Newspaper Page Text
U p
*****
t ~ . . .l -kn «nM-
hospital up town ana men sno k*jw»-
“Now you may tell me how it happened
if you will promise to be very quiet.’
*_ , -- » „ ,■■ ' wwWC ft WftPTtl
and’toM thewm Iwanted to buy a StStaW
bat. He plckedup one, put It on my head
and he says, ‘That’, the hat you want,’
jras.’TLifit‘js-fii
slated on my taking the one he had put
on my head. I asked Mm If there was
anything the matter with that hat, and he
zaidno.'but It was the one he picked out
for me as soon as he saw me come in.
‘lt’s Hobson’s choke,’ he said. ‘Whose?’ I
aaya ‘Hobeon's,’he says. I said I didn’t
know him. Then he said everybody was
saying it. Said it was a fad or something
' like that, and if I wanted to be‘strictly
in it’ I would take the hat and if anybody
said anything to me about it I sb?did say
It wm Hobson’s choice and th# drinks
would be on the other fellow. So I paid
him |1.50 and went away under the new
hat
“When I was going up the steps at Park
place station, I met an acquaintance, who
says, ‘Where did you get it?’ I wanted to
be sure he meant the hat, and I says,
‘Where did I get what?’ ‘The shed,’he
XThat threw me off. 1 asked him
he meant, and be pointed to the
headpiece and 'That. Ybu look like
a odlf under a new shed,’he say a ‘That’s
one of Hobson’s,’ I says. ‘Which isFhe
says. ‘The hat Is,’ I says. ‘I didn’t know
Hobson was in the hat business,’ he says.
‘Which one of them?’ I says. Then he
laughed and poked me and says, ‘Which
one are you ticking about?’ ‘Honest,’ I
says, 'it’s Hobson’s.’ ‘lf irtr-Hobson’s,’
he says, ‘you’d better take it back to Min
and tell him to give you your old one. ’
‘You don't seem to know about it,’ I says,
and then I told him about how everybody
was talking about Hobson. ■ Ho looked at
• me and says, ‘You’d better take some
thing for it. ’
“And then X says, ‘All right, come on,’
and we went into the first place and we
stood there quite awhile, and when we
went out I found it had cost me about. (1,
and he hadn't paid anything.
“So X left him and came on up town,
thinking all the way up. Two men were
on the seat in front of me. I couldn't hear
all they said, but one of them remarked
as Ms station was called that he s'posed it
was Hobson’s choice.
‘ ‘Then I looked as my hat to see if it
' was all right. It seemed as if it was too
small, but I put it back and went on to
Forty-second street, where .1 got off and
went into a lunch place, where. I met an
other acquaintance. Pretty soon he says,
‘That was a brave thing for Hobson to
do.' I said‘Yes.’ ‘You heard about it?’
he says. ‘Yes,’ I says, ‘and it has cost me
13.50, and you will please sell your gold
bricks to somebody else,’ I says. ‘Don’t
take me for a fool all the time,’ I says.
‘You must be crazy,’ he says. ‘I got no
gold brick,’ he jays. ‘l’m talking about
the brave man who sunk his ship in the
harbor.' ‘What’s Ms name?’l says. ‘Hob
son,’ he says. Then I gbt up and took my
hat from the peg and showed it to him
and I says, ‘Do you seattie hat?’ He said
‘ ‘Yes.’ ‘Well,’ I says, ‘that’s Hobson’s.'
He looked at it and says: ‘Why don’t you
wear your own hat? What are you doing, ’
he says, ‘wearing Hobson’S hat?’ And
then I hit him, and when I came to I was
here. ” —New York Sun.
The Question of Diet.
An article by Sir Henry Thompson, en
titled “Why Vegetarians?” in The Nine
teenth Century is an exhaustive treatise
on the subject of diet. He demolishes the
theory of vegetarians that they are total
abstainers from flesh products, as in their
use of milk, butter and cheese they in
dulge in highly concentrated proteid con
taining food of animal origin, to say noth
ing of eggs, wMoh contain the material of
the developed chicken. There are few
vegetarians who confine their diet abso
lutely to productions of the vegetable king
dom.
