Newspaper Page Text
THE CATTLE KINGS.
-
ONCE A GREAT POWER IN THE V EBT,
THEY ARE NOW DISPLACED.
Small Stock Baleero H*’« Driven Ot-J the
Larger Onea-BU ■»<* Water
Hole. Fenced la-How the Bonanza
Cattle Outfit. Made Enormous Profit..
The great cattle ranges of western
North Dakota and Montana, whero for
□early 20 years, the bonanza cattle out
fits have held complete sway, and where
cattle have roamed the vast prairies at
will, like the buffalo a quarter of a cen
tury ago, are passing out of existence.
The deathknell of the large cattle
companies has been sounded by the in
numerable settlers who have taken up
vacant government land in the great
grazing region, built "shanties” in the
vicinity of every natural spring and
water hole, fenced in thousands of acres
of grazing land and driven the immense
Jierds of the bonanza cattlemen from
place to place, until there is no place
left for them to go. All the years that
the vast prairies of the west have re-
■ mained unsettled have been worth mil
lions to the cattle princes. Hundreds of
thousands of cattle have been imported,
placed upon the ranges at a cost not to
exceed $lB a head for the 2-year-old
steers, allowed to roam at will for two
years, at an average animal cost not to
exceed $3, and then sold in the market
at Chicago for an average price of $45
to SSO. The free ranges qffered by the
millions of acres of unsurveyed and un
occupied government land have been
• turned into millidhs of dollars in cold
cash by the cattle kings, but tho tide of
immigration to the west has sealed
their fate and they are ready to go.
For 20 years nearly a vast region ly
ing along the western part of North Da
kota and the eastern strip of Montana
measuring 100 miles in width and 150
miles in length has been entirely given
up to the interests of the cattle kings.
Thousands of head of cattle have been
grazed year after year, countless train-
I ‘ loads of beeves have been. shipped to
market and millions of dollars have
gone into the pockets of the cattlemen.
Pierre Wiebaux, the Montana stock
man, said to be the largest single owner
of cattle in the United States, has num
bered his total possessions of cattle at
50,000 head. The Berry-Boice Cattle
company has owned and grazed each
year not fewer than 30,000 head, and
there are numerous companies that have
essayed to keep on the ranges an annual
total of from 10,000 to 35,000 head.
The vastness of the business of these
cattle companies may be estimated from
the fact that the annual shipments for
the past few years have been from 3,000
to 6,000 head for each of the large com
panies. The annual profits of the larger
companies, after deducting the original
cost of the cattle and the cost of their
maintenance upon the ranges, are from
$75,000 to $150,000 —all that from the
free ranges of the government, given
without taxation or any return what
ever.
To understand the situation that has
existed up to the present time it must
be remembered that thjs broad region
which has been given up to the interests
of the cattle growers has not been in
tersected by a fence, disturbed with.a
plow or graced with a field of grain up
to a few short years ago—nothing for
miles but short nutritious grass, xyhich
cured on the prairie, as clover in a stack,
and served equally well for food in dead
of winter as in the heat of summer.
Forth upon this vast area every spring
have been poured streams of gaunt, ill
shaped, long horned and lean ribbed
southern cattle. Left to roam at will,
they have thriven and waxed fat, until
in two years they have become sleek
and fat and comely to the eye. During
all that period they have been as free
and untrammeled as were ever the buf
falo. But at.tho close of the maturing
period they have been rounded up,
driven to railroad stock shipping pens
. and loaded upon the cars for a trip to
market. Their places are taken by fresh
importations from the south. And so,
year after year, have the processes been
repeated, until the profits that were
known to have accrued from the busi
ness have tempted thousands of small
holders of cattle to settle in this region
and engage in the beef business on a
smaller scale.
The presence of these smaller opera-
is the inevitable doom of the cattle
kings. /Their vast herds are no longer
allowed to roam the ranges undisturb
ed. The small ranchmen have built
fences and inclosed the water holes.
