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WOMEN ASJSPIES.
5 show M S«cr«t
S[ 0* ‘ service Military Arent..
is one branch of military duty tor
■ m h women show especial aptitudo-
8 of secret service. They make excel -
I *. antes More patient and persevering
B arising socrets. and since the days of
H many Samsons have been shorn of
I Hr Strength through the wiles of de-
■ women. Still it is scarcely fair to
I £Li secret service agents as spies. The
■ i«mciefl of military service require that
■ 4,1 arals shall be furnished with informa-
■ '?n as to the enemy, and the man or worn-
I 'who risks life in order to serve her own
| Smtry and cause is quite on another
■ from the Judas who sells his own
H for the enemy’s gold. Nina Diaz
■ ‘tXvimr her mother to a convict prison,
i iath the’ possible fate of .La Centa in re-
I is «“ oh j° ct aXecration : 80110
I novd’ fording the Potomac in a heavy
I Zein of wind and rain at midnight to
I rrv the news of a premeditated attack to
I ter brother in Stuart’s cavalry stirs hearts
I ’ with adoTiration for her unselfish courage.
I " Secret service was carried to the utmost
I v> -f n ctionduring’tTie war of the rebellion,
I thegoveminent of the United States
I <>T er 12,000,000 for that purpose.
I Vet them were few traitors on either side.
I Many « the s P^ es were women, and it is
I often that sex gave them no protec-
I tio The great obstacle to the successful em-
I women as spies is that, with
I women will betray any
I one elsefor the sake of a lover. Nay, more,
I in a transport of jealousy a woman may
I betray the man whom she loves to impris
| onment and death. -If she is in love on
I the side which she is serving and her lover
I keeps her in a good humor, she is invalu-
I »blo. Otherwise disastrous experiences
I way occur.
I One of the most active and useful agents
I of the Confederate government during the
I first half of the war of the rebellion was
I an English woman of rankr-a Lady
I Eleanor N., a relative of Lady Macdon
i ‘ ’aldpwifeof the late premier of Canada.
I Visiting in Richmond during the winter
of 1861 she became engaged to a Virginian
who was later on an officer of high rank
in the southern army, and was, of course,
ready and anxious to serve him and the
cause which he espoused. A subject of
the British governfaent, residing in Can
ada, with friends in Richmond, she went
back and forth with the mails for the
state department at Richmond. Some
times she went all the way under a flag of
truce. Sometimes the letters were brought
to her in Baltimore and sometimes in
New York. It was not until 1863 that
she was detected, and then chiefly through
her prostration by grief at the loss of her
loveu, who was killed in a skirmish near
Richmond. At this news she became care
less, lost the nerve and perfect self posses
sion which had hitherto borne her through
all dangers, and when the letters were
found in her baggage broke down and con
fessedVlverything.
« The Forests of Cuba.
Cuba still possesses 16,000,000 acres of
virgin forest abounding in valuable tim
ber, nene of which is useful as coarse con
struction lumber, while nearly every foot
would be salable in the United States and
bring high prices. Cuban mahogany and
cedar are particularly well known in the
"United States. The mahogany is very
Aard and shows a handsome grain, and is
* preferred by many to any other variety in
common Use. The indfeeht Spain drops
the reins of government in Cuba and trade
■ delations are re-established with the States
there will be a movement, both inward
and outward, of forest products which
wifi have a beneficial effect upon the in
dustry in both countries.
Fin* to feel the force of this movement
toward rehabilitating Cuba will be the
lumbering interests of thd south Atlantic
and gulf coasts. Prior to three years ago
they looked upon Cuba as an excellent
outlet for the coarse end of the mill cuts,
and since that market has been closed to
r permit'theeprosecution of a most hideous
and revolting war the coarser grades of
yellow pine produced at coast points have
been marketed with great difficulty and
seldom at a profit. It iS unfortunately
true that Cuba will bo unable to realize so
promptly from a movement to re-establish
her mahogany and cedar trade, for it is
claimed by prominent operators that the
industry has been so completely crippled
by the ravages of war that a period of time
running from 12 to 18 months will be re
quired before logs can be landed at ports
in this country.—Lumberman’s Review.
“Remember the Maine!”
The fact that certain very excellent peo
ple have oome together and formally pro
tested against “Remember the Maine I” as
j a warcry, on the ground that it gives ex-
■ pression to an abominable spirit of venge
ance, with which I heartily agree, was
brought to my landlord’s attention, and I
| was astonished by his utterances.