To this practice Sir Henry Thompson
opposes the argument that no form of
vegetable nourishment has been discovered
upon jvhlch it is possible to rear the young
mammal, in which man is included. He
wishes to be informed why an animal that
is born into the world of carnivorous par
ents, which is solely dependent for its ex
istence upon animal food—milk—should
suddenly adopt a vegetable diet, and at
what age such a change should be made.
In the matter of food Sir Henry Thomp
son denies that there is any reason for ex
clusive forms of diet Considerations of
age, personal habits, occupation, climate
and surroundings should be the determin
ing factors in governing a choice of food.
All fads that ignore this principle, wheth
er they take the form of exclusive adher
ence to a flesh or vegetable diet, are not
conducive to the maintenance of health
and physical activity.
Not That Jefferson.
A party from Philadelphia and other
Pennsylvania towns was being escorted
through the capital yesterday, by a guide
who evinced an earnest effort to show the
strangers all the points of interest They
had passed through the rotunda and Stat
uary hall and had made their way to the
east corridor of the house.
“Here/’ said the guide, “is perhaps the
most perfect statue of Jefferson In the
world’’—
“Are you certain that is Jefferson?” in
quired a blond of 20 as she gazed intently
at the statue.
“Yes, ma’am, that's Jeff emo n all right,”
replied the guide.
.. “ My, how he has changed since I saw
him, ’ ’ the blond exclaimed.
“Since you saw him,” ejaculated the
amazed guide, turning to the girl of 20.
“Why, yes. I saw Mm last winter at
the Chestnut Street theater in -Rip Van
Winkle/andhe didn’t lookrtt like this7
The girl did not smil a She seemed as
serious as an undertaker. The guide felt
embarrassed. The sileneathat prevailed
for a moment was gently broken by the
Philadelphia girl, who earnestly and with
a low voice inquired:
“When did he die?”
But the guide had moved on and he
made no reply.—Washington Times.
▲ New Phrase.
But speaking of people who are not as
intelligent as the law allows, I heard an
old colored woman use an expression the
other day that was new to me and so pat
that it would be interesting to know its
origin. She had a young girl with her,
and some especially stupid remark of the
girl’s had annoyed her. She looked at her
in disgust.
“Well,” said she, “you certainly ought
to be tapped for the simplos.”—Washing
ton Port.
•r"-
THE NATIONAL CAPITOL.
I —l I - ,
I Kt Costa aS Least •80,000 a Tear to Keep
the Big Building In Bepair.
It costs 183,000 a ear to maintain Un
tie Sam’s 114,000,000 building on Capitol
bill. That is the amount congress allows
every year for mechanics and laborers, for
brushes and hardware and lumber, for
tiles and grata bars and all the other sup
plies necessary to keep the capital in re
pair. •
For improvements congress has appro
priated an average of 125,000 a year in the
ten years just past, and much of that has
been spent in the last 12 months. Fifty
five thousand dollars has been used to
transform the senate’s system of ventila
tion and 145,000 to introduce electrio light
in the building and grounds For the
current year other changes are planned.
There is always something unfinished
about the capital. A few years ago the
most noticeable incompleteness was in the ’
terrace on the west front of the building.
That is completed now. But the painter’s
ugly scaffold hanging in the rotunda
draws attention to the still unfinished
Brumidl frieze, and in the basement of
the senate wing the abrupt termination of
the brilliant tropical wall decoration is a
constant source of surprise.
. Chance is responsible for the incom
pleteness of the wall paintings. They were
Smany years ago by an artist of rare
He grew tired of the work er he
died—no one about the capital can say ac
curately which. At all events he disap
peared from the scene and the walls of
the senate wing rema! beautiful in some
spots and bare in oth a. The beautiful
spots have been clean I and renewed re
cently by W. H. Ducksteln. Mr. Duck
stein has added also to the cleanliness of
what is known to the irreverent as the
chamber of horrors by cleaning the mar
ble, statupa there.
’ The delay in completing the frieze is not
a matter of chance. It is due to a dispute
in the committee on library oVer the im
portance of certain events in national his
tory. This frieze, begun by Brumidl, an
Italian artist, in 1878, was'only
done at the time of his death in 1883. The
hanging scaffold on whloh Brumidl did
his last work remained in plpce a long
time until another Italian, Costagglni,
was employed to carry out Brumldl’s de
signs.
