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THE NATIONAL CAPITOL..
« CO.U •» !-*•* •80.000 • Year to Keep
“ Bi< BnlldlD|C i n Rep*!,..
ft costs SBO,OOO a year to maintain Un
de Sum’s 114,000,000 building on Capitol
hill That is the amount congress allows
6 ’ vca r for mecbnnlca and laborers, for
*' hes and. hardware and lumber, for
tiima and grate bars and " n the otber ’UP
plie* necessary to keep the capitol In re-
improvements congress has appro
unfrd an average of $25,000 a year in the
Ln ream and ranch of that has
rL, gpent in the last 12 months, Flfty
jX thousand dollars has been used to
Mustform the senate’s system of ventila
tion and 145,000 to introduce electrio light
in the building and grounds. For the
current year other changes are planned.
There is always something unfinished
about the capitol. A few years ago the
in ofct noticeable incompleteness was Tn the
terrace on the west front of the building.
That is completed now. But the painter’s
ugly scaffold hanging in the rotunda
draws attention to the still unfinished
Brumidi frieze, and in the basement of
the senate wing the abrupt termination of
the brilliant tropical wall decoration is a
constant source of surprise.
Chance is responsible for the incom
pleteness of the wall paintings. They were
begun many years ago by an artist of rare
merit. He grew tired of the work or he
died —no one about the capitol can say ac
curately which. At all events he disap
peared from the seene and the walls of
the senate wing rema! beautiful in some
spots and bare in otb a. The beautiful
spots have been clean I and renewed re
cently by W. H. Duoksteln. Mr. Duck
steln has added also to the cleanliness of
what is known to the irreverent as the
chamber of horrors by cleaning the mar
ble statues there.
The delay in completing the frieze is not
a matter of chance. It is due to a dispute
in the committee on library over the im
portance of certain events in national his
tory. This frieze, begun by Brumidi, an
Italian artist, in 1878, was only partly
done at the time of his death in 1882. The
hanging scaffold on which Brumidi did
his test work remained in place a lofig
time until another Italian, Costagglni,
was employed to carry out Brumldl’s de
signs.
What is represented by the annual ap
propriation of $30,000 and in the last year
by the special appropriations of $55,000
and $45,000 is not all that it takes to run
the capitol and grounds. Care of the
grounds costs $12,000 a year, steam heat
ing and machinery for the senate $4,600,
the lighting of the building and grounds
and of the botanic gardens opposite $86,-
792 and the operation of the engine house
and stables $2,000. - -
But for the building itself the cost of
maintenance Is SBO,OOO a year, or, includ
ing the improvements, $55,000. Some
business men figure repairs and improve
ments at 10 per cent es the value of the
building*, and the actual cost of the capitol
to date has been sl4,ooo,ooo.—Chicago
Tribune.
Bobertf Fulton’s Torpedoes.
Before he turned his attention to navi
gation by steam Robert Fulton invented a
marine torpedo which he endeavored to
dispose of to the United States govern
ment. Succeeding In Interesting James
Madison, then secretary of state, in the
matter, he obtalned a small appropriation
from the government for the purpose of
conducting some public experiments. In
the summer of 1806 he invited the high
dignitaries and a number of prominent
citizens of New York to Governor’s island
to see the torpedoes and machinery With
which his experiments were to be made.
While he war lecturing on his blank tor
pedoes,’which were large, empty copper
cylinders, Ms numerous auditors crowded
around him. After awhile he turned to a
copper case of the same description which
was placed under the gateway of old Cas
tle William and to which was attached a
clockwork lock.
Drawing out a peg, Fulton set the clock
in motion, and then he said in solemn
tones to his attentive audience: “Gentle
men, this is a charged torpedo, with
which, precisely in its present state, I
mean to blow up a vessel. It contains 170
pounds of gunpowder, and if I were to
suffer the clockwork to run 15 minutes
I have no doubt that it would blow this
fortification to atoms.”
The circle of humanity which had closed
around the Inventor began to spread out
and grow thinner, and before five of the
15 minutes had passed there were but two
or three persons remaining under the gate
way. Some, indeed, lost no time in get
ting at the greatest possible distance from
the torpedo, and they dld not again appear
on the ground until they were assured that
the engine of destruction was safely lodged
in the magazine whence it had been taken.
