Newspaper Page Text
LIFE IN A WARDROOM
THE OFFICERS' QUARTERS ON BOARD
* MAH-OF-WAR.
Where All Bxcept the CommeeAer Ksfc
Ur, Md Bare Their Social Bota<—MawU
Btiqastto netalei the Mm Whom All
OOten on Board. Must Ota*.
The wardroom ona man-of-war la the
living place of all the older officers of
the shift with one exception, the com
manding officer. He lives by himself,
has his own cabins, his oWn mesa, his
own servants. Naval etiqttette and cus
tom have established this habit of isola
tion for the man on the ship who has
Command of all the rest. The reason is
undoubtedly to be found in the very
fact that he represents extraordinary
power. Under these circumstances any
attempt to forget the superiority of his
rank by means of a common cabin or
messroom for him and his subordinates
would only result in embarrassment on
both, sides. .
This does not mean that he may ndt
be sociable, for much.depends upgn the
man, Built is safe to say that any show I
of effusiveness among those who live
abaft the mast must come from his side,
11 he wishes it to be general. Thesitua
tlon is a delicate one.
In the freer air of the wardroom W 0
find from 10 to 20 officers living togeth
er, the number varying with the size of
the ship. Their aged may range from 25
to 50, and they are of all ranks above
that of naval cadet, and of all corps.
Engineer officers, line officers, medical
officers, marine officers, one pay officer
and one chaplain, may all be included
"in the wardroom of a large ship. These
men live in staterooms arranged about a
common space, which is known as the
“wardroom country. ” This assumption
of a space of prairielike dimensions is'
comparatively truthful in the cramped
quarters of a ship. In this “country”
exists the social life of the wardroom.
Here these men of varied callings, yet
all of the sea’s following, live, move
and have their social being.
A day spent in a wardroom by a land
lubber would reveal many interesting
differences between naval officers and
their brethren on shore. To begin with,
they are more cosmopolitan in their
speech. The men in our wardrooms are
gathered together from all parts of the
Union. Local discussions find but an
uninterested audience, or even a derisive
one, so that a naval officer gets accus
tomed to speak and think of all the 45
states as belonging equally to him. Out
side of his own country he is so great a
traveler that very few civilians can keep
up with the way he skips in conversa
tion from China to Peru or to Tasma
nia. Other characteristics that are
quickly noticeable are his simplicity,
his cheerfulness and his heartiness. The
wardroom is constantly resounding with
laughter. The men in it are healthier
than men who live in houses. They
up earlier In the morning and go to bpd
earlier at night. Most of our wardroom!
are bustling with officers at 7 o’clock in
the morning.
A glance at the breakfast table shows
the senior line officer presiding, and the
other officers placed near him according
to rank. At the other end of the table
is the man who has been elected by hit
messmates to direct the catering of the
mesa. Between this early meal and the
breakfast proper, which comes at half
past 11 or 12 o’clock, there is not much
life in the wardroom, for the daily mil
itary routine is full of drills and exer
cises which keep most of the officers on
deck. There are drills with great guns
and with small arms, drills in clearing
ship for action, drills in handling am
munition and many others—all of them
rooted in the one idea that you must
preserve your own life by destroying
that of your enemy.
As soon as an officer returns to the
wardroom from one drill and begins a
conversation or perhaps hums a song he
is interrupted by the bugles on deck and
must buckle on his sword and return to
another drill.
At every call to quarters all officers
must report themselves ready for duty.
The chaplain and paymaster, having
much less to do with drills than the
other officers, are usually the first to be
back in the wardroom, where there is
other work for them. The medical offi
cer has gone forward to the sick bay tc
look after his patients.
Whoa the midday breakfast comes,
there is the first breathing space for a
little leisure and relaxation. But the
drills for the day are not yet over, and
at 1 o’clock the bustle is resumed
throughout the ship. A sudden call may
come for collision drill, or fire drill, or
battalion drill. If at sea, a floating tar
get may be dropped overboard, and for
an hour the ship be shaken from stem
to stern by the discharge of guns. From
8 to 5 o’clock in the afternoon there is
generally a respite from wort, and the
wardroom begins to show signs of be
ing a hosne. Some inti are reading ox
writing, others are smoking or playing
games or loafing. Still others are in
their rooms fairing the seaxxum’s
noon nap But at 5 o’clock the drills
and exercises come again.
