Newspaper Page Text
* . Hit*
VASHTI THE VEILED.
REV DR TALMAGE COMMENDS MOD
’ v 1
ESTY IN
■ .
'.- • •■..'.■> ' -. * ■ ' ■. l ?,!£? r,
(Copyright, 189®, by American Press Asao
cla M w - -mt m. (■.
Washington, July B.—-Hr. launftge in
this discussion tells the story of a beauti
ful aueen dethroned and draws practical
mi queen uvumv*. <
lessons for aU conditions and all times;
text, Esther 1, 1 »,
reyaTto show the people and the princes
« _* frw alia waa fair in lrw»t iivwivi •
hut Queen toTomeV
We stand amid the palaces erf Shush an.
The pinnacles are aflame with the morn
ing light. The columns rise festooned
and wreathed, the wealth of empires flash
ing from the grooves, the ceilings adorned
with Ireugm of bird and beast and scenes
of prowess and conquest. The walls axe
hung with shields and emblazoned until
it seems that she whole round of splendors
Is exhausted. Each arch is a mighty leaf
of architectural achievement. Golden star,
fibininsp (tawn nn r/lnwlnty nrrfhAcnnn
Hangings of embroidered work hTwhleh
mingle the blueness of the sky, tho green
ness of the grass and the whiteness of the
These filled with" luxuriant
couches, in which weary limbs sink until
all fatigue is submerged. Those for ca
rousal Where kings drink down a king
dom at one swallow. Aniatein g spectacle 1
Light of silver dripping down over stairs of
ivory on shields of gold. Floors of stained
marble, sufiset red and night black and
inlaid with gleaming pearl. In connec
tion with this palace there is a garden
where the mighty men of foreign lands
are seated at a banquet. Under the spread
of oak and linden and acacia the tables
are arranged. The breath of honeysuckle
and frankincense fills the air. Fountains
leap up into the light, the spray struck
through with rainbows falling hito crys
talline baptism upon flowering shrubs,
then rolling down through channels of
marble and widening out hero and there
into pools swirling with the finny tribes
of foreign aquariums, bordered with scar
let anemones, hypericums and many col
ored ranunculi. "
Meat, of rarest bird and beast smoking
up amid wreaths of aromatics. The vases
filled with apricots and almonds. The
baskets piled up with apricots and figs and
oranges and pomegranates. Melons taste
fully twined with leaves of acacia. The
bright waters of Eulteus filling the urns
and dropping outside the rim in flashing
beads amid the traceries. Wino from the
royal vats of Ispahan<md Shiraz, in bot
tles of tinged shell, and lily shaped cups of
silver and flagons and tankards of solid
gold. The music rises higher and the rev
elry breaks <Jut jnto wilder transport, and
the wine has flushed the cheek and touch
ed the brain, and louder than all other
voices are the hiecough of the inebriates,
the gabble of fools add the song of the
drunkards.
A Woman Wronged.
In another part of the palace Queen
Vashti is entertaining the Princess of
Persia at a banquet. Drunken Ahasuerus
says to his servants, “You go and fetch
Vashti from that banquet with tho women
nnd bring her to this banquet with the
men and let me display her beauty. ” The
servants immediately start to obey the
king’s'bommand, but there was a rule in
oriental society that no woman might ap
pear In publlo-without having her face
veiled. Yet here was a mandate that no
one dare dispute, demanding that Vashti
come In unveiled before the multitude.
However, there was lx Vashti’s soul a
principle more regal than Ahasuerus, more
brilliant than the gold of Shushan, of
more wealth than the realm of Persia,
which commanded her to disobey this or
der of the king, and so all the righteous
ness and holiness and modesty of her na
ture rise up into one sublime refusal. She
says, “I will not .go into the banquet un
veiled.” Ahasuerus was infuriate, and
Vashti, robbed of her position and her
estate, is driven forth in poverty and ruin
to suffer the scorn of a nation, and yet to
receive the applause of after generations,
who shall rise up to admire this martyr
to kingly insolence. Well, the last vestige
of that feast is gone, the last garland has
faded, the last arch has fallen, the last
tankard has been destroyed, and Shushan
is a ruin, but as long as tho world stands
there will be multitudes of men and wom
en familiar with the Bible who will oome
into this picture gallery of God and ad
mire the divine portrait of Vashti the
queen, Vashti the veiled, Vashti the sacri
fice, Vashti the silent.
