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I blessings of war.
■ Dfl. TALMAGE PORTRAYS THE BRIGHT
I SIDE OF THE CONTEST.
ti ** ony Hostlllkte, VVHh Spain.
BbW MiS?*? _.... . AB —wt ■■ ■■
I
- popyricht, X. Xtton.] riCan
I WASHINGTON, May 15.—Most pertinent
I so the exciting times through which we
I us now passing is this wraon of Dr. Tal-
I mage. iu which be P r °P o,es to oheer the
| "" pl o w ho are saddened by the horrors of
I war- teri> Pw,,,nß MV,1 > 8, “Though
| war should rise against me, in this will I
It- ha confident.
I The ring of battleaxes, and the clash of
■ shield®, and the tramp of armies, are
| all up and down the Old Testament,
I tW ] you -find godly soldisrs like Moses and
I Joshua and Oaleb and Gideon and zcoun-
I drelly soldites like Sennacherib and Shal-
I manoscr and Nebuchadnezzar. The high
E nriest would stand at the head of the army
gay, "Hear, O Israel, ye approach this
| unto battle against your enemies, let
not your hearts faint, fear not and do not
B tremble, neither be ye terrified because of
| them!’’ And then the officers would give
I ; »mmand to the troops, saying: "What
I ' man is there that bath built a new house
| j and hath not dedicated it? Let him go
I I sod return to hia house, lest he die in the
g ? battle and another man dedicate it. And
I I what man is he that hath planted a vine
? F yard and hath not eaten of it? Let him also
go and return unto hia house, lest he die
£ jn the battle and another man eat of it.
| And Whatman is there that bath betrothod
• wife and hath not taken her? Let him go
if. and return unto bis house, lest he die in
I - the battle and another man take her.”
Great armies marched and fought. In
r time of Moses and Joshua all the men
were soldiers. When Israel same out of
Egypt, they were 600,000 fighting men.
Abijab commanded 400,000. Jeroboam
commanded.Boo,oos men, of whom 500,000
were slain in one battle. Some of these
ware God approved, for they were for the
rescue of oppressed nations, and some of
them he denounced, but in all cases it was
' a judgment upon both victors and van
| quisled. David knew just what war was
when he wrote in the text, “Though war
should rise against me, in this will I be
confident."
David is encouraging himself in stormy
times, and before approaching battles ad
ministers to himself the consolatory. So
* today my theme, is the “Alleviations of
War. ” War is organized atrocity. It is
the science of assassination. It is the con
vocation of all honors. It Is butchery
wholesale. It is murder glorified. It is
death on a throne of human skeletons. It
is the coffin in ascendency. It is diabolism
at a game of skulls. But war is here,
and it is time now to preach on its allevi
ations.'
Reunion of North and South.
First, I find an alleviation in the fact
that it has consolidated the north and the
south after long continued strained rela
tions. It is 88 years since our elvil war
dosed, and the violences are all gone and
the severities have been bushed. But ever
and anon in oration, in sermon, in news
paper editorial, in magazine article, on
; political stump and in congressional ball
& the old sectional difference has lifted its
I and for the first time within my
memory or the memory of any one who
hears or reads these words the north and
tbe south are one. By a marvelous provi
dence the family that led in opposition to
our government 80 years ago is represent
ed at the front in this present war. Noth
ing else could have done the work of uni
fication so suddenly or so completely as
this conflict. At Tampa, at Chattanooga,
at Richmond and in many other places the
regiments are forming, and it will be side
by side, Massachusetts and Alabama, New
York and Georgia, Illinois and Louisiana,
Maine and South Carolina. Northern and
southern men will together unlimber the
guns and rush upon the fortification and
charge upon the enemy and shout the tri
umph. The voices of military officers who
were under Sidney Johnston and Joseph
Hooker will give tbe command on the
same side, tbe Old sectional grudges for
ever dead. The name of Grant on tbe
northern side and of Lee on the southern
side will be exchanged for the names of
Grant and Lee on the same side. The vet
erans in northern and southern homes and
asylums are stretching their rheumatic
limbs to see whether they can again keep
step in a march and are testing their eye
sight to find whether they can again look
along the gun barrel to successfully take
aim and fire. The old war cry of “On to
Richmond!" and “On to Washington!"
has become the warcry of “On to Ha
vana!" “On to Puerto Bioo!” “On to the
Philippine Islands!" The two old rusty
swords that in other days clashed at Mur
freesboro and South Mountain and Atlanta
are now lifted to strike down Hispanic
abominations.