“Isn’t it better,” he said, “to look the
.thing square in the face? This is a war
of revenge. If we knew at this minute
that every ‘reconftcntrado’ would be dead
and buried before we could land in Cuba,
I even if we knew that every man on the
Island other than the Spaniards and those
who favor them was dead and buried, the
i war would go right on. If there had been
no Maine, there would have been no war.
p The simple fact is that every man in the
navy, from the admiral down, ‘remembers
the Maine.’ It may be‘abominable,' but
.there are lots of things of that sort con
nected with war. It makes no difference
’ what congress said, and I for one don’t
. assume that congress meant what it said.
Among the people, in the army, and espe
dally in the navy, ’Remember the Maine I’
b the warcry. Everyman feels it, every
gun roars it, every shot whistles, it, every
flag signals it. It is the root and branch of
the whole thing. ” —Time and the Hour.
Sublime Faith.
a woman here in town who is
fearfully afraid of thunder. She says it
Isn’t at all the lightning that frightens
■h-£?•. She rather enjoys the glare, but she
can’t endure the noise. She is going to
•pend the summer on one of the big wheat
S,! Brn ' s in North Dakota, and I went to see
■»I toe ot^er Any while she was packing.
, tra y of her trunk she stowed away
'■ a long narrow box full of palm
y trips. I asked her what in the world
were, and after a bit cf fencing she
stud:
I don’t care, they’re just palms
L j?* 1111 Sunday palms. You know they
L Buch terrific thunderstorms out
on the prairie, and I simply can’t
K fiv* , heaL takng these Palm Sun-
I -zy J** na sfor—well, you know if you burn
I J 4 wlll ke °P a storm away. ”
And what does that S. A. G. on the
fe* neanf ” 1 “ked.
ILrie. said she, “that means St. An
-1 8 Guidance. If you put that on
I F it; neVer gets lost. I don’t want
j ’“y Palma. ’’—Washington Post.
-V ? A' .
THE MOHAMMEDANS.
The Queer Manner In Which They MU
Up Religion and Marder.
The month of Ramadan, in which the
first part of the Koran is said to have
been revealed, is observed as a fast by
all Mohammedans. The fast extends
over the whole “month of raging heat”
and involves extraordinary self denial
and self control. No food or drink of
any kind may be taken from daybreak
until the . appeamnee of the stars at
nightfall.
The rigor with which a Mohammedan
observes this fast and the great gulf be
tween its observance and obedience to.
the moral code are both illustrated by a
story told in the life of one of the he
roes of India, Major John Nicholson.
While Nicholson in 1854 was deputy
commissioner in Bannu, a native killed
his brother and was arrested. He was
brought before Nicholson on a very hot
evening, looking parched and exhausted,
for he had walked many miles, and it
was the month'of Ramadan.
“Why,”
jxclaimed Nicholson, “is it
possible that you have walked in fast
ing on a day like this?”
“Thank God,” answered the Ban
nuchi, “I am a good faster. ”
“ Why did you kill your brother?”
“I saw a fowl killed last night, and
the sight of the blood put the devil in
to me.”
“He had chopped up his brother,
stood a long chase and been marched in
here, but he was keeping the fast,”
wrote the commissioner to a friend, that
he might know what sort of blood
thirsty and bigoted people he, Nichol
son, had to govern.
One day a wretched little child was
brought before the commissioner. He
had been ordered by his relatives of the
Waziri tribe to poison food.
“Don’t you know it is wrong to kill
people?’ ’ asked Nicholson.
“I know it is wrong to kill with a
knife or a sword, ” answered the child.
“Why?”
“Because the blood leaves marks, ”
answered the trained poisoner.
A Pathan chief, who fell by Nichol
son’s side in a skirmish, left a little son,
upon whom the English officer lavished
care and attention. One day the 7-year
old boy asked his protector to grant him
a special favor.
“Tell me first what you want. ”
“Only your permission, sahib, to go
and kill my cousins, the children of
your and my deadly enemy, my uncle,
Faltri Khan.”
“ To kill your cousins?’ ’ exclaimed the
Englishman, horrified at the answer.
“Yes, sahib, to kill all the boys while
they are young. It is quite easy now. ”
“You little monster! Would you
murder your own cousins?”
“Yes, sahib, for if I don’t they will
certainly murder me.”