' By 0:80 o’clock there is a feeling that
one can sit down and dine without feat
of interruption. The mess as a whole is
now gathered together, and the meal so
generally a thoroughly enjoyable and
delightful affair. After it is over there
are cigars, games, music, or the right to
withdraw within oneself without ex
citing remark. By 10 o’clock most of
these sailors are in bed, but even now
the drills may not be over. At midnight
the bugles may sound, and in two min
->tes all the ta&’a company be rapidly
making ready for an enesny.—New
York Post.
It is strange to notice how many old
classical exprearioM still survive in
Tuscany. The people still SWear “By
Bacchus!” and “By Diana!” just as we
do “By Jove t” but when they talk of
“Torn, Dick and Harry” they say “Ti
tas, Cains and Sempronius. ”
.'..■■l,. ' •
. - ■
THE ROMAN WALL PICTURE
Mew Thought X«rt to B. » ItoprMUteUM
of the CrneiMxioa.
The now famous graffitte, or wall I
scratching, recently discovered in Rome
wmM first thought by archaeologists to
be possibly a rode contemporary repre
sentation of the crucifixion. According
to an article by Dr. Albert Battandier in
Cosmos, experts have now quite abandon
ed this view of the meaning of the picture,
though they ase not yet agreed about
what it does represent After quoting the
earlier theory of the Italian antiquarian
Marucchi, the article to which reference
has been made, Dr. Battandier goes on to
say: F
“We must confess that the impressions
received at first sight have begun quickly
to disappear. Other arehnologists see
quite differently, and M. Marucchi him
self has become less positive, as the char
acters, having been washed repeatedly,
come out more clearly. It is now impos
sible to defend the earliest
and We are obliged to mourn the loss of a
discovery that would have been valuable
for many reasons, but useless for our
Christian faith. The gospels ought to
suffice us. ■„
“Let us speak first of theecene repre
sented at the bottom of this series of graf
fitte. There are, in fact, a large number
of inscriptions, one above the other, and
we should be foolish to suppose that all
must necessarily be on the same subject.
We should observe first that the design is
vary rough. The part of it that is dearest
represents perpendicular posts united by a
transverse bar and fanning a sort of por
tico, with ladders fbr mounting. Several
of the persons represented have names
written over their heads, for the most
part illegible ones. Thus we have Nostu
lus, Eulogius, Secundus, or, better, Joeun
-dUB, and finally Pilatus, of which there
remain Oqly the syllables’ll* and‘tus.’
Higher up vre find numerical signs.
“Now, thp explanations of this scene are
as numerous as they are hypothetical.
“First pt all, on account of a name that
was thought to be ‘Crestus,’ at the begin
ning of the graffitte, it was regarded as a
vfowof the crucifixion. This is what has
glvqn to the drawing its great notoriety
and has already caused floods of ink to be
shed on tho question. Others have seen in
it a naval maneuver. The posts are masts,
only unfortunately there is neither ship
nor sea. For others it is a mason’s scaf
folding, traced here as a kind at rough
preliminary plan of the proposed manner
of doing some piece of work, but this does
not account for the drawings of people
and still fess for the names Written over
their heads. Some archaeologists find here
the preparations for an exhibition of rope
walkers or acrobats, and In this case the
figures would represent the principal ac
tors with their names written over their
heads. It is probable also that it may be a
representation of some imaginary scene
traced by soldiers with plenty of leisure
and not strong on perspective, who occu
pied an idle hour in drawing a picture that
had nothing real to correspond to It Fi
nally, to close this Berths of interptatatlsns
With a note es humor, some have thought
this to represent the preparations for an
exhibition of fireworks, as if powder had
been invented at this epoch I
“Above the scene there are numerous
inscriptions, and it has been noted already
that these do not relate necessarily to the
design placed below them. An attentive
examination shows that most of the In
scriptions vre not fit for ears pplite. Os
the words supposed to be‘Christ’ there
remain only the letters ORE——S. A hols
in the wall has caused the Intermediate
letters to disappear.