An Unselfish War.
Another alleviation of the war is the
fact that it is the most unselfish war of the
ages. While the commercial rights of our
wronged citizens will be vindicated, that
is not tbe chief Idea of this war. It Is the
rescue of hundreds of thousands of people
from starvation and multiform maltreat
ment A friend who went out under the
flag of the Bed Cross two years ago to as
suage suffering in Armenia, and who has
been on the same mission, under the same
flag, in Cuba, says that the sufferings in
Armenia were a comedy and a farce com
pared with the greater sufferings of Cuba.
At least 800,000 graves are Walling to us to
seme on and remember by what process
their occupants died. It is the twentieth
century crying out to the nineteenth: “Do
you mean to pass down vo us the curse
with which you have been blasted? Or
will you let me begin under new auspices
and turn the Island of desolation Into an
Island Edenlo?”
It is a war Inspired by mercy, which Is
an attribute in man imitative of the same
attribute of God. In no other age of the
world could such a war have been waged.
The gospel of kindness needed to bo recog
nized throughout Christendom In order to
wake such a war possible. The chief rea
wn why most of the European nations are
not now banded together against us is be
cause they dare not take tbe part of that
behemoth of cruelty, the Spanish govern
ment, against the crusade of mercy which
our nation has started. Had it been on
our part a war of conquest, a war of an
nexation, a war of aggrandizement, there
would have been by this time enough fly
ing squadrons coming to this country
across tbe Atlantic to throw into panic
every city on our American seaboard.
The wars 6f the crusaders were only to
regain an empty sepulcher; the Napoleon
ic wars, With their 6,«D0,000 slaughtered
> men, were projected and carried out to ap
pease' the ambition of one man; of the 25,-
■>oo,ooo slain In Jewish wars and of the
■
1 60,006,000 slain in wars under Julius
Cursor, of the 180,000,000 slain in wars
with Turks and Saracens, of the 60,000,-
000 slain in wars of Xerxes, of tbe 20 000 •
000 slain in wars of Justinian and the 83 -
000,000 slain in tbe wars of Genghis Khan
not one man was sacrificed by mercy, but
in this Hispanic-American war every
drummer boy or picket -or gunner or
standard bearer or skirmisher or sharp
shooter or cavalryman or artilleryman or
engineer who falls fails in the cause of
mercy and becomes a martyr for God and
his country.
The Principle es Liberty.
Another alleviation of this war is that
it is for tbe ad va nee men tof tbe sublime
principle of liberty, which will yet engir
dle the earth. Not otily will this war free
Cuba, but finally will free Spain. By
what right docs a dynasty like that stand,
and a corrupt court dominate a people for
centuries, taxing them to death, riding in
gilded chariot over tbe necks of a beggared
population? There are 10,000 boys in
Spain growing an with more capacity to
govern that nation than will the weak boy
now In tbe Madrid palace ever possess.
Before this eonfikt i« over the Spanish
nation will be well on toward the time
when a constitutional convention will as
semble to establish a free government in
stead of the wornout dynasty that now
afflicts the people. The liberty of all na
tions, transatlantic as well as cisatlantic,
if not already established, is on the way
and it cannot be stopped. * •
Napoleon 111 thought he had sucoossf al
ly driven the principle out of France when
on the 2d day of December, 1851, he rode
down the Champs Elysees of Paris, con
stitutional government seemingly crushed
under the hoofs of his steed. Bfit did it
stay crushed? Let the batteries on tbe
heights above Sedan answer, and the shout
of 260,000 conquering hosts, and the letter
of surrender to Emperor William tell tbe
story. “Sire, my brother, not having been
able to die in tbe midst of my troops it
only remains for me to place my sword |n
your majesty’s hands. lam, your majesty,
your good brother, Napoleon. Sedan, 1
September, 1870." That monarchy having
fallen, then the French republic resumed
its march.
A Good Beginning.
Another alleviation is that the war opens
with a great victory for the United States.