The little boy wished to follow Pa
than usage and thought it very hard
that his guardian should prevent his
taking so simple a precaution.
DID THE GLRLS PAI NT?
How the Qaeation Waa Decided and a
Bet Paid. •
Two well known society swells went
to the Imperial theater one afternoon
when “East Lynne” was the,bill. A
few evenings before there had oeen dis
cussed at their club the subject of wom
en painting theij; faces. Several girls
were mentioned who were suspected by
their admirers of wearing an artificial
carnation bloom. Others defended the
young damsels and said it was natural.
How to find out and win a wager
that was laid then and there was the
subject of the young men’s visit to the
Imperial.
“East Lynne” is a play which ought
to make all women cry, they reasoned,
for it makes even men’s throats grow
thick. They sent tickets for reserved
seats to the girls under discussion, beg
ging them to invite whomsoever they
pleased of their acquaintances, as they,
the donors, would not be able to escort
them. *
The ruse was successful. In an upper
box sat the young men ready to win or
lose the wager, and right below, in the
parquet, where they could see their
faces and every move of their hands,
were the young women. There Were six
of them, two of whom shed copious
tears and hesitated not to wipe
them away with their handkerchiefs,
while the other four never winced.
Among those who did not cry were the
girls suspected of laying on the red
pigment, and it was on just that evi
dence that the bet hinged. That night
the wager was paid with a supper at
the University club. —St. Louis Repub
lic. . "
She Will Teach Bonnet Making.
Mlle. Valentine About, daughter of
Edmond About, the author, is going to
open a “class in hat and bonnet mak
ing. ’ ’ Everybody in Paris is surprised
at the necessity for it, as during his
lifetime About kept open house in his
hotel* on the Rue de Donai, and a fete
that he gave to tlje Authors’ society in
the chateau he had just bought at Pon
toise is remembered as almost princely.
By what reverse of fortune A bout’s
family were left destitute nobody seems
to know. Although he himself began
life humbly as the son of a gfocer, his
daughter was a brilliant young society
woman brought up in luxury, and every
body is admiring the courage with
which she has undertaken to solve the
difficult problem of the “struggle for
life.” —Boston Woman’s Journal.
Her Tacky Day.
A North Carolina paper says:
“A negro struck his wife two terrible
blows on the head with an ax. The
negro escaped to the woods, and his
wife soon revived and said: ‘I mighty
glad he done it, kase now he’ll stay
cl’ar er de neighborhood en I won’t have
ter suppo’t him no mo’. It wuz a lucky
day fer me w’en he hit me wid dat
axF ”
Very few of us are as thankful as that
for these little blessings in disguise.-r
Atlanta Constitution.
:
JAPANESE DECORATION DAY.
The VUlt to the Cemeteriet Fullowed by
Eports and Picnics.
Army dril), discipline, infarction and
parade, with magnificent doeorationa, flags
and symbolism in leaf, flower and extem
porized material, form tho first part of the
celebration exercises Then follow wor
ship, the ceremonies of religion, visitation
of the shrines and cemeteries by soldiers,
people, dignitaries and priests. After re
freshing the inner man come the afternoon
sports, picnics, fireworks and general re
laxation with lanterns, boats, river joys
and promenades or moon viewing at
night. Let me describe an occasion that
I remember well. It was in the far in
terior, away from the seaports, where the
true life of the people is seen.
In the days of 1871, when the national
spirit was bursting the cocoon of feudal
ism, it would be like describing “the Mul
ligan guards” or Falstaff's company to tell
of the parade of a provincial regiment in
hybrid transition dross. Uniformity was,
however, gradually established in a na
tional army, navy and civil administra
tion, and then I saw in Fukui these same
Echizeii troops smartly dressed in neat
uniform of French style with the mikado’s
crest on their caps. They looked very
promising. In Tokyo afterward, during
three years, I saw 10,000 troops at a time,’
with their drills, evolutions, dress parades
and of barrack life and training.
In caamestficss and perseverance they al
ready showed what loyal soldiers could do
in the Satsuma rebellion of 1877, and
what, with the uprising of the nation, was
possible in Korea and China in 1894-5.
On May 4 as I remember, tens of thou
sands of people visited the new cemetery
in Fukui, called the Sho-Kon-Sha, or Soul
Beckoning Rest. Among the new tombs
of the loyal men slain in the civil war of
1868-70 fluttered many colored streamers
and banners with memorial inscriptions.