“We see how the discovery of these fa
mous graffitti that have created such ex
citement both at Borne and abroad appears
at the present time. It would doubtless
have been very interesting if the first ver
sion had been oorrest, but historical troth
obliges us to confess that it was not.”—
Literary Digest.
Spanish Pool.'
“Until we began to get into hot water
with Spain,” said a naval officer, “the fa
vorite game of men forward on American
warships was Spanish pool, which Is a
game of checkers of a peculiarly intricate
sort—so intricate that, after 12 years in
the service and much careful watching of
the game while officer of the deck, I
couldn’t play a game of it now to save my
soul. The enlisted men all played it,
however, and greatly preferred it to the
ordinary geffie of cheafew, for it stems
that Spanish pool is a game wherein you
get quicker action for your brains in ma
neuvering titan you do in checkers. But
I will venture to say that there has not
been a single game of Spanish pool played
in the United States navy since the Maine
disaster. I was attached to a ship on the
Pacific home station when the news was
received aboard that the Maine had gone
up in the air. After knock off work had
been piped that day the Spanish pool fiends
’broke out* their oilcloth Spanish pool
boards and robber Checkers as usual, and
I watched them curiously to see if they
would play Spanish pool. They didn’t.
Without saying a word as to their reason
for the switch, titey all plunged into the
game of ordinary checkers. This struck
me as being pretty significant at the time,
as evidencing the opinion of the men for
ward in our navy as to the cause of the
Maine disaster.’’—Washington Star. ,
1 ■ 1
Luxury In the Wildarneaa.
A press dispatch from London states
that the Russian government has provided
> for the Siberian line a train de lUXB, qom
posed of four splendid can, built at Mos
cow. There are an open saloon oar, a din
ing ear, a bathroom, a library, telephone,
electric lighting, refrigerators and venti
lating apparatus, piano, chessboards and
means for gymnastic exercise. This Will
make the Pennsylvania and the New York
Central and the other American origina
tors of luxurious trains hide their heads in
confusion. ....
American passengers have perhaps all
the luxury that they have been taught to
appreciate, but we must admit that Rus
sia has beaten us. The first half tarn
features of the Siberian train are familiar
matters here, even telephones being at our
command if we want them. Moreover,
pianos have been used in American ears,
and something even better than a chess
board may be found in most smoking can,
even those used by the plebeian ’ classes,
but when it comes to gymnastics we give
up. We have no better expedient than to
stop 80 minutes and let the passengers
walk up and down the station platform.
Whether the Russian apparatus consists at
a pair of 50 cent dumbbells or of only a 88
inch cane is not stated.—Railroad Gazette.
Patriotic.
There was a remarkable instance o< pa
triotic action in City Hall park yesterday
afternoon. The tramps who frequent the
park held a meeting and unanimously re
solved that while the war continued they
would use no castile soap.—New York
Tribune.
A KINGDOM FOR A JEST.
Mow William Fa Fool Got Urn Title eg
Klug of Yvetot.
Gerald Btonan writes for St. Nicholas
an article on “Tbs Kingdom of Ytetot.”
After telling of the bare facts of history to
bo gathered from legal papers Mr. Branan
Now for tradition as unearthed by M.
d’Hauterlve from many a musty tome or
taken down by the good cure of the viltage
from the lips of old parishioners. This
“Ansfred, styled *le drole,’ or‘ths humor
ous,* ” was, it seems, none other than Wil
liam I’s court Jester, and his stone Image,
in cap s»d bells arrayed, stood In tho din
ing hall of the Chateau d’Yvetot until
those terrible fellows, the revolutionary
soldiers, pulled down both house and
statue.
Those who love to stray In history’s by
ways Will remember that when William
tho Conqueror landed on the English coast
ho tripped and fell with extended arms
ujfon the strand. Moot of his followers
would have regarded this as a bad omen
had not the monarch, with rare presence
of mind, quieted their fears by exclaiming
that he was “grasping the soil of England
in his arms.” Now, tradition in Yvetot
has it that the person who whispered this
cunning reply Into the ear of the prostrate
William w« our witty acquaintance, thq,
court Jester Ansfred. .
