon said that by this
elimination, tho only candidates remaining
whom ho could with selfrespect
vote for are Ilarnion and
1 Wilson. Iletween these two, ho said
that he could only choose Gov. Wilson
of New Jersey, a Virginian by
birth and a North Carolinian by edu1
cation, who, though long a honored
1 resident of a Northern State, has
never proved himself disloyal to the
South.
? <? +
Kinds in Full Itetreat,
A Conojas, Mexico, dispatch Bays
burning bridges behind them, the
Mexican rebels continued their retreat
northward beforo tho victorious
federal army of Gen. Iluerto.
Five bridges spanning wide areas
were dlstroyed by the insurgents,
causing delay to overnment troop
trains."
The Jonesltes In the State Convention
paid Senator Tillman a graceful
compliment when they elected
him a delegate at large to the National
Democratic Convention by acclamation.
Classified Column
Hair Sniltliclics made to order from i
combings. Mrs. Willie Breediove,
Florence, Ark. i
LtuUkca ? Coamings made into j
switches, chignont. Write Mine
dates, Norfolk, La. I
i Uii'uiou n uue ituck CocKcivu ? $- 1
to $5 each. Lggs, $2 per 15. F. W.
Plftmnn. FCnfleld. N. C 1 I
' mmmmm
aocd inuiiis?per peck, or $3.oU j
per bu., not prepaid. Perry A.
.iones, Defuniak Springs, Kla.
luMiy rtvveel Potato Plants?best varieties.
Descrijitive circular free.
Ilass Pecan Co.. Lutnberton. Miss.
Lggs iiotn ored to lay tf. C. W. Leghorns
$1.25 per 15, after March 15,
?' Ton n
| \ \ I I ;>| (M I M Fl II 1 I U , I U i I Kill \t I M -XJ BM ft*
c>gg??Choice S. C. Butt Orpingtons
aud Silver Iv?ced YVyuudottes, 15 for
$ 1.5 0. A. Perkins. South Hill. Va.
toung Men warned tor government,
positions. Full information free.
Eastern Civil Service Schools, Darhy.
Pa.
? ?, t. w liile and Brown l?egtiorii
Fggs, $l.f>0 per 15, special prices
ott large lots. Kelly Farm, Cleveland.
N. C. 1
wite wanted?I never had what I
craved?a true girl's heart. Address
J. T. Boatwright, General Delivery,,
Atlanta, G a. I
Sweet Potato Plants?Beading varieties,
$1.50 M. Kggs for hatching,
$1 per sitting. C. W. YVanghtel,
ITotneland. Ga
\wuucd?'Persons to earn good coniniissions
getting members for Nests
and Auxiliary Nests. Order of Owls
South Bend, In 1.
.Agents?steamship Titanic Disaster.
Complete, authentic, biggest book,
best terms. Address Carolina Sales
Agency, Orangeburg, S. C.
Success Cotton Seed?You want the
best. Order Sliaro Success, 2 1-2
Ko loa nor jtrro tS.Oft ner hn. f. o.
b. Kim City, N. C. J. D. Sharp.
inrry?Alany wealthy members wishing
early marriage. Description
free. Raliable Club. Mrs. Wrubel.
Dent. 8. Rov 2f? Oakland. Cal.
local Stock and dairy farm. Pedigreed
large English Berkshire pigs
$4 to $fi each. Satisfaction guaranteed.
C. PL Smith, Afton, Tonn.
lioys:?Write to-day if you want to
earn a good Fielder's Glove. A postal
will bring everything necessary.
Linn T, Newton. Atlanta, Cla., R. 68.
For sale?Invention for Fourth of
July pleasure. Also a Tuner and
wind treatment. *i. 10. Cummins,
Mart ban. Fla.. R. F. D. No. 2, B. 20
v?l?ip O. I). Siien *V Company, Charles
ton, S. C., your poultry and Eggs
Cane Syrup, Butter. Hides, Skins
Beeswax. etc TTisrhest prices paid
Registered Berkshire Gilts and Boon
for sale, chock full of champior
blood. Price, $12.50 to $30. Write
for pe-Mgree, etc. J. L. Pickens.
Lynnville, Tonn.
Wanted?Men to learn Cotton business
in our sample rooms, high salaried
positions secured: enter now,
got good contract. Charlotte Cotton
School. Charlotte. N. C.
.'v-tgs for Hutching?$1 for 13. Silver
Spangled Hnmburgs, Light
P.rnhmas, Rose Comb Partridge
Wyandot tes, White Wvandottes.
l,,,hp| Fltzirornld. 1 inwood. N. C.
icrmuda Grass Sod?Freshly dug.