Hundreds came with beautiful flowers to
lay before and upon the monuments. In
the afternoons the ladies of the prince’s
household visited the cemetery in their
gorgeous embroidered silk gowns and gir
dles. Then I thought myself back in the
middle ages, when the figures now cn
playing cards were realities, as gorgeous
With their colors. Their hair was dressed
in magnificent style in an exaggerated sort
of pompadour, outraying from the fore
head, flanking the temples in sort of
semicircle or halo pad gathered backward
into a long, single, tress, which in most
cases went down to the waist and in some
almost to their feet, the back part of the
hair on the head being held together by a
pretty horn or tortoise shell comb. One
gracious lady, the prince’s wife, who with
her husband did so much, in my year of
loneliness, when I saw only rarely a white
man’s face, to make my lot comfortable,
was dressed in a simple but very rich garb
of white and crimson silk.
The flower decorated monuments, the
streaming pennants, the fluttering banners
and the new and shining monuments,
with the reverent and exceedingly polite
and well bred crowds of people in that new
cemetery—which contrasted in its fresh
ness with the century old dalmios’ ances
tral burying ground not far away, where
the mosses and lichens seem to have been
feeding on the granite for ages, and, on
the other hand, with the large city ceme
tery below, with its cremation furnaces
and ascending columns of smoke, having
near by a great mound many rods long
and wide and several feet high, where in.
indistinguishable mass lay the ashes and
bonesdrn’tafianfty swepttn successive
and old time periodical famines—made a
scene forever impressed on my memory.
Tradition locates the burial place of one
of Japan’s 123 emperors on this hill.
Hence it is a place of much interest. —ln
dependent.
The Ameer of Afghanistan.
There is nothing of that slatternly un
tidiness, combined with lavish expendi
ture, in the ameer’s establishment that
characterizes the residences of Indian
princes. Except on state occasions, when
he dresses in a sort of European uniform,
he wears a long, loose coat made of some
lovely pale colored French brocade or sat
in, lined in winter with fur—sable, stone
marten or red foxes’ feet perhaps—and in
summer with tho shot glace silks that
come from Bokhara. Harmonizing with
these, but seldom matching them, are his
skullcap and handkerchief, the whole
making a charming mass of color with his
couch, which is draped in the most elab
orate style and is constantly being altered.
In summer it is generally covered with
silks and satins, and in winter with cash
mere shawls, furs, etc., and has a velvet
valance bordered with a massive gold
fringe.
I have constantly seen him throw off a
shawl that offended his eye because It did
not harmonize with tho rest and order in
another, and when ho chooses his handker
chiefs for tho day (never Ibss than three or
four, for he snuffs, as do most Afghans)
ho mechanically, as it were, holds first
one and then another up against his coat,
and if he does not fancy the shade'throws
that ono down and takes up another, and
so on until he is satisfied, talking all the
time as if he were hardly conscious of
what ho was doing.—Pearson’s Magazine.
The French Red Cro».
According to tljp Figaro of Palis, the
French Rod Cross has recently opened a
subscription for the benefit of the future
wounded of the Spanish-American war
and has headed it with a contribution of
50,000 francs. “To speak frankly,” says
tho writer of the article, “we owe this ac
tion to foreign nations, for they all showed
an admirable generosity toward our
wounded during tho war of 1870-1. The
United States sent us at that time 600,000
francs; Canada, 300,000; Spain, 20,000;
Italy, 19,000; little Denmark, 160,000;
the Argentine Republic, 250,000; Chile,
100,000; Peru, 60,000; Russia, 50,000; in
all about 3,000,000 francs.
“Our Red Cross, having spent more
than 12,500,000 francs for our wounded
during the fatal year, had still remaining
in its treasury more than 2,000,000 francs.
At present the society has on hand 8,000, -
000 francs. It sent to Spain 30,000 francs
for the wounded in the Carlist war, 297,-
000 in tho Turco-Russian war, 90,000 for
the wounded in Tunis, 530,000 for Ton
’quin, 316,000 for Madagascar—in all
3,000,000 francs since the war with Ger
many. The president of the society is now
General Fevricr. ”
Cuba and Junta.
A woman who speaks Spanish tells me
that we don’t even pronounce the name of
the island we’re fighting about correctly.