The prairies have fcsn made to yield to
the ißwjng machine, and the iormer
freegrass has come to be cut and stack
ed as hay,) until the ranges in many
places are flare of feed for the herds of
the largejr companies. These conditions
artLxesffonsible for the closing out of
the cattle princes. There is no longer
room for theirthousands of beeves. Fif
teen thousand cattle, the property of
one of the larger operators, succumbed
to the severity of the weather for no
other reason than that the ranges had
been denuded of grass by the numerous
smaller ranchmen. This was a warn
ing that the most obstinate must heed.
And so the cattle companies that for
merly numbered their possessions by
the thousands of head may now number
them easier in hundreds. The small
ranchman is the man upon whom the
market of the future must rely for its
beef.—St Paul Pioneer Press.
Oat of His Depth.
"What, ” said the girl with loose hair
around her ears and a spasmodic man
ner, "is your opinion of tho ultimate
destiny of tho human race?”
"Did I—er—understand you to say
the ultimate destiny of the human
race?” inquired Willie Wishington.
"Yes.”
‘ “Why— nm—if you want my candid
opinion, I should say that—uh—that
it’s long ways off.”—Washington
Star.
HIGH PRICE FOR DITTO.
* «• *llll11 1.1.
A Howewlfc i Experience In Getting tha
, Xagradianta of a Jar of Chowohov.
What is the power of a ditto mark? A
nice housekeeper in this city knows more
about it than she did once.
This is the time of year when mustard,
cloves, cassia, bell peppers, vinegar and
the other fixings that go with cucumbers,
tomatoes, cauliflower, button onions, cel
ery, etc., are seething in the pot and the
pickle jar is yawning with open month to
receive them. A good recipe for mixed
pickles or chowchow is at a premium just
now. The lady referred to above had a
receipt for chowchow which ran something
like this: Cauliflower, 8 heads; button
onions, 2 quarts; small cucumbers, 2
quarts; bell peppers, 6; celery seed, 1
/ounce; white mustard seed, 1 ounce; cur
cuma seed, 1 ounce, and so on.
Now everything went well until she
asked her grocery man to bring these ran
terlals to her. He said he got everythin!:
all right until ho struck curcuma scOti
The druggist, when’he got the rest of the
things, said he didn’t keep curcuma seeds
“Never mind,” said she, “I’ll get those
myself the next time I go up town. ”
Accordingly she soon called on a leadin. '
druggist for curcuma seeds, one ounce. .
holding the recipe ip her hand and read in,;
from it. He blandly said he never had a
call for them before, but would order some
and have them in a day or two. She wait
ed a proper length of time and called
again. The druggist referred to his bill
and read a footnote which said: “None in
this city. Will try Boston. ’’ Boston could
not furnish them, but would try New
York. New York responded. “Can’t
find. Would probably cost $1 or more an
ounce if obtainable. ”
‘Not long after her husband dropped Into
another drug store one evening, and the
conversation was runping on the expen
siveness of some kinds of drugs, and he
joined in with a bit of his wife’s experi
ence on curcuma seeds. The druggist lis
tened intently to the yarn and said quietly:
“There must be some mistake about this.
It is not curcuma seeds that you want. It
is curcuma, ground curcuma. I sell lots
of it every day for coloring chowchow yel
low’.”
“I don’t care,” said he, “the recipe
reads:
“Celery seed, one ounce.
Curcuma “ “
“I’ve read it a dozen times, and if those
ditto marks don’t call for curcuma seeds
then I don’t know how to read English. ”
So the pursuit of curcuma seed was
dropped, and he carried home some ground
curcuma, and his wife made the chowchow
and it was lovely.
Now tho point of this is that tho curcu
ma root is tho part used. It grows in
China, Japan, Ceylon and East India
countries in general and is an ingredient
in the famous curry powder of the
orient. When it is dried, it has a taste
like ginger root and is consumed in great
quantities by the natives of the countries
wljere it grows as a condiment. It is per
fectly harmless and is used entirely in this
country to give the bright yellow color to
chowchow and pickles in general.