—Sacramento Beoord Union.
Glad He Was Not Like These.
“I haven’t any sympathy for the peo
ple who are always complaining and whin
ing,” remarked the man with the troubled
frown upon his forehead. “In fact, I be
lieve that the men and women who are al
ways fancying themselves 111 used and
grumbling at other people ought to be
confined just as much as if they bad hy
drophobia or got drunk; but there are
some troubles a man really can’t help
mentioning.
“Now, for Instance,” ho continued fret
fully, “I don’t suppose any man In Chi
cago has more real worries than I have.
My wife tells me every night that she’s
tired of hearing me talk of them, and the
other mqn in the office begin to tell funny
stories just as soon as I come around out
of sheer aggravation, I believe. My chil
dren run out of the room whenever X get
ready for a nice, long, confidential chat
with one of them, and even the dog howls
when I get ready to talk, I’m nearly al
ways so sad. But do I go round telling
people what a martyr to fate and other
people I am? Well, I guess not, my friend.
I haven’t a particle of use for a chrohic
complalner.’’—Chicago Times-Herald.
Grewsome Blrtbqpy Celebration.
M. de Paris, otherwise Dei bier, the pub
lic executioner of France, has just cele
brated his seventieth birthday in a grew
some fashion by executing at Bastia, in
Corsica, the murderer Fazzini. The scaf
foldings of the guillotines remain in the
prisons throughout France where execu
tions may take place, but the knife is never,
out of M. Del bier# possession. He carries
't in a long leather satchel, not unlike
®n elongated dress suit ease. When be
•eaves Paris with his grim instrument of
justice, a small army of newspaper men
usually accompany him in the hope that
•omething may happen. His trip to Cor- 1
nca was hardly noticed, howevet, on Re
count of the Dreyfus excitement. DmbJer
probably killed more men
teher living person. Fazzini broughThW
tetord up to 506.—San Franciteo Argq-
DINAH-SALIFOU.
The Ludicrous Adventures of a Negro
King In Gay Paris.
Dinah-Salifou, formerly king of the
Naloue, died a few days ago in the Mili
tary hospital of St. Louis, in Senegal. It
may be remembered that only two sov
ereigns visited the French universal exhi
bition of 1889. Dinah-Salifou was one,
and the shah of Persia, thy luxurious
Nasr-ed-din, was the otber. They met one
day at the exhibition. The shah looked at
his black cousin from head to foot and
then turned away in contemptuous silence,
much to the surprise of the poor negro
monarch, who felt inclined to call him
out. The shah, however, compensated for
the affront by presenting him with a mag
nificent saber, which Dinah-Salifou im
mediately suspended to his belt. It was
the happiest day of bis life, as Joseph
Prud’homme would have said. But, alas,
his happiness did not last* long! There be
Ing some doubt as to the authenticity of
the African potentate, no reception was
prepared for his arrival, and he had to
lodge in a small furnished apartment.
Every day our negro king, accompanied
by his queen, a corpulent lady dressed in
savage fashion, went out in an open cab
to visit the sights of Parte. Behind the
royal couple came their suit, which was
composed of half a dozen natives, all at
tired in what may be described as rags
and tatters, add grinning like so many
gorillas. His majesty knew nothing of
the French language beyond a phrase
which he had learned, and which he em
ployed on all occasions, from grave to gay,
from lively to severe. “Suis tree content”
(I am very contented) was the universal
phrase in question. One evening Dinah-
Salifou, together with his wife and at-
went tn the theater of the Porte
St Martin. The king was dressed in a
long robe very much like a dressing
gown, a hat which resembled a wideawake,
With a tall crown, red babouches, and by
his side the saber which the shah had given
him. The queen wore a white drbss, with
a necklace made of colored beads, and a
small hat of red and yellow velvet. As
regards their suit, they put on for the
oasion caftans of various colors, greasy and
patched up. One of the dignitaries had on
a pair of red. trousers which evidently be
longed at one time to some French soldier.
Another was the treasurer of the king
dom, who was considered to boa dlstin
guished personage.