She confesses that she has heard “junta”
pronounced “hoonta, ” which I believe is
the proper pronunciation, frequently, but
she declares that even those among us who
say “hoonta” call Cuba “Kcwba.” It
isn't “Kewba” nt aB, she says. It’s “ Koo
ba,” and hereafter let us try to pronounce
it correctly.—Washington lost.
CATACOMBS ,N AMERICA.
The Only Burial Place o f the Kind la
Thto Country.
Knowing what you expect to sue hero it
is only natural for you to enter the ceme
tery with Mino little nervousness and
trepidation, but you are reassured when
you do enter tho big gate, for there is
nothing uncanny or “triste” yet to bo
seen. On the contrary, this Mexican
“God’s acre” is all tranquil and bright
and beautiful, and you do not think even
of the square black letu red spaces that
are honeycombed, one above the other, all
the way around tho great wall of the pan
thesn. These square spaces, five rows of
them, contain a vault each, and that is
where the Interment is made.
It is an enormous ].lacv, this cemetery ,
and well that it is e >, f<* during the great
typhus epidemic in 1893 it received, so
people say, about a third of the then popu
lation of Guanajuato. 1 or a time the city
council kept some sort of tally on the
deaths, but as later on Cig council itself
and most of the phy .dcL.ns succumbed to
the fatal disease no c;»unt was kept, and
interment was made in a grengirench dug
in tho center of tlio pantheon/one coffin,
with a spring in the bottom, serving for
all, when tho ceremony of a coffin was
used nt all.
However, waiving the matter of epidem
ics, in Guanajuato when a person dies
the family at once arrange to rent ono of
the boxlike spaces in this pantheon, rent $ 1
per month, payable in advance. Then the
“deader” (as Sentimental Tommy has
it) is put away in one of the vaults—not
to wait the last trump, but to await tho
next pantheon pay day. When the day
comes, if the family can’t ralso the sl2 for
tho next fiscal year, the city council has
the vault unsealed, the coffin taken out and
the “deader” transferred to the huge pas
sages below the pantheon, in the cata
cumbas. The catacumbas comprise enor
mous underground passages that run all
the way around the pantheon.
The pantheon man pushes back a big flat
stone over in a corner of the cemetery and
Invites yon to step ifito a small dark hole
which admits only ono person at a time
and contains a small, winding stone stair,
built pretty much oh the corkscrew plan.
Some godless person, with more sense of
humor than grace, has placed the tallest,
ugliest and uncanniest (if there is such a
word) of all tho mummies at the very bot
tom of the last step, so arranged that as
you descend the crooked stalss you land
right into his bony arms.
It is truly a grisly thing to see, once yon
are safely there. Imagine to yourself long,
seemingly endless white passages, silent
as only death can make them, heaped up
at each end with great piles of bones—the
bones of those who refused to mummify—
and lined thickly with mummy after
mummy, horrible, brown, skinny things,
fastened in a starring position against
tho walls, many of them with their grin
ning, fleshless faces turned toward other
mummies, as though in conversation, oth
ers with heads bowed, as in meditation or
prayer, and others with faces blankly
staring up at tho stone walls above! Once
seen, it is a thing that you do not soon
forget
Along one slde arethe gentleman mum
mies, on the other the ladies, and indis
criminately mixed among them are the
poor baby mummies.
There is not, strange to say, the slight
est hint of a-disagreeable odor; rather
there is a smell of lime. The place is beau
tifully clean and white, and there are
even some birds that build down here and
bring up their young ones among the
mummies.—Dr. Gilbert Cunningham in
Godey’s Magazine.
Imperfectly Understood.
At a certain cast end Sunday school
some time ago the teacher talked to the in
fant class upon the evils connected with
strong drink. Tho little tots of 4 and 5
listened attentively to a long tirade against
the rum demon. Finally the teacher cried:
“Wine is a mocker!” >
The children pricked up their ears at
the teacher’s vehemence.
“Wine is a mocker!" she cried again,
like one of the prophets of old.
The children looked very grave Indeed.
“Wine is a mocker!” cried the teacher
for the third time, and then she turned
and wrote the sentence in big letters on
the blackboard.
“Now, children,” sho exclaimed as she
whirled around, “I want you to tell me
what wine Is.”
The little ones looked about vacantly.
“Wine is a mocker!” cried the teacher.
“Now, what is wine, first little boy?”
Tho first little boy looked thoughtful.
“Wine—is—a—marker,” he drawled.