It is a tuberous plant and is wholly
propagated from the root, which makes ijt
unnecessary to save the seeds, which are
few and entirely useless. This is why they .
would cost $1 an ounce if they could be
obtained.—Lewiston Journal.
What Is a Title—Half Title?
It is a curious thing that two well known
librarians of the British museum, Messrs.
G. F. Barwick and A. W. Pollard,
endeavored to ascertain what was under
stood among publishers by the terms
“half title,” “title,” “head title” and
“running title.” Mr. Horace Hart, Ox
ford University Press, says he agrees gen
erally with the definitions given in Ja
cobi’s “Printer’s Vocabulary,” 1888, but
ho says: “ ‘Head title’ I never heard of; I
suppose it means tho ‘drive down’ or ‘dro]£
down’ title which begins tho work or the
first chapter of it. * Bastard title’ is the
same as ‘ half title. ’ ‘ False title’ is not in
use in England [I am glad to hear this],
but is obviously tho same as ‘bastard
title.’” Mr. Charles 8. Jacobi says:
“ ‘False title’ is rarely every used, and
then not by printers. I hardly know what
is meant by ‘head title.’ Wo don’t use tho
term. 1 Heading’ is the title to first page
or chapter.”
It is most extraordinary to find printers
and publishers themselves all differing so
much as to these terms. All I want is
that for the future we may have some set
tled terms which shall be clearly under
stood without explanation. I therefore
present the following terms in what ap
pears to me to bo their most generally ac
cepted meaning: “Half title” is half or a
portion of tho title given before the title
page or whole title. “ Title” is the main
. title page of a book. “Head title” is that
at the beginning of the first page or chap
ter. “Running title," Mr. Charles S. Ja
cobi says*, “is the fixed title of the work
used in headline, sometimes used instead
of title of work, ” or, to put it shorter,
that which runs along tho top of every
page.—Notes and Queries.
One Cure For JLove and Alcoholism,
M. de Fleury, in his “Introduction a la
Medecine de I’Esprit,” combats with great
seriousness the old fashioned hypothesis
that bodily ills alone are the province of
the practitioner. The disorders of the
psychic half of the human economy are
every whit as numeious and important, if
not more so, than those affecting the
somatic half and every one reflecting on
the havoc.they occasion must acknowledge
that systematic efforts should bo made to
render them amenable to treatment. Lazi
ness, grief and anger are among the mental
affections dlscuSsed by the writer, not only
from a curative, but also from a prophy
lactic, point of view. As might perhaps
be expected, an entire chapter is devoted
to the tender passion under the heading,
“La Medecine des Passions.” “Love,”
says M. de Fleury, “ is a physiological phe
nomenon which enters tho domain of pa
thology the moment it assumes the senti
mental form. Do we not habitually say,
‘So-and-so is madly in love?’ This passion,
which is beyond tho control of sense, in
face of which reason loses her rights and
her powers, is incontestably a human mal
ady. ” The symptoms of I’amour maladie,
we are further told, bear a wonderful re
, semblance to those of alcoholism and mor
phinomania. Every one who inquires into
tho facts for himself will be struck with
the absolute identity of the pathological
processes in each case. The point of de
parture is different, but the results are
precisely similar, and the same treatment
—namely, separation—cures both.—Lon
don Lancet.
Jost Suited.
Watts—Some of those Chinese plays are
six months long.
Potts —What of it?
“I was thinking one of them would be a
good thing to take to the arctic regions for
a one night stand.”—lndianapolis Jour
nal * I
- * _
■» *
HATS OFF IN CHURCH.
A Chicago Pastor Sefrvea on th«
Woman of Uh C<>ng egation.
The women of Unity ’c!»t ch, Oak Park,
will take off their bonnets md hats and
alt unbonneted and unhnti d during the
Sunday morning and craning services con
ducted by their pastor, the Rev. R. F. (
Johonnot, who says he “cimuot see why
the children of darkness should always be
wiser than the children if light.” In
fact, ho does not propose to let the theater
become more advanced than tho church.