Prnnnrlv napVpfl. OllicklV Shipped.
Information free. Angora Goats?
.Any number, any age, prices right..
R. If. Strickland, Route No. 5, Clifton,
Tenn.
I ore a sufferer of rheumatism
we are sure you will be intci
Mb^mM "cures" claim something di/
which is an external treatn
j ten requires internal remed
HI the entire system than the
v" Vv; Rheumatism is one of th
CffiHare discouraging of all trouble!
time it often doubles one up
u^cr'nK? makes life miserabl
Where there is no iwc
Liniment will no doubt hel
nffl bottle will t)e enough for a t
has helped others, and we tr
MBiffii some of them write, which
BflKoBI mI have used Noah's Lin
|JHM| stiff joints and backache, a
HfiMn more good than any remed
W. Smith, Abbeville, S. C.
M1 suffered a dreac
^^ Hg back, and tried different ren
|MBSSwbB a bottle of Noah's Liniment r
PSBfeKSM Mrs. J. D. Billingsley, Poin(
E^fyUKn < "P or three years I suffci
Bu&HgtiH tlsm. Two bottles of Noah1
BH cured mo."?S. E. Cyrus, C
i%l ni*prompt
I Its beneficial efH
H B U fecte are turned*
'0 ieU eery quickly
jy P.
Makes rich, red, pan
system?clears toe brain ? stre
I A positive specific for Bloo
I Drives out Rheumatism and I
?0 a wonderful tonic and body-1
[ F. V. LIPPMAN,
Prize Winning Singlo Comb Huff Or- ]
pingtona anu Wlnte Leghorns. Or
AO 'k A I
pingtoii eggs, JM.au; ja.vv uuu i
$O.DO per J 5. Leghorn $1.00 and'
<? on. Choice matinga. Circular
U nue iiuckh aim Leghorns exclusively.
A beautiful lot of well-mat*
ed birds. Hggsf $1.00 to $2.50 for
15. $5.00 to $10.00 for 100. Wrilo
us your wants. Randolph Poultry
Karin Aahehoro. N. C.
10,000 White and llrown Leghorn
Cockerels and laying Pullets. Bred
for egg produeton. Poultry farms
supplies with birds. Prices reasonable.
American Poultry Plant.
Cleveland, Obio.
u umcu?hverj tanner to use our
"Gem" Guano Distributor. and
"Lewis" Plow Stock, and "Lewis"
Sweeps. Write us for cuts and
booklet; sent free; write at once.
Dillon Plow & Novelty Works, 1)11Ion,
S. C.
Agents wanted?To sell household
aiiicie. men or women can represent
the line. You can earn $5 0 to
$75 a week. High-classed article.
Sells at sight. Particulars free.
Useful Products Co., Duncan, Okla.,
Drawer 4 4 5.
;
Lggs for Sale?Your hens don't lay? j
1 have single comb brown leghorns, i
prize winners, bred to lay. $1.25
per 15 eggs. Mammoth Pekin
Ducks, fine stock. $1 25 per 11
eggs. I bred no stock akin. J. L.
Phillips. Orangeburg, S. C. 1
(nicks?Light Pawn and White Indian
Runner Ducks. Rggs, $2, $3
and $f for 12. From prize winners.
White Wyandotte eggs $2,
$3 ^nd $5 for 15; 10c each in 100
lots. Oak Dean Poultry Farm, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Rummey, Btone
Mountain. Or. j
Spartanburg Poultry Supply Store |
carries full line Fssex Model and j
rhi.buvo innihrrtorH. Poultry Feed
( nnd supplies. Eggs from pri'/o win1
ning White Leghorns, Huff Orpingtons
and White Wyandottes (Owen
Parm) C. W. Anderson, Prop..
Spartanburg, S. C.
Kirir*?Cockerels, Breeding, Stock,
White Leghorns, Hondans, Rhode
Island Reds, Mareh nnd April ihe
months to sot eggs for winter layers.
Leghorn eggs, $1.00, liondans,
$1.5 0, Reds, $2.00 per 15.
Leghorn, $5.00 per hundred. W.