His African majesty was a tall, well
built man, as black as ebony. The queen
was also tall and not without a certain
grace. But she was not to black as her
royal husband. The manager of the thea
ter did honor to his royal guests by plac
ing them in one of the prominent boxes,
from which they were able to see the whole
audience. “Suis tees content,” said the
king, showing hist tongue and indicating
thereby that he was thirsty. Beer was
brought to them, and as they drank it the
orchestra struck up a “bamboula,” which
delighted them beyond’measure. .The per
formance passed off airright, save that the
queen fell asleep and set to shoring 90
loudly that she had to be removed to a
back seat. The king preserved a more
dignified attitude. Upright and immobile,
with his right hand on his saber, he fol
lowed the representation. Now and then
he looked at the audience, and a few cries
of “Vive Dinah!” were raised, whereon
he bowed gracefully and exclaimed, “Suis
tres content!” The news soon spread that
Dinah-Salifou and his suit were inside,
and in a few minutes the theater was be
sieged by a large crowd curious to see
them. When the dark monarch appeared
at the door, he was greeted with all sorts
of cries, to which he responded by clap
ping his hands. It was some time before
the royal ooupleand their attendants could
be pushed into cabs, but, alas, such was
the crowd that it was impossible to move
on. The police were powerless to dear the
way, and renewed cries ot “Vive Dinah!
Vive lee morioauds!" echoed on all sides.
Dinah-Salifou seemed at first to be agree
ably surprised and shook the bands of all
near him, exclaiming“Suistres content!”
but on seeing the crowd jump on his cab
and take other liberties with himself and
wife be began to feel uneasy. Suddenly
he rose in great wrath and glaring fero
ciously at the crowd around him cried out
louder than ever, “Suis tres content!’’
which, of course, only increased the mer
riment of the spectators. His fury grow
ing gren ter, he wanted to draw his saber
andcha-gethe crowd, but unfortunately
the weapon was intended for show only
and had no blade. But for that some dls
aster might have occurred.
His misfortunes, however, did not end
here. A little ragamuffin, more audacious
than the rest, seized hold of his majesty’#
crown and made off with it. The king
Was about to descend from his carriage
and pursue the urchin, but his queen kept
him back by the tail of his caftan. The
disorder was now complete. A strong
force of police, however, soon arrived, and
the crown was restored to its owner. The
crowd then made way for the royal vehicle,
and Dinah, who had recovered from his
indignation, saluted them. The latter
again shouted “Vive Sallfou!” while the
black monarch responded with cries of
“Suis tres content!” and so ended the royal
adventure. —Paris Letter in London Globe.
Funds Locked Up In Chancery.
The receipts and transfers into the su
preme court of judicature (England) dur
ing the year ended Feb. 29, 1896, were
£15,888,257 Is. Id. This sum, added to
the balance in hand on March 1, 1895,
makes a grand total of £76,768,417 Bs. sd.
After payments out of court to successful
claimants and others amounting to £17,-
085,648 14s. lOd. there remained in hand
in cash and securities on Feb. 29, 1896,
the large balance of £59,732,768 Bs. 7d.,
exclusive of a large item under the head of
“Foreign Currencies.” The proportion of
this balance which may be classed as “un
claimed” is not stated, but no less than
£2,827,822 18s. sd. has been appropriated
in the absence of claimants to various ob
jects. The consolidated fund is liable in
respect of this appropriation in the event
of legitimate heirs at any time substan
tiating their claims. The number of suit
ors’ accounts is 49,924, of which some
5,000 relate to funds unclaimed between
1720 and 1877
The funds in the supreme court of judi
cature (Ireland) bn Sept 80, 1896, were
£5,881,213 4s. Bd. In the chancery divi
sion there la a large sum of unclaimed
money, but the exact amount is not stated.
More than £250,000, part of such un
claimed funds, has been appropriated to
ward the cost of building the law courts
and law library in Dublin.—Chambers’
Journal.
His Loquadeus Wife.
Van Wither—How cheap things ore get
ting to be. I see you can buy a talking
machine now for $lO.
Miner —Yes. But I got one for
nothing. It was a wedding present from
my wife’s parents.—Cincinnati Commer
cial Tribune.
GLORIES OF VENICE.
Among Them That of Dreaming the Dee*
Away In a Gondola.