So a few weeks ago he intimated to his
congregation his wishes in the matter and
requested the women of Unity church to
be leaden in the new movement.
Naturally the step caused something
more than a ripple of surprise. Not a
little indignation was expressed. There
wbre some who said Pastor Johonnot was
growing autocratic when he attempted to
dictate in matters of dress. It ( hardly
seemed decorous to’ sit unbonneted in
church ; besides, there were other questions
involved. What was to become of tho
church millinery? “How does my hair
look?” - would be the query now, instead
of the old familiar “Is my hat on straight?”
It certainly gives the congregation a
home look as they sit all with uncovered
heads, but somehow it is not satisfying.
Tho attractive and diverting spectacle of
well trimmed hats and bonnets, resem
bling as they do a garden of flowers, is
like the withdrawal of the stained glass
windows or an effective part of the serv
ice. True, there is no craning of the neck
to get around a big, offensive hat to see
the preacher, and this is the reason for
the mandate, “Tako off your bonnets and
hats in church.”
Tho Rev. f R. F. Johonnot, pastor of
Unity church, believes that tho church of
the future will have a dressing room where
ladies can leave their hats and wraps and
a checkroom for overcoats and umbrellas.
Ho is very much in earnest in his new
crusade against the monopoly of fashion.
‘I have no personal interest ih the mat
ter,” ho said, “except to give a more home
like and devotional aspect to the meeting.
It will, if carried out, make the congrega
tion look as If its ladies had come to stay
and were not merely visitors. Then con
sider the courtesy of such a movement. It
will bo carrying out the golden rule.
Wby, I went to a church in the city not long
ago where four young ladies came in and
occupied the pew in front of me. Each
one wore a flower garden on her head, and
I did not get even a .glimpse of the preach
er. You see, our churches have not raised
seats like the theater, yet the theater set
the first example and compelled ladies to
take off their hats.
“Now, I do not ask my people in a com
pulsory spirit to remove their hats. I
suggest it as a matter of courtesy, first to
the church, next to me as their pastor. As
I said in public, I have two reasons—one
and the main one is that other people may
enjoy the privileges of the sanctuary, ths
other that the assembled worshipers may
look more homelike.
“The women have accepted the edict in
a very friendly spirit of acquiescence. The
leaven is working well, and J must express
my gratitude to the young women of the
choir, who led tho way. Os course there
are some who will never change a custom
until it become? a fashion. As soon as it
is fashionable to sit in church without a
bonnet all the ladies will adopt the idea.”
“Perhaps they have a wholesale fear of
St. Paul, who said that the women should
remain covered in church?”
“St. Paul is out of date with such tra
ditions as those in the present age of ths
world. I intend to leave the matter en
tirely to the good sense and courtesy of
the ladies of my congregation, satisfied
that they will decide what is best them
selves. The whole thing was suggested tc
me by complaints made from time to time
by sitters who could not see the platform
on account of tho overshadowing pre*
ence of fashionable millinery.”—Chicago
Times-Herald. Z
Carnot and Alsace-Lorraine.
,At a dinner recently I sat beside an em
inent Frenchman who graduated at the
Polytechnic with M. Carnot. The severe
discipline—a military discipline—and the
fearful mathematical grind there Weld the i
pupils into a close brotherhood. They are
out of touch with every one else. Carnot
was generally amiable, but only expanded
with Polytechnicians. My neighbor and 1
were speaking of his sense of pulilic duty
and his deep feeling of patriotism. It was,
said the former, very sincere, and he gave
the following as an instance: “I went one
forenoon early in 1892 to dejeuner with
him as an old Polytechnic chum. He wae
pacing up and down his morning room,
and was In a state of glee that reminded
’ me of the Carnot of the Polytechnic wheit
he had solved some all but insoluble prob
lem in mathematics.
“I said to him: ‘You are in a state of
visible contentment. Can I share in it?’