In the first place, I want you to look
upon Vashti the queen. A blue ribbon,
rayed with white, drawn around her fore
head, indicated her queenly position. It
was no small honor to be in such a
realm as that. Hark to tho reustle of her
robes! See the blase of her jewels, and
yet it is not necessary to have place and
regal robe in order to be queenly. When
I see a woman with stout faith in God
putting her foot upon all meanness and
selfishness and godless display, going right
forward to serve Christ and the race by a
grand and glorious service, I say, “That
woman is aqueen,” and the ranks of heav
en look over the battlements upon the cor
onation, and whether she comes up from
the shanty on the commons or the man
sion of tho fashionable square t greet her
with the shout, “All hail, Queen Vaehtft”
Thlip to Consider. ■
What glory was there on the brow of
Mary of Scotland, or KHvAbeth of Eng
land, or Margaret of France, or Catherine
of Russia compared with the worth of
some <rf our Christian mothers, many of
them gone into glory; or of that woman
Mentioned tn the Scriptures who put her
-Shinto the Lord’s treasury; or of Jeph-
Wft’s daughter, who made a demonstra-
Kof unselfish patriotism; or of Abigail,
who rescued the herds and flocks of her
husband; or of Ruth, who toiled under a
tropical sun for poor, old, hslpleasYfaomi;
or of Florence Nightingale, who went at
midnight ft) stanch the battle wounds of
the Crimea; or of Mrs. Adoniram Judson,
who kindled the lights of salvatiqn amid
the darkness of Burma; or of Mrs.
Hernans, who poured out her holy soul in
words which will forever be associated
with hunter’s horn, and captive’s chain,
and bridal hour, and lute’s throb, and our
few’s knell at the dying day, and scores
and hundreds of women unknowm on earth
Who have given water to the thirsty, and
bread to the hungry, and medicine to the
government hospital and in'toLtoouse
corridor and by prison gate? There may
be no royal robe. There may be no pula-
■ tial surroundings,. She does, not need
I them, for all charitable men will unite
Sn n v±H? 0^: Hai‘u
| QUO 6& VftßAui I
Again, I want you to consider Vashti
I u nd* 11'" 8 rtbefore Ahas
faoe
the delicacies of oriental society, and the
very men who in their intoxication de
manded that she come in their sober mo
ments would have despised her. As some
flowMS seem to thrive best la the dark
lane and in the shadow and where the sun
does not seem to reach them, so God ap
points to most womanly natures a retiring
and unobtrusive spirit. God once in awhile
a , thro ?°' OT a
Miriam to strike the timbrel at the front
of a host, or a Marie Antoinette to <fuell a
French mob, or a Deborah to stand at the
front of an armed battalion, crying out:
“Upl Up! This is the day in which the
Lord will deliver Sisera into thy hands. ’’
And When the women are called to such
outdoor work and to such heroic positions
God prepares them for it, and they have
iron in thefr soul, and lightnings in their
eye, and whirlwinds in their breath, and
the borrowed strength of the Lord omnip
otent in their right arm. They walk
through furnaces as though they vrere
hedges of wildflowers and cross seas as
though they were shimmering sapphire,
and all the harpies of hell down to their
dungeon at the stamp of womanly indig
nation - --xX- ■••••■= ■’j-z •
Vashti Unrolled.
But these are the exceptions. Generally
Dorcas would rather make a "garment for
the poor boy, Rebecca would rather fill
the trough of tho camels, Hannah would
rattier make a coat for Samuel, the He
brew maid would rather give a prescrip
tion fpr Naaman’s leprosy, the woman of
Sarepta would rather gather a few sticks
to cook a meal for famished Elijah, Bhebe
would rather carry a letter for the Inspired
apostle, Mother. Lois would rather educate
Timothy in the Scriptures. When I see a
woman going; about her daily duty, with
cheerful dignity presiding at the table,
with kind and gentle but firm discipline f
presiding in the nursery, going but into
the world without any .blast of trumpets,
following in the footsteps of him who went
about doing good, I say, “This is Vashti
with a veil on.” .