It took our government four years to get
over the fiasco at Bull Run. A defeat at
the start of this present war would have
been disheartening to the last degree and
would have invited foreign intervention
to stop the war before anything practical
for God and humanity had been aocom-'
pliahed and would have prolonged the
strife for which we are hoping a quick
termination.' In tbe most jubilant man
ner let this victory of our navy be cele
brated. With the story of the exploding
battleship fresh in the minds of the world,
it required do ordinary courage to sail in
to the harbor of Manilla and attack the
Spanish shipping. That harbor, crowded
with sunken weaponry of death—to enter
it was running a risk enough to make all
nations shiver. But Manilla is ours, and
the blow has shaken to the foundation the
palaces of Madrid, and for policy’s sake
the doubtful nations are on our side. For
Commodore Dewey and all who followed
him let tbe whole nation utter its most re- -
sounding huzza, and, more than that, let
us thank the Lord of hosts for bls guiding
and protecting power. “Praise ye the
Lord! Let everything that hath breath
praise the Lord!”
Might Allied With Bight.
Another alleviation is tbe fact that In
this war the might is on the side of ths
right. Again and again have liberty and
justice and suffering humanity had the
odds against them. It was so when Ben
hadad’s Syrian hosts, who were in the
wrong, at Aphek came upon the small regi
ments of Israel, who were in the right,
the Bible putting it in oneof those graphic
sentences for which the book is remark
able, “The children of Israel pitched be
fore them like two little flocks of kids, but
the Syrians filled the whole country." It
was to in the awful defeat of tbe Lord’s
people at Gilboa and Megiddo. It was so
recently when gallant and glorious Greece
was in conflict with gigantic Mohamme
danism, and ths navies of Europe hover
ing about the Bosporus were in practical
protection of the Turkish government,
fresh from tbe slaughter of 100,000 Arme
nians. It was so when, in 1776, tbe 18
colonies, with no war shipping and a few
undrilled and poorly clad soldiers, were
brought into a contest with the mightiest
navy of all the earth and an army that
commanded the admiration of nations. It
was so when Poland was crushed. It was
so when Hungary went under. It has
been so during all the struggles heretofore
for Cuban Independence. But now it is
our powerful navy against a feeble group
of incompetent ships, crawling across the
Atlantic to meet our flotillas, which have
enough guns to send them as completely
under as when the Red sea submerged
Pharaoh’* ariny. li.l*-so in these times
when only a few thousand Spaniards at
most can hSech our hemisphere, and we go
out-to meet them with 125,000 armed men,
to be backed up speedily with 800,000 more
if needed. We do not have to ask for any
miracle, but only a fair shot at tbe ships
beaded this way and time enough to de
molish them. This Is one of the cases in
the world’s history where might and right
ate shoulder to shoulder.
Crime Must Be Punished.
Another alleviation is In the fact that
such an atrocMy as the destruction of 266
lives in Havana harbor in time of peace
cannot wlii tapubity be wrought tn this
age of the world’s civilization. Th* ques
tion as to who did that infernaUsm is too
well settled to need any further discussion.
But what a small crime it was compared
with the systematic putting into their
graves of hundreds of thousands of Cu
bans or leaving them unburied for . tbe
buzzards to take care of I If Spain could
destroy 200,000 men, women and children,
the slaughter of 266 people was not a very
great undertaking. But this ope last deed
will result in the liberation of Cuba, and
the driving of Spain from this hemisphere
and the overthrow of that government,
which will soon drop to pieces if it does
notgodown under bombardment of in
sulted nations.
There was danger that tbe long con
tinued oppression of our neighbors in Cuba
might be continued from generation to
generation without sufficient protest on
our part and the pronounced execration of
people on both sides of the Atlantic, but
that bursting volcano of destruction in the
harbor of Havana fired the nation and
shocked the whole civilised world. All na
tions will learn that such an act cannot be
repeated without the anathema of all
Christendom. As individual criminals
must be punished for the public good, and
we have for them courts of oyer and ter
miner and penitentiaries and electric chairs
and hangman's gallows, so governments
committing high crimes against God and
huibanlty must be scourged and hung up
for tbe world’s indignation. When in
Spanish waters our battleship, looking
. -
after our commercial interests and intend
ing nothing but quietude, was hurled into,
demolition and the n.cn on board, without
time to utter one v.ord Os prayer, were I
dashed into tho eternal world, the doom
of tho reigning houao of Spain was pro
nounced iu tones louder than the thunder
which that night rolled out over the sea.
God Is W«h Us.