‘Ca va bien; ca va bien,’ he went on re
peating. He kept rubbing his hands and
was so overjoyed at something that I said
to myself, ‘lt would be shabby now to
proffer a request, for ho could not help for
sheer joy to grant the favor.’ ‘May I
ask,’ I ventured to say, ‘what goes on so
well?’ ‘Ca va bien; ca va bien, mon ami.’
‘Mais, quoi?’ ‘We hate drawn the czar to
our side. Mark my words. Great events
are in course of preparation. We shall re
cover what we lost.’ ‘Recover what?’
'Alsace-Lorraine. It may not be in my
presidency, but I think I shall live to see
It and before many years have sped.’ ”
London Truth.
Carse Cards.
Curso cards area novelty which have'
lately been introduced into Prussia, Sax
ony and Alsace, though they originated in
Calvin’s land. The manner in which the
propagandist employs the curse cards is
said to be as follows: He or she starts in
the early morning by filling his or her
pockets with the form in blank. When in
omnibus, tram or train, bad language is
heard; then the user of the profane words
is invited to fill in' the blank forms, and
he binds himself for a certain time to ab
stain froifi “swear words” or to do pen
ance in pfennings for indulgence in the
same. In Switzerland 39,800 of these
cards have been distributed, and, as the
prospectus gravelyremarks, “In a country
where three great European languages are
spoken the system will have invaluable
results in enabling the religious statisti
cian to estimate the prevalence of violent
language among the nations of western
Europe.” The benefits of the curse cards
have yet to be proved.
A Considerable Admission.
“Os course, all my aunts say that the
baby looks like me,” said the blushing
young man.
“What docs’your wife say to that?”
asked tho elder man. .
“ Well, she admits that perhaps I may
resemble the baby a little.”—lndianapolis
Journal
9
Ir. . *'l.- «
ANOTHER “SPITE” BUILDING.
Curious Structure on a Remnant of the
De Peyater Property.
A “spite store,” wblcJYbutdoes the well
known Richardson “spite house” on the
east side, has just been completed in the
west end at West End avenue, the Boule
vard and Ono Hundred and Eighth street.
' The store is one of tho smallest buildings
•ver put up for the transaction of busi
ness. It is 19 feet in depth and 9 feet in
width at One Hundred and Eighth street,
tapering to a sharp point at the south end.
It is two stories in height, and the occu
pant of the upper floor will be compelled
to ascend and descend upon a ladder. It
has a single wall of brick extending along
the rear. The front is of steel, with plats
glass windows, and the roof la of tile.
Thia curious structure is erected upon a
remnant of the De Peyster estate and orig
inally beldngod to a large tract of land
purchased by the Do Peyster family short
ly after the oloso of the Revolution, when
the De Peyster homestead was located up
on the ground now occupied by St. Luke’s
hospital, Ono Hundred and Thirteenth
street, Morningside Heights. The rem
nant was left when West End avenue, the
Boulevard and One Hundred and Eighth
street were opened, nnd Henry T. Cary,
the executor of tho Do Peyster estate, has
long been at a loss to know what to do
with it, as Mrs. Sherman, the owner of
lots on the corner, refused to purchase it.
i The plot was at last leased for a term of
i years to Michael M. McDermott of St.
Nicholas avenue, and he immediately be
gan to erect the tiny store upon bis claim.
Mrs. Sherman, the owner of the sur
rounding property, came from Washing
ton at once to interfere with the work,
but found she could do nothing. Mean
while several persons with whom she was
negotiating for the sale of her property
i withdrew their option when they saw the
store being placed on the corner.
The structure is said to have cost more
than $2,000. It is erected upon a solid
concrete foundation to withstand severe
windstorms. The lower floor has been
fitted as a refreshment booth for bicyclists,
the roof has also been leased to a stereop
. tioon advertising firm, and the upper floor
is designed as showrooms for specialties.
. —New York Commercial.
i 1
The Drafted Soldier.