When England had been won, the story
goes that the king remembered his hum
ble Jester's timely whisper and, calling to
him to the foot of the throne, bade him
ask a boon byway of reward. Ansfred
jestingly replied, “Ah, my good king, I
have an ambition too lofty far you to
gratify!”
Greatly piqued at this speech, even from
such a privileged Joker as his “court fool,”
William insisted upon knowing what the
ambition was which the sovereign of Eng
land and Normandy could not make good,
whereupon, Jingling his golden bells gay
ly, Ansfred said: “In sooth, friend Wil
liam, I desire to become a king, like your
self. Nothing less can satisfy ma **
At this the nobles of the court set up a
mighty shout of laughter, looking upon
the affair as another of Ansfred’s sallies,
but the king laughed louder than them
all Recovering from his mirth, he cried
out: “Ansfred shall have his wish. When
wte get back to Normand* we will give
him a kingdom of his own/’ Then, sum
moning his chancellor, he demanded the
name of “ths very last place in all his do
minions, the most barren and waterless
waste In his possession. ” The chancellor
consulted his great books and found that
the last place mentloned'was the hamlet
of Yvetot Moreover, this hamlet stood in
the treeless, springless plain of Caux and
was an extraordinarily desolate spot, little
thought of by the abbey of St. Wandrille,
to whoso monks it belonged.
William laughed again when he heard
of Yvetot, and In pursuance of his pledge
when he returned to Normandy he took
Yvetot away from the abbey and gave it
to Ansfred, the jester. In the nearby vil
lage of Bolbec, amid great merriment,
Ansfred'was formally crowned "king of
Yvetot.” Everybody looked on tM'core
nation as a Joko— everybody but Ansfred
himself As was often the caao with these
jesters, the folly of tills “fool” was only
on tiie exterior. No sooner had he acquir
ed possession of his small kingdom than
be built himself a tower there and set
about planting the wastes around. The
trees grew, but King Ansfrod could think
of no plan that would supply Yvetot with
water. Always, till he died, Ansfred re
tained the title of “king,” and, William
the Conqueror's sons being busy with their
wars, none tried to take it from him.
Ansfred’s son and heir, Richard, second
king of Yvetot, went to tho crusades in
1096 and fought-with great bravery.
Mexloo*s New Capitol Building.
The city of Mexico is to have a national
capitol building worthy of the great re
public. It is to be built pt stone and ac
cording to a Chicago architect’s design.
The dimensions are to be 880 by 880 feet—
that is to say. a perfect square on the
ground plan. The height will be one-third
the breadth, with central porticos on each
face, supported by four columns and hav
ing heavily ornamented architraves and
gables. Colonnades extend'rlght and left
from each portico, resting upon the base
ment and extending to the top of the
building. The four corners present solid
faces, except where pierced by windows.
To add to the imposing appearance of
the building a square tower, composed of
88-columns, rises above‘the roof in the
center, bearing a heavy cornice and equal
ly heavy parapet, with statues placed oh
pedestals at each upper corner. Equestrian
statues ornament tho base of this tower at
the four corners, and at each angle of the
low sloping roof of the main building
there are to be placed bronze ornaments,
griffins and the like. The style is Roman,
modified by the introduction of Italian
renaissance effects. Prominent architects
say the building will be obe of the finest
architectural efforts of modern times. It
wfll cost about 85,000,000. Baltimore
Sun.
BrigMsdaga In Italy.
Brigandage still flourishes in Italy. As
Signor Romanin-lacur, a well known dep
uty, and a dozen other men were going
toward Grossetto the other day for the
purpose of inspecting a newly constructed
aqueduct they suddenly meta man, dress
ed like a huntsman, who leveled his rifle
at them and ordered them to halt They
obeyed,’whereupon the brigand command
ed them to empty their pockets. Strange
to say, not one of them made the least re
sistanoe, and as a result the brigand ob
tained a few thousand francs, Deputy Ro
manin-lacur’s involuntary contribution
being five bank notes of 100 francs each.
Having secured this booty, the fearless
robber disappeared, and no trace of him
has since been found. On the following
day a wealthy landed proprietor was stab
bed and robbed by a brigand within a few
miles of Rome, but fortunately the police
were near at hand, and they arrested the
miscreant before he could escape. As his
victim Is saM to be mortally wounded the
ehans— are that the criminal’s enweer <■
practically ended.—New York Herald.