Another alleviation Is the fact that we
hove a God to go to in behalf of all those
of our countrymen who may be In especial
exposure at the front, for wo- must admit
the perils, it is no trifling thing for 100,-
000 young men to be put outside of home
restraints and sometimes Into evil com
panionship. Many of tbe brave of the
earth are not the good of tbe earth. To be
in the same tent with ■'those who have no
regard for God or home, to hear their holy
religion sometimes slurred at, to be placed
under influences calculated to make one
reckless,do have no Sabbath except such
Sabbath as in most encampments amounts
to no Sabbath at all, to go out from homes
where all sanitary laws are observed into
surroundings where questions of health
are never discussed, to invade climes where
pestilence holds possession, to make long
marches under blistering skies, to stand
on deck and to. the fields under fire at tbe
mercy of shot and shell—we must admit
that those thus exposed need especial care,
and to the omnipresent God we have a
right to commend them and will com
mend them. Postal communication may
be interrupted and letters started from
camps or homes may not arrive at the
right destination, but, however far away
our loved ones may ba from us and how
ever wide and deep the seas that separate
us, we may hold communication with
them via the thrpne of God.
A shipwrecked sailor waa/pund floating
en a raft near the coast of California.
While In hospital he told his experience
and said that he bad a companiou on the
same raft for some time. While that com
panion was dying of thirst be said to him.
“George, where are you going?" and the
dying sailor said, “I hope I am going to
God.” “If you do,” said the rescued sail
or, “will you ask him to send some wa
ter?” After the death of his companion,
the suvitor said, the rain came in torrents
and slaked his thirst and kept him alive
until ha was taken to safety. The survivor
always thought it was tn answer to the
message be had sent to heaven asking for
water. Thank God we may have direct
and instantaneous communication with
tbe Lord Almighty through Jesus Christ,
bis only begotten Son, and in that faith
we may secure the rescue of our imperiled
• kindred. Is not that a mighty alleviation?
Fray For Our Country.
Until this conflict is ended let us be
much in prayer for our beloved country.
Do not let us depend upon the friendship
of foreign nations. Our hope is in God.
Out of every misfortune he has brought
this nation to a better moral and financial
1 condition, and so let ns pray that be will
lift us out of this valley of trouble unto a
higher mountain of blessing.
It is a mystery that just as this country
was recovering from a long season of hard
times so many of our industries should
now be halted; that business men who
thought they could see their way to pay
their debts and build up more prosperous
enterprises and endow their homes with
mere advantages should have to halt and
wait until the perfidious oppressor of Cuba
■hall be turned back. But individual and
national life is always clothed With mys
teries, and we may make ourselves miser
able by stabbing ourselves with sharp in
terrogation points and (dying the everlast
i ingquestions of “why?*’and “How?" and
“What?” and “Whan?" While we must of
oourse try to be intelligent on all public
affairs, it'ls a glorious thing to do out
duty, and then fully and confidently trust
all in the hands of God, who has proved
himself the of our country from the
time when the Spanish government fitted
out an expedition to discover it to this
time when Spaniards would like to de
stroy it.
Morning, noon and night let us oom
i mend this beloved land to the care of a
i gracious God. That he answers prayer is
, so certain that your religion is a hailucl
. nation if be does not answer It. Pray that
. in reply to such supplication the farmers’
I boys may get home again in time to reap
the harvest of next July, that our busi
. ness men may return In time to prepare
l for a fall trade such as has never yet filled
. the stores and factories with customers,
, and that all the homes in this country now
i saddened by the departure of father or
i brother or son may months before the
t Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays be
i full of joy at tbe arrival of those who will
i for tbe rest of their lives to
i tell of double quick march, and narrow
i escape, and charges up the parapets, and
, nights set on flre with bembardment, and
, our flag hatfied upto plaoes from which
, other flags were hauled down.
Away With Barbarism.
I Now tbat.we have started on the work
i let us make that Spanish government get
i out of this hemisphere. We do not want
1 her any more, with her in justices and bar
barism and stilettos of cruelty, hanging
' .arotAd the shores of this free land. She
' must not breathe her foul breath on our
I winds; she must not again redden our seas
- with her butcheries. There blds fair to
i be a scene on the deep as disastrous to the
I Spanish as that which whelmed their
armada in 1588. Philip 11, king of Spain,
resolved on the conquest of Europe, and
; already in the compass of his dominions,
I besides Spain, were Naples and Sicily, ana
, the Netherlands, and the East Indies, and 1
i the Canary.and Molucca and Sundaand
. Philippine islands, and Mexico and Cuba,
t and some of the moat splendid parts of
America. All fihe nations of the earth ex-
I oept England were to her underlings, and
. the Spanish king resolved that even Eng
. land must bow the knee. Although the
, destructive strength of modern battleships
I was then unknown, the Spanish armada
started for tbe subjection of England with'
■ about 140 great ships, with 2,600 guns,
I 4,000 cavalry horses and 82,000 men. The
[ battleships were provisioned with 147,900
i casks of wine and six months of provl
, alone. The commanders of
i these war vessels, ware dukes and tafcr
. qulses and noblemen. At Plymouth,
England, on the 19th of July tbe proml
. nent officers of ths navy ware In a bowling
, alley, bowling with great glee—-Lord
, Howard, the high admiral; Sir Martin
t Frobisher, the daring explorer, and Sir
> Francis Drake, the first circumnavigator
( of the world—whsu word came to them
i that the Spanish armada was advancing.