“No, no,” said the teacher. “Next lit
tle boy.”
The next little bey looked still more
thoughtful.
“Wine—is—a—market,” he ventured.
“No, no,” fidgeted the teacher. “Next
little boy.”
The third little boy smiled. He was a
self confident little boy.
“Wine—is—a—monkey,” he bravely
announced.
And then the teacher gave It up.—
Cleveland Plain Dealer. *•
Vitality of the Wild Goose.
Farmer H. N. Clement of Lowell, Lake
county, Ind., was*gunning in the Kanka
kee marsh. He came upon a flock of wild
geese and baggod several of them, ono of
which astonished him by having as a
breastpin an arrow 9 inches long. That
goose became the wonder of the neighbor
hood and the study of scientists, the only
conclusion reached being that wherever
the wild bird came from there it got the
arrow, so unique in formation that it oould
be assigned to no tribe of Indians In the
United States or any other known coun
try. Finally Professor O. T. Mason of the
National museum said the bird and arrow
could have come from no other place on
the globe than ‘’the Yukon valley, for ex
cept in that region no such arrows are
made. Science does not pretend to say how
long the goose had carried tho arrow of a
Yukon tribesman until it met its death
from the shot of a civilized gunner down
on an Indiana marsh. The bird disdained
the weapon of a savage, but turned its
legs up to tho marksmanship of the Hoo
sier farmer years afterward and thousands
of miles from its summer home in arctic
desolation as it was journeying south
ward.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Hope.
“Hope is a fine thing,” said Mr. Stay
bolt, “sure. We’d boa pretty miserable
lot, most of us, without it. And a man
can get along very comfortably for quite a
spell on nothing else, without doing a
1 blessed thing but hope that things will
come his way. But while hope makes a
bright light it doesn’t give out very much
heat; if a man wants that, ho must dig for
It. It is a fort unate thing for a man to
make this discovery early, and the man
who mixes the most digging wftn his hope
fulness has the most resison to be hopeful. ’’
—New York Sun.
j■in » _ i . —r~rnr
*
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS.
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD ”CASTORIA,” AND
“ PITCHER’S CASTORIAAS OUR TRADE MARK.
Z s DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, qf Hyannis, Massachusetts,
90S the originator of "PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” the same
that has borne and does non eoerv
bear the facsimile signature of wrapper.
This is the original “ PITCHER’S CASTORIA,’ which has been
used in the homes qfthe Mothers if America for over thirty
years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is
the kind you have always bought on
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
President. /? a
Xareh 8,1897. 6
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 docs not know’.
. “The Kind You Have Always Bought"
BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE C.GNATURE CF
Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Failed You.
tms aawTAua w «vmmv as* r»« ww.
I
We ■ a# z-
- - - -- - - - -y - - - -1
SHOES, - SHOES I
IN MENS SHOES WE HAVE THE LATEST STYLES—COIN TOES,
GENUINE RUSSIA LEATHER CALI* TANS, CHOCOLATES AND GREEN
AT |2 TO 13.50 FER PAIR.
IN LADIES OXFORDS WE HAVE COMPLETE LINE IN TAN, BLACK
AND CHOCOLATE, ALSO TAN AND BLACK SANDALS RANGING IN
PRICE FROM *3c TO $2.
ALSO TAN, CHOCOLATE AND BLACK! SANDALS AND OXFORDS IN
CHILDREN AND MISSES SIZES, AND CHILDREN AND MISSES TAN LACE
SHOES AND BLACK.
xaz . JF. JEvZn jEL
WE HAVE IN A LINE OF
SAMPLE STRAW HATS.
—GET YOUB —
JOB PRINTING
DONE A.T
The Morning Call Office.
We have just supplied our Job Office with & complete line of btatumerr
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way oi
LETTER HEADS, , BILL HEADS
STATEMENTS, IRCULARB,
ENVELOPES, NOTES, ,
*
MORTGAGES, , PROGRAMS
JARDB, ' POSTERS „
> ' r ■' ' ♦ .- * - . s
z ' DODGERS, K.U., E'lX
We oarry tef beet ine of FNVEJ/>FES w : thistradn.
Aa ailraedve POSTER cf say size can be issued on short notice.
Our prices tor work of all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained roe
any office in the state. When yon want fob printing of£any [deecrij tkn five s
call Satisfaction guaranteed.
ALL WORK DQNK-
' ' -JI-
With Neatness and Dispatch.