If Rome Id these day la too warm for
comfort, if Florence is an oven perfectly
un bearable, there is one spot in Italy which
is ns near perfection as one can hope to
find in this world. Venice, Venfee tbs
golden, is in the height of its glory in
these warm, summer days, when one can
float about all day and half through the
night in a poetic but at the tame time
admirably comfortable gondola, when the
sun deepens the tints of sky and water and
gilds the fairylike palaces, when the man
dolin and guitar tinkle until dawn under
the window of some fair inamorata, when
the Lido is a long strip of gold laved by
the refreshing sea, and the harshest sound
to bo heard is the human voice—when, in
fact, life in Venice ia the apotheosis of the
doloe far niente. .
However, if one be energetic there are
other ways of amusing oneself in the
Queen City of the Adriatic than by lotus
eating. The cases, cbantants and other
wise, are in full swing, the theaters are
open, the social world still lingers, the
usual attractions to sightseers are open,
and there is the International Art exhibi
tion, which quite merits more than one
visit. Take, for example, the Japanese
exhibits, those delicious landscapes with a
blending of colors all their own; fascinat
ing, tender little women, and gems of
bronzes in which the Japanese have reach
ed such perfection, reproducing animals
and flowers With ths most scrupulous ex
actness. There areexamples of ’ Japanese
art of the en< of the eighteenth And be
ginning of" the nineteenth century, espe
cially of the well known artists, Hokosal
and Otamaro. In utter contrast are the
British painters represented, and especially
the Scotch group, while the Russians, and
under some aspects the Austrians, have
distinguished themselves. Connoisseurs
in Italy, who until lately clung to old
prejudices, have been obliged to cast them
aside and acknowledge the pre-eminence
of these schools. In April there were 86,-
000 visitors tq.ti&gxblbition, about 2,800
a day, and from all sources, sales of cata
logues, etc.,'s22,220 have been gathered in
dbring that month. The municipality of
Venice has bought 88 pictures in oils,
three statues and one water color for a
sum of $20,000. So far the Italian gov
ernment has made no purchases, much to
the indignation of the Venetians.—Pall
Mall Gazette.
The African Cook.
The Accras, who are employed right
down the whole west coast of Africa,
thanks to the valuable education given by
the Basel mission, as cooks, carpenters
and coopers, cannot resist fishing, let their
other avocations be what they may. A
friend of mine the other day had a new
Accra cook. The man cooked well, and
my friend vaunted himself, and was con
tent for the first week. At the beginning
of the second week the cooking was still
good, but somehow or another there was
just a suspicion of a smell of fish about the
house. The next day the suspicion merged
into certainty. The third day the smell
was Insupportable and the atmosphere un*
fit to support human life, but obviously
healthy for flies;
The cook was summoned and asked by
her Britannic majesty’s representative
where the smell came from. He said he
could not smell It and he did not know.
Fourth day, thorough Investigation of the
premises revealed_tho fact that in the
backyard there was a large olotheshorse
which had been sent out by my friend’s
wife so that he could have his clothes
aired. This was literally converted into a
screen by strings of fish in the process of
drying—l. e., decomposing in the sun.
The affair was eliminated from the do
mestic circle and oast into the ocean by
seasoned natives, and awful torture in this
world and the next promised to the oook
if he should ever again embark in the fish
trade. The smell gradually faded from the
house, but the poor oook, bereft of his
beloved pursuit, burst out all over in bolls
and took to religious mania and drink
and so had to be sent back to Accra, where
I hope he lives happily, surrounded by his
beloved objects.—Miss Kingsley In Na
tional Review.
Netting the Natives.