At Geveener Atkinson's Bxponso.
Governor Atkinson of Georgia tells this
story at his own exptase: "“It was during
my recent inspection <rf the convict camps.
Among other planes I visited were the
coal mines, and in order to make a thor
ough inspeetlon it was necessary to go
down into the mines and see the convicts
at work. Two guards aceorapanied me
down Into the mines. They showed me
i everything of interest and finally took me
where the convicts were at wort. As we
approaehed them one at tho convicts rush-*
ed over to me,dying: ’Good Lord! Bill
Atkinson, as sure as I Kve! I never ex
pected to see you here. What on earth,
BUI. did they convict you of doing!’ I
readily recognized the man as one whom
I had known since my Irayhood.”
THE VICIOUS JAGUAK
HE FINDS A DEADLY ENEMY IN THE
PLUCKY PUMA.
XhsM Fierce South Aaxerieaa Brutea Fight
Bach Other to the Death ea Might—Twe
Battlee'That Siow the Characteristics of
the Animals.
“Ott the Apure river, near its head,
lives—or did live there five years ago—
a woman of mixed Spanish and Indian
race named Maria Padilla, the wife of
tiie mayordoma, or foreman, of a cattle
ranch. I have talked with her and
heard from her lips the account of the
strange adventure she had when a child
of 7 years.
“Her parents with their children
were ranking a jeunu y over a trail that
led along the foothills of the Maritime
Andes. They bad encamped for the
night, and this child, while her parents'
attention was occupied, started into the
forest to gather firewood as she had of
ten seen her mother do. Her absence
was not noticed until she had been gone
' some time from tiie camp. As she gath
ered dry sticks into a bundle she saw a
large, spotted animal stealing swiftly
toward her.,
“Every South American country girl
of 7 knows a jaguar when she sees him,
whether she has ever seen one before or
not, for the dread of these animals is
an instinct among the' inhabitants of
regions which they frequent Overcome
by fear the girl could only stand still
and await her fate. With her eyes riv
eted on the jaguar she did not see where
they came from, but of a sudden she
perceived that he .was savagely fighting
with two huge, tawny animals that had
sprung upon him.
“ ThoUght seemed to her to last a long
time* and once the brutes in their strug
gles came very near to where she stood.
The pumas that had attacked him kill
ed the jaguar at last, and after standing
over the body a few minutes as if to as
sure themselves that he would not re
vive they for the first time turned their
t gaze toward the child, who had been too
, much terrified to improve her chance to
; run away while the beasts were fight
< ing.
“They favored her with a long stare,
and then, not offering to approach or
' harm her, turned deliberately away
and trotted into the depths of the for
est. They scarcely had disappeared
i when her father, having missed tho
; child and guided by the sounds of the
> fight, came running to the place with
- gun and machete and found her safe.
, He got a jaguar skin as a trophy, though
' it was cut too nearly into ribbons by
j the pumas’ claws to be of value.
( “In Ihe Gdhrico oountiy, at a village
> called Paraya, near-the Merida trail, I
. saw an Indian named Jose Lobado
whose face and head were deeply scar-
S red and whose body was a network of
J similar scars from wounds received
: through being carried away by a jaguar
' when an infant in arms. Os course he
j opuld not remember the occurrence, bat
. bls mother, who had rescued him, de
scribed it to me.
1 “She had gone to a mate, or wooded
1 spot, on the pampas for firewood, carry
ing her child, after the fashion of Ven
emelan women of humble station, in
a shawl looped from her shoulder. This
. shawl, with the small boy in it, she slung
- to a low tree branch while she gathered
■ her bundle of sticks, and she did not
perceive the approach of a jaguar until
i he had seized the child and was carry
t ing it away.
L “The mother grasped her maohote
and ran after the jaguar, shrieking.
I She managed to keep the beast in sight,
> but he was rapidly getting beyond her
' view when suddenly the jaguar stopped,
’ put the child down and bristling for
fight stood with his farepaws resting
> upon it
“Then the mother saw that a puma
i WM fronting the jaguar. She hurried
on toward where the two beasts faced
each other, growling and snarling. Be
fore she got to them the puma "Sprang,
’ and at once the two were fighting fierce
. iy above the child. In the struggle the
child wae rolled to one side, but before
the mother could get to it the jaguar
i broke away from the puma and spring
i ing to the boy again crouched with his
[ paws above him as before.