A. Hall. Rurkevllie, Va.
Story of the Wreck of the Titanic? |
by * Marshall Everett. Complete
hook containing 3 50 pages, over
50 Illustrations now ready for ship- j
ment. Agents wanted in every com- !
munity; best terms. Agents selling
from 30 to 90 copies of the book per
rtov. Outfit free on rerelnt of 1 Oe
dvertiscmcnt. If you Read what the
, or have a relative or nally three or fou
this terrible disease, Vcure" (a few Larg<
csted. ^ Beware of taki
so-called rheumatic your family physic
/ make a sufferer feci you WOuld giv<
9- thing?anything?t
the cause of rheuma- relative or friend,
W3 what that is?ask way, Is a serious di
uble, liver complaint, following if not rri
manufacturer of these All we ask you I
ferent. of
h'ct T ini
LA t*?9dfaAMAJ
nent. Not one rase in "I had an atti
ies. Iicware of these 'cf?? an(l It was ha
Len do more to upset Iw
temporary relief they ?Recelved the
. . think it helped m<
e moat distress,n* and nwtism in the nc(
If not checked in Dam ^
>, brings on all sorts of
le?almost unlxsarable. Noah's L!nlm<
lling or fever Noah's remedy for Rheum
Ip you. One 25c sizo Lame Back, Stiff J
rial. Noah's Liniment e9' S?r? Xh[oat?1
, . Sprains, Cuts, 1
ust you will read what Cramos, Neuralgi
follows: and all Nerve, Bo
iment for rheumatism. Aches and Pains,
nd will say it did me The genuine has
y I ever used."?Geo. every package and
cut, but has REO
Ifully sore pain in my
rtedies. LesTthanhafi meat ^ways In
nade a perfect cure."? Beware of Imit
t Eastern. Va. bottle, 2S cents, ?
ed with bone rheuma- dealers In medicln
a Liniment completely or money refun<
tonald, S. C. ? Remedy Ox, In&*
Powerful Permanent E
tftubtxwo cue? Good rooolte are CI
yield to P. P, P. kiting?it ctireo II
when other roedi- you to aUp oared KA '
P. P. I
9 blood-?cleansed the entire H
:ngthens digestion and nerves. H
d Poison and skin diseases. * H
Stops the Pain; ends Malaria; H
guilder. Thousands endorse it* H
^SAVANNAH^^^^J
for postage. Complete book mailed
to any address on receipt of the
price, $1. Phillips-Boyd Publishing
Company. Atlanta, (?a.
hcitHilive J'alni?Thousands have
heard of but have never aeon it.
You can do a profitable business
with $1.00 package containing
1000 seeds of this wonderful botanical
curiosity. Leaves fold up,
and branches drop down If touched.
Plants sell on sight. Fred Iterber,
304 San Adres, Milate, Philllpine
Islands.
.ship lour Eggs, Poultry, Puller, etc,
to
/*V&.rket Produce Co..
CHARLESTON, H. O.
We guarantee you top market
prices. Handle any quantify you
care (o ship and mail you check same
day goods are received.
Make a start by marking youi
next shipment
M&rket Produce Co.
KAP-AL-G1NE f
WILL CI KH YOIK HEADACHE
Whether sick or nervous, headache
or from depression, worry or fatigue,
K" A P-AI-CINE
Is Liquid mikI Acts Immediately.
SAFE AM) PLEASANT TO TAKE,
Two Sizes ? 10c and 25c.
At All Druggists,
free. Mil ford Aycock, Plkevlllo, N. O.
Chinese Koasted To Death.
1
Victoria, B. C., May 11.? Many
Chinese In Basra, capital of Thibet, v
were roasted alive during an attack
on their quarters by angry Thibetans.
In lb e lighting many were
killed on both sides the rioting grew
| out of the declaration by tlio Llama
who said the Chinese were destined
for divine punishment.
y
ts said that Bryan expects to got the
nomination when the Democratic eonj
vention fnils to nominate any of the
I present candidates. If such were to
j happen Democrats would follow the
[ example set by Bryan and bolt the
: party." Is the Record one of the
Democrats that, would holt?
y wish you to do?take inter- * BW
r times a day their particular IB""
rimaitiia Caaaiili
1*5 IICM I V/UUOUI
ian first and ask him. Kg
i $5.00?yes, $25.00?for some. E9
:hat would cure you, or you r Efl
of rheumatism, which, by tho HI
isease, with more serious results |H
tieved.
to do b to try one 25c size bottle ^B
ack of rheumatism in my right Pa
rd for me to get about. Noah's Pjflj
the pain and soreness away."? H,
ansboro, Va. Hj,
bottle of Noah's Liniment and
s greatly. 1 suffered with rheu- nj
Jc."?Mr*. Martha A. Lambert, B|
tj
snt is the best 19
atism, Sciatica, OH
oints and Mus- E^H22flEI M ^B
Colds. Strains. LffWfik..V>i OB ^O
ss i
no and Muscle |IH
Noah's Ark on lUKEjliH B
1 looks like this HlillwlTTl
'Noah's Lini- fw">u>i'V1?m H B
RED ink. ?*hmi?mh
tnd sold by all
o. Guaranteed
ied by Noah bjjjjjjjja
Richmond. Vs. w |B
H
_____