I Ouida stoutly denies that the soldier is
I the highest type of humanity or that obe
i dlenoe is the highest human virtue. The
| obedience which is exacted from the sol
dier is very much like slavery, and it is
I no moral act and teaches no virtue.
> “There is no servant, groom, artisan, farm
i laborer or hireling of any kind so laty, so
impudent, so insubordinate and so useless
as the young man who has recently come
‘ out from his term of compulsory service.
1 When Lord Wolseley utters the preporter
i ous declaration that tho education given
1 by conscription teaches a lad ‘all the qual
' ities calculated to make him a thoroughly
i useful and loyal citizen, ’ has he the least
' idea of what is the actual moral state of
the barrack yards and barrack rooms of
the armies of the continent? When the
1 youth has had purity and strength of
• character and of mind enough to resist
' the contagion in which he has been
steeped, he will in nine instances out of
ten be a spoiled agriculturist, artisan,
student, laborer.
“I can conceive nothing so appalling to
the world as would be the forcing of the
' military temper dbwn the throats of its en
tire multitudes. Militarism is the nega
tion of individuality, of originality and of
true liberty. Its somber shadow is spread
over Europe. Its garroting collar of steel
; is on tho throat of the people. The whole
people sweat, groan, perish, under the bur
-1 dens laid upon them for the maintenance
of the vast battalions of young men im
prisoned in barrack yards ip enforced idle
ness and semistarvation.” Collier’s
Weekly. ,
Celluloid.
Though the chemical constitution of cel
luloid is a matter of doubt, the art of man
ufacturing this peculiar modern product is
explained in a few words—an article, says
The Trade Journals’ Review, made by the
combined action of pressure and heat, or
with the aid of solvents, in that case in
the cold. The camphor is dissolved In al
cohol, as little as possible, and the solution
sprayed through a rose on to tho pyroxy
lin, the latter perfectly dry, a second layer
of pyroxylin being then added, moistened
again with camphor solution, and so on.
The gelatinus lump is worked between iron
rollers, to which it adheres, and the layer
is slit longitudinally and rolled again.
The cakes, .4 ‘lnch thick, are cut into
plates, about 2 feet by 1 foot, and pass for 24
hours into hydraulic presses, which are
doubly steam jacketed. The mass is now
‘ sawed into plates, which are dried at about
95 degrees F., for a week or two and Anal
ly cut into smaller pieces, from which the
I articles are stamped. Further, according
to a writer in The Gummi Zeitung, it ap
pears that at Magnus & Co. 's. noted estab
-1 lishment in Berlin the method pursued is
I believed to consist in pouring 100 parts of
i ether on 50 of collodion wool and 25, of
camphor, the covered mass be|ng then
I stirred in earthenware vessels with rubber
i sticks until a homogeneous gelatinous
mass is obtained, and then rolled. Apart
i from dyestuff and other additions, the
i average celluloid consists of two-thirds
pyroxylin and one-third camphor.
Alaskan
Alaskan squaws are not sensitive on the
subject of their age. On the contrary,
they take some trouble to make it known
to the world. They wear a piece of wood
or bone in the lower lip, the size of the
ornament indicating the age of the owner.
When a girl marries, her lower lip is
pierced and a peg of wood or a piece of
bone the size of a pea inserted. As she
grows older this is increased in size until
it is almost as wide as her chin and one
fourth of an inch high. The result Ik na
turally most unsightly. There is an in
teresting family at Fort Wrangel which
illustrates perfectly this peculiar custom.
It indudes four generations. A young
girl may be seen sitting on one side of the
one roomed square frame house, while her
mother, grandmother and great-grand
mother are /quatted on the earthen floor
near the door offering mats and baskets to
the ship’s passengers Who come on shore.
There is no disfiguring object on the girl’s
chin, but there is a big one on the lip of
the greet - grandmother. Philadelphia
Ledger,
A Pauper Princess.