“The puma leaped again and the fight
’ wm renewed, but again the jaguar got
clear and jumped to guard his prey be
fore the mother could get a chance to
i snatch her child. Once more the puma
attacked his foe, and this time as the
! beasts struggled and tore each other an
1 accidental kick from one of them sent
‘ the boy 20 feet away, almost to the
i mother’s feet
“Catching him up she ran for home
. and got safe to the house. The boy,
! though covered with claw weunds from
head to foot and bearing deep marks of
- the jaguar’s teeth in the back, where
' the beast had seized him to carry him
' away, recovered completely from his in
! juries, although bearing the scars for
L his lifetime. The puma and the jaguar
. were found, both dead, at the place
■ where they had fought ” —Philadelphia
• Times.
i
A Qolek Witted B»ptlst.
i One of the candidatee for the state
* senate down in Jefferson county, Ala.,
1 was a prominent Baptist, and he ex
„ pected his fellow churchmen to help
push him akmg. The story goes that he
was campaigning on a country beat and
1 had the good fortune to fall in with a
’ of Baptists. WhSth
t era prayer meeting* had just been held
or what the occaainn <jf the gathering
, was is not known. About this time a
i light shower came ftp, and the candi-
> date at once raised a\ largo umbrella
1 which he was carryimt \
“You are notjfraid of this little
shower, are you, Brother ?” re-
marked one good Baptist standing near.
“Not at all, ” responded the quick
witted candidate, “but you know I am
: opposed to all forms of ‘sprinkling.’”
He carried that beat solidly.—New Or
leans Times-Democrat
w \wl Ibsmi I w Isaßimanß ■ ■ Baßla
To MOTHERS.
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD “CASTORIA,” AND .
“PITCHER’S CASTOBIA,” AS OUR TRADE MARK.
DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, qf Hyannis, MassachusstU,
was the originator of “PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” the same
that has borne and does now on eosry
bear the facsimile signature of wrapper.
This is the original “ PITCHER’S CASTORIA, ’ which has been
usedin the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty
yean. LOOK CAREFULLY ai the wrapper and see that it is
ttetajd always bauM m
and has the signature of wrap-
per. • to one has authority from me to use my name ex
cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is
March 8,1897.
Do Not Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting
a cheap substitute which some druggut ia«/ .offer yo**
(because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in
gredients of which even he docs not know.
“lie Kind Yon Have Always Bought”
BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SjCNATUHE GF
.
; Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Failed You.
«h« acaravn «•««>•■». tt bvmav •▼oerr. «bw v»«* «rr.
=/ . =■■!.. ' .:!•■• '■?■» -."'T— TJM >
SHOES, - SHdES I
IN MENS SHOES WE HAVE THE LATEST .STYLES—COIN TOES,
GENUINE RUSSIA LEATHER CALF TANS, CHOCOLATES AND GREEN
AT |2 TO 88AO PER PAIR.
IN LADIES OXFORDS WE IIAVE COMPLETE LINE IN TAN, BLACK
AND CHOCOLATE, ALSO TAN AND BLACK SANDALS RANGING IN
PRICE FROM 75c 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 - -E3.OJcxJ-N-E.
WE HAVE IN A LINE OF
SAMPLE STRAW HATS.
i...i ' .. J
YOTTH —
JOB PRINTING
4»
DONE A.T
The Morning Call Office.
• ■' Wig ll
We have just supplied our Job Office with a complete line of Slatioaetv
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted ia the way Os
*
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS
STATEMENTS, IRCULARB,
ENVELOPES, NOTES,
MORTGAGES, PROGRAMS
JARDS, POSTERS’
DODGERS, MJ., ETV
We carry toe iue of ENVELOfEfI tm : thietrada.
Aa atlratdvt POSTER of asy size can be issued on short notice.
Our prices for work of all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained ras
any office iq the state. When you want fob printing ofSany {description give
call Satisfhction guaranteeu.
.A.LL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.