But when I see a woman of unblushing
boldness, loud voiced, with a tongue of in
finite clitter clatter, with arrogant look,
passing through the streets with the step
of a walking beam, gayly arrayed in a
very hurricane of millinery, I cry out,
“Vashti has lost her veil." When I see a
woman struggling for political prefer
ment, trying to force her way on up to
conspicuity amid the nqasoullne dema
gogues, who stand with swollen fists and
bloodshot eyes and pestiferous breath to
guard the polls, wanting to go through
the loaferlsm and defilement of popular
sovereigns, who crawl up from the saloons
greasyantWoul and vermin covered to de
cide questiane of justice and order and
civilization-—when I see a woman, Y say,
ftbeteitata M'yrres thnpgh-all hor
rible scum to get to public place and pow
er, I say: “Ah, what a pity! Vashll has
lost her veil!*
When I see a woman of comely features
and of adroitness of Intellect and endowed
with all that the schools can dn for her
and of high social position, yet moving la
society with superciliousness and hauteur,
as though she would have people know
their place and with an undefined com
bination of giggle and strut and rhodo
montade, endowed with allopathic quanti
ties of talk, but only homeopathic infin
itesimals of sense, the terror of dry goods
clerks and railroad conductors, discoverers
of significant meanings in plain conversa
tion, prodigies of badinage and innuendo,
I say, “Vashti has lost her veil."
Man’s Cruelty.
Again, I want you this morning to con
sider Vashti .the sacrifice. Who is this
that f see coming out of that palace gate
of Shushanf It seems to me that I have
seen her before. She comes homeless,
houseless, friendless, trudging along with
a broken heart. Who is she! It is Vashti
the sacrifice. Oh, what a change it was
from regal position to'a wayfarer’s crust!
A little while ago approved and sought
for. Now, none so poor as to acknowledge
her acquaintanceship. Vashti the sacrifice.
Ah, you and I have seen it many a time!
Here is a home empalaccd with beauty.
All that refinement and books and wealth
can do for that home has been done; but
Ahasuerus, the husband and the father, is
taking hold on paths of sin. He is gradu
ally going dawn. After awhile he will
flounder and struggle like a wild beast in
the hunter’s net—farther away from God,
farther away from the right. Soon the
bright apparel of the children will turn to
rags; soon the household song will be
come the sobbing of a broken heart. The
old story over again. Brutal centaurs
breaking up the marriage feast of Lapi
th®. The house full of outrage and cruel
ty and abomination, while trudging forth
from the palace gate are Vashti and her
children. There are homes in all parts of
this land that are in danger of such break
stand in a home by a dissipated life, de
stroying the peace and comfort of that
home! God forbid that your children
should ever have to wring their hands and
have people point their finger at them as
they pas down the street and say, “There
goes a drunkard’s chil<w” Godforbid that
the little feet should ever have to trudge
the path of poverty and wretchedness!
God forbid that any evil spirit born of the
wine cup or the brandy glass should come
forth and uproot that garden, and with a
lasting, blistering, all consuming curse
shut forever the palace gate against Vashti
and the children.
Ufe’i Campfires.
One night during our civil war I went
to Hagerstown to look at the army and I
stood on a hilltop and looked down upon
them. I saw the campfires all through
the valleys and all over the hills. It was
a weird spectacle, those campfires, and I
stood and watched them, and the soldiers
Who were gathered around them were no
doubt talking of their homes and of the
long march they had taken and of the
battles they were to fight, but after awhile
I saw these cwnpfires begin to lower, and
they oontliyxed to lower until they were
all gone out, and the army slept. It was
imposing when I saw the campfires. It
Wm imposing in the darkness when I
Jhmight of that great host asleep. Well,
God looks,down from heaven and he sees
the firesides of Christendom and the loved
ancs gathered around these firesides.
These are the campfires where we warm
battles that are yet to come God grant
that when at last these fires begin to go
out and continue to lewer until finally
old homesteacHt may be because we have—
Gone to sleep that sleep "
'From which none ever wales to weep.