The Infanta Isabella Ferdinands Fran
ooise Josephine, aunt of the king of Spain
and sister of the ex-Klng Francis d’Assisi,
who died the other day in poverty in a
wretched Inn in Paris, was the most beau
tiful princess in the Spanish court 50 years
ago. Her marriage in 1841 to Count Ig
natius Gurowski, a Pole, caused a rupture
between her and her family. He died in
1887, leaving her penniless, nnd she has
been living from band to mouth ever since. I
r- • - - - - -w—"
*
| SEE
L a ernpi* I THAT ™E
IU Isac-simile
table Preparation for As- M SIGNATURE
starting thCToodandßegutar !
ling the Stomachs andßoweis of W OF
Promote slXgesHon,Cheerful
nessandßest.Contains neither ■
Opnim,Morphine nor Mineral. B IS qjj tttf: '
Not Narcotic.
I WRAPPER
XU-
I ■ OF EVEBY
j I BOTTL:n: OF
A perfect Remedy for Constipa- H S
lion,Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, ® H § i
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- ■■ il g
ness and Loss OF SLEEP. ■|||l Q | IS El g
Facsimile Signature of I it D
H
NEW YORK. Jlp Outoria h pot vp fa ons-sta tatlM oaly- It
not told in balk. Don’t allow jnycas to t'J’
BffißßiliilWiWjWWlM 118 TOn noytbing oho tho " promUa
Ifli ia "Z !t R 3 coed" and “will answer evrry par-
poae.” Ece that yon get C-A-3-T-O-B-L-A,
IB The he- -/? d
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. ■
- - v - if * r
■■ ‘ 1 . . , L..'
—GET YOUK—
JOB PRINTING
DOISTE
■■ ' • z
The Morning Call Office.
' -SH— ——S—E————
We have Just supplied our Job Office with a complete line oi Btationer*
*
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way oi
■
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS .
STATEMENTS, IRCULARS,
■ ■
ENVELOPES, NOTES,
MORTGAGES, PROGRAMS,
JARDB, POSTERS
DODGERS, - EH
We orry U/e'xst iue cd FNVEJ/VRB yii : this trad*.
An adraedvt POSTER lI any size can be issued on short notice
Our prices for work of all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained ro»
any office in the state. When you want Job printing ot'sny <J< tt rip ticn sne »
call Satisfaction guaranteed.
, =====
ALL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.
Out of town orders will receive
prompt attention
J. P.& S B. Sawtell.
GEHTRAL OF GEORGIA RIILWD EO.
Schedule in Effect Dec. 12, 1897.
'No. 4 No. U No. S ~
Dolly. Daily Dally. stamoms. i Dally. Daily. Daily.
TsOpm 4 06pm 760 am LvAtlanta...7.’..Ar 736 pm HSOam J***®
8 36pm 4 46pm 8 28am LvJonesboroAr 862 pm 10S8am
• Upm 628 pm »07am Dr Griffin Ar 6Upm OsOarn
•45 pm «00pm •SO am Ar............. BarneevfUe Lv <42 pro •18 am *4. an>
17 40pm tlNXIpm Ar.... -Thomaston.LrUßpe: 1800 am
10 Is pm 628 pm 10 12am Ar ForaythLv SHpaa 860 am
1110 pm 780 pm 1110 am ArMaconLv 4Upm 8 00am
1219 am 810 pm 1208 pm ArGordonLv 804 pm 710 am >Waro
1860 pm +ll6 pm Ar MilledgevilleLv 2880 am ,
180 am 117 pro Ar...Tennille• ... .Lv IMj«
315. m 2L spm -5‘ r . MiUen -
835 am OSspmArAugusta....Lv 820 am
6 00am8 00pm Ar...SavannahLv 846am*00pm
•Dally, texoept Sunday.
Train for Newnan, Carrollton and Cedartown leaves GrUßn at o’s am. and 1 »0 pm
dally except Sunday. Returning, arrives In Grifln 620 pm. and 12 40 p m dally except
Sunday. For further InformaUon apply to
C.S. WHITR, Ticket Ageat, GriMn. Ga.
IL H. HINTON. Traffio Manager, Savannah. CM.
*