Here is a good yarn explaining how
Whalen get native crews:
6 When a whaler is fitted out from home,
she takes her officers, boatswains and a
few foremast hands and steers for the
western islands (Azores). Arrived there,
a boat is lowered and a box of new boots
pub in it The crew pull ashore into some
convenient little bay surrounded by woods,
and, landing, they open the box of boots
and stand them all along in a row. Then
one man begins at one end of the row and
pulls all the boots on and off again one
after the other. They then board thefr
boats and pull off around the point out ot
sight, and the. natives, who have been
Watching them from the woods, coms
down and try jnHsm op, When thp offi
cer in charge ot the bbat thinks tfidy bate
had time enough to be fitted, he oofiaeS
back, and the poor *Geqs, being unable to
run with the boots on, afe easily captured
and carried off Whaling. I know this to
be a fact, far the wlmtars told me 6f |t
themeelves.”—"On *thnyoeas,” by Fred
erick Benton William*
Foul Breath and How to Treat IL
Foul breath comes from several causes
—viz, digestive bad teeth anu
certain forms of catarrh. If foul diges
tion, it comes from the stomach, and in
that case the stomach should be washed
out or otherwise sweetened and a mild
diet adopted until the stomach clears it
self. It from the teeth, it usually comes
from a cavity in which food lodges and
decomposes. This Is deleterious to health,
aside from being disagreeable, and should
be remedied by consulting a good dentist.
If from catarrh, it is generally the atropio
kind, in which there is usually a good
deal of dryness to the throat. The secre
tions become morbid and cling to the mu
cous membrane, decomposing and form
ing a crust, usualin In the posterior nares,
or vault, of the pharynx. This is a very
troublesome form of catarrh and should
lead to a consultation with a specialist. A
spray of peroxide of hydrogen mixed with
water, equal portions, will destroy all
odors. An application of oarbolised vase
line has also been found to be of great
service.—Home Doctor.
Golden Silence.
On one occasion Mr. J. M. Barrie found
himself sitting at dinner beside a literary
celebrity with whom be was welj acquaint
ed. After the conventional salutation,
Mr. Barrie turned to hie companion and
asked: - ■
“Do you feel like talking?”
"No, I do not,” was the prompt reply.
“No more do I,” answered Barrie. And
it la told of the twain that neither ex
changed a word with the otber during the
whole program of the "dinner. *
*
ENGLISH LAWYERS.
The Small Vess That Are Received hy th*
London Barrister*.
A barrister’s fees are small, and they
are always paid In advance, and the
sum is recorded under the title of the
brief. A friend who has a large practice
showed me his feebook yesterday. The
largest item was 88 guineas, which ia
less than S2OO- The average was about
SSO. Fees are regulated by the benchers
of the inn according to the service per
formed, and no contingent fees are al
lowed. A barrister may accept a case
for nothing or return the fee in cases of
charity, but ho cannot without violat
ing his oath, directly or indirectly, ac
cept any greater compensation for a
legal service than is allowed in the
regular schedule fixed by the benchers
of hie inn. If he does co, he is debarred
from practice.
It is a common custom in America
for a lawyer to undertake a suit for the
recovery of damages or a claim of any
kind with a contract that he shall re
ceive a certain percentage of the amount
of money recovered. In England such
an act would be considered disreputa
ble, and any barrister found guilty
would be expelled from his inn. The
fees are regulated by the amount of
time and labor required, and not by the
amount of money involved. A barrister
may receive a fee of $250 in a case in
volving only SSOO, and he may receive
a fee of $25 in a case involving $1,000,-
000.
All legal business originates with so
licitors. They bring to the barrister’s
office a case all prepared after certain
forms and written in manuscript. The
British courts do not permit typewrit
ing. The solicitor requests the barrister
to undertake the case, and the fee is
marked plainly upon the brief. If the
barrister does not care to undertake the
labor for the amount of money allowed
or for any other reason, he advises the
solicitor to go elsewhere. If he accepts
the responsibility, the solicitor leaves
the amount of the fee in coin with the
brief, so that the barrister has his pay
in advance. This is the almost invaria
ble custom. The only exceptions are in
cases of close friendship between the
solicitors and barristers and where there
is a large amount of litigation in
which both are involved. Then it is
customary for the barrister to make up
his bill at the end of the month or the
end of the quarter, but the fee in each
case must nevertheless be written upon
the brief and recorded in the books of
the court.
It is customary, also, for the solicitor
to leave a fee for the barrister’s clerk
at the same time, which must be a cer
tain percentage of that paid to the bar
rister. When you dine at a hotel or a
restaurant in England, it is customary
to tip the waiter an amount equal to 5
per cent of your bill for the same rea
son. The waiter receives no compensa
tion from his employer, nor does the
banister’s clerk. His pay comes entire
ly from the clients, and if his princi
pal has no clients Ip gets no pay.' On
the other hand, if his principal has a
very large and profitable practice his
fees are enormous. They say that the
clerk of Six Charles Russell lives in a
handsome villa down in the suburbs, is
dxiveh to and from his office in a brough-*
am and hires a box at the opera for the
season.—Chicago Record.