!■ • .. . -
Now we ate an army oh iho march d
life ThenTWeshal! ’■> an army bivouacked
in tho tent of the grave
the silent. You do not hear any outcry
from this woman as she goes forth from
the palace gate. From the very dignity of
crises when thqmost triumphant thing.to
do is to keep sflonce. The philosopher,
confident in his newly discovered princi
ple, waiting for the coming of more intel
ligent generations, willing that men |
should laugh at the lightning rod and cot
ton gin and steamboat and telegraph,
waiting for long yeaYs through the soeff-'
ing of philosophical schools in grand and
magnificent silence. .. .. :;
Galileo, condemned by mathematicians
and monks and cardinals, cartcMhred ev
erywhere, yet waiting and watching with;
his telescope to see the coming up of stel
lar re-enforcements, when the stars in
their courses would fight for the Coper
nican system, then sitting down in com
plete blindness and deafness to wait for
eomloff on of tho iron s who
would build his monument and bow at his
grave. The reformer, execrated by his
contemporaries, fastened In a pl lory, the
slow fires of public contempt burning un
der him, ground under the cylinders of
the printing press, yet calmly waiting for
the day when purity of soul and heroism
of character will get the sanction of earth
and the plaudits of heaven. Affliction
enduring without any complaint tW
sharpness of the pang, and the violence of
the storm, and the heft of the chain, and
the darkness of the night, waiting until a
divine hand shall be.put forth to soothe
the pang, and hash the storm, and release
the captive. A wife abused, persecuted
andlv perpetual exite from every earthly
wmfort, wtfiting, waiting until the Lord
shall gather up his dear children in a
heavenly home and no poor Vashti will
ever be thrust out from the palace gate.
Jesus, in Silence and answering not a
word, drinking the g Al, bearing tho cross,
in prospect of the rapturous consumma
tion when—
Angels thronged his ehariot wheel
And bore him to his throne,
Then swept their golden harps and sung,
“The glorious work is done!"
Oh, woman, docs not this story of Vashti
the queen, Vashti the ve'iled, Vashti tho
sacrifice, Vashti the silent, moVe your
soul? My sermon, converges into the one
absorbing hope that none of yon may be
shut out of the palace gate of heaven. You
can endure the hardships, and the priva
tions, and the cruelties, and the misfor
tunes of this life if you can only gain ad
mission there. Through the blood of the
everlasting covenant you gothrough those
gates or never go through at all. God
forbid that you should at laStrbe banished
from the society of angels, and banished
from the companionship of your glorified
kindred, and banished fprever. Through
the rich grace of our Lord’ jesus Christ
laaKyou to enabled to totetatto
ple es Khchel adt RanfiaE and Abigail
and Deborah and Mary and Esther and
Vashti. .
Bauarta and Ckrirtlan Manea.
On our ride to Xochlcalco we chanced
upon a valuable piece of Information,
which I do not feel like withholding from
this superstitious age, and I think it will
be of great Use to opr mind curists and
healfire. When I wondered at the size oi
the buzzards we encountered, our guide,
who was a volunteer guide and a man of
standing and perfectly trustworthy, in
formed me that this bird was really a crow
and not a buzzard, as I had thought, and
it is not merely an ornamental and thiev
ing bird. This is wfiat he told ihe :
If any man has heart disease or is threat
ened with it, organic or otherwise, all he
needs to do is to catch one of these crows
and make a companion of him, a real in
timate. He must keep him by him con
stantly, let him eat from the same plate at
table and sleep with him at night. When
this intimacy is established, all the man’s
heart disease and tendency to it will leave
the man and pass into the crow. The tes
timony to this fact is abundant and ad
mits of no doubt, and the singular thing
about the miracle is that the crow Js noi
injured. The crow, by an entirely mental
process common in all mind cures, absorbs
the heart disease and sustains no harm
and asks no pay for his work.
This Christian Science crow is, te bo
sure, a Mexican, but I suppose that any
kind of crow with us would do as well.—
Charles Dudley Warner in Harper’s Mag
azine.
Farm Work For Imbeciles.
The state of Ohio has decided to inau
gurate a new experiment in the treatment
of Imbeciles. Hitherto threse wtokmlnded
unfortunates have been housed In great
asylums, where, under the constant care
of trained attendants, they have received
elementary classroom instruction. Whil«
this system developed the intellectual re
sources of the imbecile, weak and waver
ing as they were, there was no opportu
nity to build up the physical energies.
Gymnasium exercises failed to meet the re
quirements.
The state legislature has recently ap
propriated $150,000 for the purchase of n
farm and the establishment of an imbecile
village in connection with it. Instead of
a great aslyum there willoe a great num
ber of cottages, each in charge of a com
petent attendant It is proposed to develop
the minds of the members c* the colony
by classroom work and tijeir bodies by
outdoor exercise in practical farming.
They will thus have the same mental stim
ulus as before, and Will also have the ad
vantage of pure’air, physical exercise And
the healthful incentive of sustained work
along practical lines. The result of ths
experiment will be watched with interest
—Pathfinder.