! The officers continued at the game of ths
. bowling alley until the game was finished
, and then went out to investigate the tl
[ dings, and, sure enough, that mighty fleet
i whielTwasoonsideredinviDCibleand which
was to bombard and overthrow England
. was approaching, but the invading navy
i was destroyed, for the Lord Almig'hty ap
t peared in tbe fight.
014 and New Spanish Armada.
i A storm such as had never swept tbe
coast of England or aroused tbe ocean
; swooped upon the Spanish armada. Most
of the Ships soon went down under tbs
ssa, while othen were driven helplessly
along to be splintered on tbe coasts of
England, Ireland, Scotland and Norway.
Another Spanish armada is crossing the
Atlantic, and we are ready to meet them.
The same God who destroyed the armada
In 1588 reigns in 1898. May he In his
might, either through human arm or
dumb element, defeat their squadron and.
give victory to the old flag of Admiral
Farragut and David Porter!
Yet what the world most wants Is
Christ, who is ooming to take possession
of all hearts, all homes, all nations, hut
the world blocks the wheels of his ebsriot.
I would like to see this century, which is
now almost wound up, find its peroration
in some mighty overthrow of tyrannies
add a mighty building up of liberty and
justice. Almost all the centuries have
ended with some stupendous event that
transformed nations nnd changed tbe snap
of the world. It was so’ at the close at the
fourteenth century; it was so at the close
of the fifteenth century; it was so at tbe
close of the sixteenth be: tury; it was to st
the close of tho seventeenth century; it
was so at the close of the eighteenth cen
tury. May it be more gloriously so at the
dose of tbe nineteenth century! “Bieased
be tbe Lord God of Israel from everlasting
to everlasting, and let the whole earth be
filled with his glory." Amen and amen!
Everybody Bays So.
Cascarets Gand v Cathartic, the most won
derful medical discovery of tbe age, pleas
ant and refreshing to the taste, act gently
and ]x>sitively on kidneys, liver and bowels,
cleansing the entire system, dispel colds,
cure headache, fever, iiabitiml constipation
and biliousness. Piease buy and try a box
of C. C. C. to-day; 10,95,50 cents. Bold and
guaranteed to cure by all druggists.
. ANNOUNCEMENTS.
,
For County Surveyor,
I hereby announce myself a candidate
or County Surveyor, of Spalding county,
subject to tbe democratic primary of June
88rd. A. B. KELL.
For County Oommiuionor.
Editor Call : Please announce that I
am a candidate for re-election for County
Commissioner, subject to the action of the
democratic primary, and will be glad to
have the support ot all the voters.
J. A. J. TIDWELL.
At the solicitation of many voters I
hereby announce myself a candidate for
County Commissioner, subject to the dem
ocratic primary. If elected, I pledge my
self to an honest, business-like administra
tion of county affairs in the direction of
lower taxes. R. F. STRICKLAND.
1 hereby announce myself a candidate
for County Commissioner, subject to the
democratic primary to be held June 28,
next. If elected, I pledge myself to eco
nomical and business methods in conduct
ing the affairs ot the county.
.- W.J. FUTRAL.
I hereby announce myself a candidate
for County Commissioner of Spalding
county, subject to the Democratic primary
of June 23d. W. W. CHAMPION.
To the Voters of Spalding County: I
hereby announce myself a candidate for
re-election to theofficeofOtnintyCommls
sioner of Spalding county, subject to the
democratic primary to be held on Jone 28,
1808. My record In the past is my pledge
for future faithfulness.
D. L. PATRICK.
For
To the Votajs of Spalding County: I
am a candidate for Representative to the
legislature, subject to the primary ot the
democratic party, and willappreciate yoar
support. J. P. HAMMOND.
Editor Call: Please announce my
name as a candidate for Representative
from Spalding county, subject to the action
ot the democratic party I shall be pleased
to receive the support of all the voters/md
if elected will endeavor to represent the
interests of the whole county.