No More of It For Him.
He entered the shop of a fashionable
bootmaker, a look of determination on
his face. It was such a look as one sees
on the face of a man who is firmly re
solved to carry out, at all hazards, a de
cision which will change the whole
course of his life.
“H’m!” he began as the assistant
stepped forward and politely questioned
him as to his requirements in feet
beautifiers. “I want a pair of shoes for
my wife, Mrs. Brown.”
“Yes, sir, certainly,” said the young
man briskly. “Same style and size as
last week!”
• ’Same style. Size, fives—wide fives, ”
replied Brown decidedly.
“But—er—excuse me. Mrs. Brown
only takes—that is, she usually has
BX>” exclaimed the assistant, who
knew the lady well.
“Are you married, young man?”
queried Brown sternly, the look of de
termination deepening on his careworn
features.
“Er—not yet, sir,” answered the
shopman, blushing.
“I thought not,” returned Brown.
“I ami lam not going to suffer half
an hour’s purgatory every morning,
watching a woman trying to squeeze a
bushel of feet into a peck of boots. I’ve
stood it long enough, and I’ni going to
take her a pair that will fit.”—Pear
son’s Weekly.
Making Thing* Clear.
.An old Peebles worthy and an Eng
lish lady were one day recently occu
pants of a railway carriage in an Edin
burgh bound train. The train had been
waiting long at a certain station, and
there was no appearance of its starting,
when the worthy remarked, "They’re a
gey taiglesome lot here.”
“I beg your pardon,” said the lady.
“I’m sayin they’re an awfu’ daidlin
squad here, ” said the old fellow.
“I really beg- your pardon, sir,” she
rejoined.
“I’m remarkin they’re a vera dreich
lot here the nlcht,” the old gentleman
further ventured.
“Realty, I must again beg your par
don,” said the lady, with marked em
barrassment; “but I do not comprehend
you.
“I was just trying to say the train
waa late,” he finally blurted.
“Indeed, sir, it is very late,” agreed
the lady.
And the conversation collapsed.—
Dundee News.
Good Look* Go a Great Wsy.
“Miss Highaee is a beautiful singer,
isn’t she?”
"Very. That was what made her
singing so endurable. ” —Washington
Times.
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS.
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD “CASTORIA,” AND
** PITCHER’S C ARTORT AS OUR TRADE MAPK.
Z, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts,
was the originator of “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” the same
that has borne and does now m ever
bear the facsimile signature of wrapper.
This is the original M PITCHER'S CASTORIA,” which has been
used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty
years, LOOK CAREFULLY al ths wrapper, and see that it is
the kind you have always bought on the
and has the signature of wrap-
per. No one has authority from me to use my name ex
cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is
Pregident ' J «
Jfareh 8,1897. ■
Do Not Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting
a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer yo”
(because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in
gredients of which even he does not know.
“The Kind You Have Always Bought”
BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE CF
Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Failed I oil
TMI OEWTAUR TV SBUSIRAV STfISCT* SSSW YWM W*.
* —"..'.y
—GET YOUH—
JOB PRINTING
*W’ .
DONE AT
Z ’ •■er-*-’ /■■■’'•• '■ ’•
The Morning Call Office.
We have ju»t supplied our Job Office with a ccn plcU Urc o* bULcn.ri
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way Os
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS]
/
STATEMENTS, IRCULARS,
ENVELOPES, NOTBS,
MORTGAGES, PROGRAMS,
JARDS, POSTERS*
A
DODGERS, BTC., ETL
We c*ny 'xet iue of ENVEIX)FEA via jfred 3 thia trade.
Ac aitraciivt POSTER cf aay size can be issued on short notice.
Our prices for work of all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained kb
any office In the state. When you want job printiag o£ any'description srtre m
call Satisfaction guaranteed.
I y————sMewsiera—■
jAJLL work done
With Neatness and Dispatch.
Out of town orders will receive
prompt attention
J.P.&S B.SawtelL