Something Mew to Bite AU
The following advertisement appeared
in a recent number of Le Figaro. In the
original it is tastefully surrounded with a
border of molars and canines:
“To Persons Possessing Old False
Teeth. —We have the honor to inform you
that we are about to open, an establish
meat in France for the purehase of false
teeth out of use. If you possess any, send
them to our address. By return mall vou
Wilt receive a check for the highest aripunt
we can give, andJf the price docs net'sult
the objects will be returned. ”
This proposition is signed with the firm
name, and thereto is appmided the further
information that the house was founded
in 1833 at Ipswich (Angieterre).
Mendicant—Could ye give me a carfare,
dJPawerby— You know you want it for
(lightly)-Wotcver you says,
boss; you’re payin for it—Brooklyn Life,
of a sanitary millennium, to find that after
all we can “catch cold.” The great <iis
ffom which wo suffer are associated with
■nifllncr and anti nf fmrta thn nhillfn whink
w saasva waaw v* wess UMvaa vvx w aa wm
the first sign of our be
what is more interesting still, they have
made ft dear tlu.t In regard to various
dlseasM which aro known to bo caused by
micro organisms, and if seciallr in rouare
to pneumonia, wo x W y the owm-
Sto e D n.K
the microbes to take root.
Resent demonstrations as the presence
ing such animals to a thorough chill wJN
bring on pneumonia, is very suggestive
and makes it probable that in many of tho
ailments which resalt from “catching
cold’* ft (ioncurre>nt infection from wikbouk
is not necessary. Tho healthier and the
jjleaner the man, both inslds and out, the
more, no doubt, wiltehe bo able to bear ex
apsure without 111 consequences, but for
those people whose tissues are already
charged with infective micro organisms a
mayevidently set up disease.
*ißin»z*CK oiory.
Rudolph Lindau, In the Deutsche Revue,
te»s some stories about Prince Bismarck
thatthave not been told In detail before.
In May, 186«, Bismarck, then only count,
wps passing through Unter den Linden,
vyheq he heard behind him the report of a
revolver.- Hb turned quickly around and,
saw a young man—Ferdinand Blind it
was-ialming at him with the still smok
ing pistol. Bismarck ran toward the man
and seized the hand fa which he held the
revolver, and with tho other band ho
the other and shot three times in
quick succession. Bismarck felt himself
wounded In the shoulder and Injured in
one of bis ribs, but he held his assailant
fast until several soldiers ran up and'se
cured him. Then Bismarck walked quick
ly to his house, which he reached long be
fore any report of the affair got there.
Tho countess’ it appeared, had several
callers when her husband came in. He
greeted them all pleasantly and asked to
be excused for a few minuses on account
of a pressing engagement. - Thereupon he
retired to the next room and rapidly wrote
out an account of the attempt on his fife,
Vs sto to ttteiafe «fcM,xe4Mui
ing to the drawing room, he joxed in his
usual way about his unpunctuality at
luncheon and ate with a good t M?Mtite.
When the meaUwasJUritefed, to to
the countess, Meflra tor, vWktod her
“zpahlzeii” In old German way and
don ’t ’you?’’ Bt»e stared at Mmjwhere
upon he added: "Yes, you mustn’t bo
anxious, my child. Somebody has shot at
me, but it is nothing, as you see.”
The Saga«l«M Bergall.
Lying up close against the end of an
overhanging stone on the bottom of one of
the tanks at the aquarltftn was an eel
about 15 inches in length- six or
eight inches of the eel’s tall projected clear
of the stone. Swimming about in the
same tank there was a bergall about G
inches in length, which presdbtly took a
notion that it would like to lie in there
snug against the rock and the overhanging
projeotton, and it came up at the tail end
of the eel and tried to wedge Itself in be
tween the eel and the rook—-that la, to
crowd the eel away and take its place.
But the bergall couldn’t do that; there
is a good deal of strength ia an eel, and
this eel held its place finely. The bergall
hauled off a little distance and beaded for
the point where the roek and the side of
the eel met and made for it under full
.steam, but with tho same result; II
couldn’t budgb the eel, which still clung
closely to the roek. Then the bergall back
ed off again and tried • change erf tactics.
The eel’s head’was around on the other
side of the rook, where ;t couldn’t see
what was going on at the rear. The ber
gall backed oft and darted for the eel’s tail
and nipped it as bard as it oopld bite.
The eel started as though it had been
struck by lightning and tlifi around ths
end of the rock and off to tho other end
the tank, sotting in the water as it went
letter B’a of 14 different sizes and styles,
while the bergall quickly took fts place
under tho overhanging rock.—New York
Sun. ■- ' ■ ‘ ;>¥
The Herae Gets the Most In Btusl*.