J. B. Bbll.
For Tax Collector.
I respectfully announce to the citizens
of Spalding county that I am a candidate
for re-election to the office of Tax Collec
tor of this county, subject to the choice of
the democratic primary, and shall be
grateful for alt votes given me.
T. R. NUTT.
For County Treasurer.
To the Voters of Spalding County; I
respectfully announce myself a candidate
for election for the office of County Treas
urer, subject to the democratic primary,
and if elected promise to attend faithfully
to tbe performance of the duties of the
office, and will appreciate the support of
my friende. W. P. HORNE.
To the Voters of Spalding County; I
, announce myself a candidate for re-elec
tion for the office of County Treasurer,
subject to democratic primary, and ifelect
,l ed promise to be as faithful in the per
formaace of my duties in the future as I
i have been in the past.
J. O. BROOKS.
* Per Tax Beoelver.
Editor Call ; Please announce to the
voters of Spalding county that I am a can
didate for the office of Tax Receiver, sub
‘ ject to the Democratic primary of Jone
23rd, aad respectfully ask the support of
all voters of this county.
Respectfully,
R. H. YARBROUGH.
I respectfully announce myself as a can
didate for re-election to the office of Tax
Receiver of Spalding county .subject to the
action of primary, if one is held.
8. M. M’COWELL.
For Sheriff.
I respectfully inform my friends—the
people of Spalding county—that I am a
candidate for the office of Sheriff; subject
to the verdict of a primary, if one is held
Your support will be thankftilly received
and duly appreciated. ,
M J. PATRICK.
I am a candidate for the democratic
nomination for Sheriff, and earnestly ask
the support of all my friends and the pub
lic. If nominated and elected, it shall be
my endeavor to fulfill the duties of the of
fice &s faithfully as in tbe past.
M. F. MORRIS.
. • .. <
a/
I 1 "” l\l ■* nw
* *"**£ ■ ■■■
lk Ji XX “T® ■ I f—* FX fix
TO MOTHERS.
* - *
EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD “ CASTO BIA,” AND
“PITCHER’S CASTOBIA,” AS OUR TRADE MARK. H
I t DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, Hyannis, Massachusetts,
was the originator of “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” the same
that has borne and does now on every
bear the facsimile signature of wrapper.
This is the original “ PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” wAicA has been
used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty ,
years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is
the hind youJiave always bought ° n thc
and has the signature of wrapr-
per. No one has authority from me to use'my name ex
cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is
President. a *
March 8,1897.
Do Not Be Decayed.
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting
a cheap substitute which some druggist xnay offer yo”
(because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in
gredients of which even he docs not know.
“The Kind You Have Always Bought”
BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE CIGNATURE GF
r
Insist on Having
. The Kind That Never Failed lou.
th, ecNVAUz «w««mv. vv imhumv sraicrr.
'' I'■ ' '
SHOES, - SHOES!
IN MENS SHOES WE HAVE THE LATEST STYLES-COIN TOES,
GENUINE RUSSIA LEATHER CALF TANS, CHOCOLATES AND GREEN
AT |2 TO 88.50 PER PAIR.
IN LADIES OXFORDS WE HAVE COMPLETE LINE IN TAN, BLACK
AND CHOCOLATE, ALSO TAN AND BLACK SANDALS RANGING IN
PRICE FROM 75c TO *2.
ALSO TAN, CHOCOLATE AND SANDALS AND OXFORDS IN
CHILDREN AND MISSES SIZES, AND CHILDREN AND MISSES TAN LACE
SHOES AND BLACK.
X/\Z ■, JiL » JLimL JCLdM
' > . WE HAVE. IN A LINE OF
>
1 \ SAMPLE STRAW HATS.
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—GET YOUB —
JOB PRINTING
I- .
DONE JCT
■ The Morning Call Office.
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»
We have just supplied our Job Office with a complete line of Stationary
t kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way or
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS.
, STATEMENTS, * IRCULARS,
ENVELOPES, NOTES,
4 MORTGAGES, PROGRAMS,
! ■ fe?'-
CARDS, POSTERS?
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I , DODGERS, ETC., MTU
We ouny ti»e best ine of FNVE)X>FEf) vr» : this trade.
An attractive. POSTER cf aay size can be issued on short notice.
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Our prices for work of all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained ion
any officein the state. When you want job printing [description give u
i call Sat&fhction guaranteed.
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ALL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.