In Russia the wages'of a hone are high
er than those of a man, and hence, of
course, very much higher than the wages
of women. Thus in the Niahni-Volga sec
tion we find the average pay of man and
horse to be about 72 cents per day, of man
alone 84 cents—that is, 88 cento for horse
and 84 cents for man. The women roeeive
from IG to 20 cento. In iho central agri
cultural region'fbe average is: Horse, 28
cento; man, 80 cento; woman, 18 cents.
In ttie southern steppe: Horse, 86 cento;
man, 26coati; woman, 16 cento.
Tbh is an interesting, commentary on
the standard of living of Russian agricul
tural laborers. Its meaning is simply
that hujnan beings are cheaper there than
draft animals. In other words, it costa leas
to keep them alfcc. Irrthe southern steppe
five women can be eznploywd more cheaply
than two heroes. Is it difficult to imagine
the conditions of home life, the dearth of
refining influences, the sodden, hopeless
stagnation that such a state of affairs re
flects? Is it any wonder that the products
of such a wage stylus as this are individual
degradation, social barrenneae, meager
eduostion, political despotism, religious
Intalereno? and generally elvHiza
tira aeatefty aUbveWbiirism?—e(»«toh’«
Magasine.,’ ’ J ‘? . -?< f-'
Why He Looked Glum.
Wife—What’s the matjer, dear?
Hcaband—l bad a chance to bet 110 on
a “sure fftug” this afternoon.
Wife-j And you didn’t ’do it? Well, no
matter. Getting money by betting isn’t—
Husband—You don’t understand I
did.—Chicago News.
Os Oourse.
“Glevca are very okL The ancient Par
dons wore them.”
“Yes, but I fancy that fellows got the
mitten long before that.”—Detroit Free
Press.
■/■■■ ‘ ‘’k- ’
To MOTHERS.
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
CABTOMX” teS
I DR SAMUEL PITCHER. If Huannit Massachusetts
the oriaMar of •-PITCHERS CASTORIa"
that has ooms ana does wn on every
Dear mejacsimue signature oj /'CctcAi/x wrapper.
This is the original - PITCHER'S CASTORIA, ’ which has been
• wow WWW WWW w - w ww W - w ww w -. —, W w w • w w
used in the tones gs the Mothers qf America for over thii tg
years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see tUt it is
the fund you have always bought m tho
and has the signature of wrap-
per. Vo one has authority from me to ilis my name w
eept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is
President. /j m
March 8,1897.
Do Not Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting
a cheap substitute which some druggist nw/ offer yo
(because he makes a few more p nnies on it), the in
gradients of which even he docs not know.
“The Kind You Have Alvzays Bought'
BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE StGUATURE CF
Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Failed You.
w. w mmtoV .wwsr, «w
-
oHOliiOj " oHOiSo I
IN MENS SHOES WE HAVE THE LATEST STYLES—COIN TOES,
GENUINE RUSSIA LEATHER CALF TANB, CHOCOLATES AND GREEN
AT <2 TO 18.50 PER PAIR.
IN LADIES OXFORDS WE HAVE COMPLETE LINE IN TAN, BLACK
AND CHOCOLATE, ALSO SAN AND BLACK SANDALS RANGING IN
PHKJE FROM TO» WO*
ALSO TAN, CHOCOLATE AND BLACK SANDALS AND OXFORDS IN
CHILDREN AND MISSIS SIZES, AND CHILDREN AND MIBSEB TAN LACE
SHOES AND BLACK.
'*
wamvEWAuraor
SAMPLE STRAW HATS.
MSLL!_J ...hi , , , ' i , W |
■' r ?
—GET YOUB— J
JOB PRINTING
DONE jkT 8
The Morning Call Office.
We have jurt tupplied (for Job Office with a complete line of Bteboae«v
kinds and can get np, on short notice, anything wanted In the way oi
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS
STATEMENTS, IRCULARB, *
envelopes, Nona,
MORTGAGES, PROGRAMS
< * , JARDB, POSTERS*
DODGERS, EHL, MV
We wry tar beet ine of FNVWXIFEB w : this trade. 1
An aOxacdvt POSTER uT aay size can be issued on short notion
Our prices for work of all kinds will compare favorably with tbeee obtained MB
any office in the state. When you want job printing ofjany [description give
call Satisfection guaranteeu. J
Jk-LL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.