What is’ represented by the annual ap
propriation of 130,000 and in the last year
by the special appropriations of (55,000
and (45,000 is not all that it takes to run
the capitol and grounds. Care of the
grounds costs (19,000 a year, steam heat
ing and machinery for the senate (4,600,
the lighting of the building and grounds
and of the botanic gardens opposite (86,-
798 and the operation of the engine house
and stables (2,000.
But for the building Itself the cost of
maintenance is (80,000 a year, or, includ
ing the improvements, (55,000. Some
business men figure repairs and improve
ments at 10 per cent of the value of the
building, and the actual cost of the capitol
to date has been (14,000,000.—Chicago
Tribune.
Robert Talton’s Torpedoes.
Before he turned his attention to navi-,
gation by steam Robert Fulton Invented a
marine torpedo which he endeavored to
dispose of to the United States govern
ment. Succeeding in interesting James
Madison, then secretary of state, in the
matter, he obtained a small appropriation
from the government for the purpose of
conducting some public experiments. In
the summer of 1806 he invited the high
dignitaries and a number of prominent
citizens of New York to Governor’s Island
to see the torpedoes and machinery with
whloh his experiments were to be made.
While he was lecturing on Ms blank tor
pedoes, which were large, empty copper
cylinders, his numerous auditors crowded
around him. After awhile he turned to a
copper case of the same description whloh
was placed under the gateway of old Cas
tle William and to which was attached a
clockwork lock.
Drawing out a peg, Fulton set the dock
in motion, and then he said in solemn
tones to his attentive audience: “Gentle
men, this is a charged torpedo, with
whloh, precisely In its present state, I
mean to blow up a vessel It contains 170
pounds of gunpowder, and if I were to
suffer the clockwork to run 15 minuses
I have no doubt that it would blow this
fortiflctrflon to atoms.”
The-circle of humanity whloh had closed
around the Inventor began to spread out
and grow thinner, and before five of the
15 minutes bad passed there were but two
or three persons remaining under the gate
way. Some, indeed, loot no time in get
ting at the greatest possible distance from
the torpedo, and they did not again appear
on the ground until they were assured that
the engine of destruction was safely lodged
In the magazine whence it had been taken.
—Sacramento Record Union.
Glad Be Was Not Like These.
“I haventt any sympathy for the peo
ple who are always complaining and whin
ing,” remarked the man with the troubled
frown upon his forehead. “In fact, I be
lieve that the men and women, who are al
ways fancying themselves ill used and
grumbling at other people ought to be
confined just as muoh as if they had hy
drophobia or got drunk; but there are
some troubles a man really can’t help
mentioning.
“Now, for instance,” he continued fret
fully, “1 don’t suppose any man in Chi
cago baa more real worries than X have.
My wife tells me every night that she's
tired of hearing me talk of them, and the
other men in the office begin to tell funny
stories just as soon as X come around out
of sheer aggravation, I believe. My. chil
dren run out of the room whenever I get
ready for a nice, long, confidential chat
with one of them, and even the dog howls
when I get ready to talk, I’m nearly al
ways so sad. But do Xgo round telling
people what a martyr to fate and other
people I am? Well, I guess not, my friend.
I haven’t a particle of use for a chronic
com plainer. Chicago Times-Herald.
Grewiome Birthday Celebration.
M. de Paris, otherwise Delbler, the pub
lic executioner of France, has just Cele
brated his seventieth birthday in a rtew
some fashion by executing at Bastia, in
Corsica, the murderer Fazzini. The scaf
foldings of the guillotines remain in the
prisons throughout France where execu
tions may take place, but the knife is never
out of M. Deltrter’s possession. He carries
it in a long leather satahel, not unlike
an elongated dress suit ease. When he
leaves Paris with his grim Instrument of
justice, a small army «f newspaper men
usually accompany him in the hope that
something may happen. His trip to Cor
sica was hardly noticed, however, on ae-{
count of the Dreyfus excitement. Dotlw
has probably killed more men thanfbyt
other living person. Fazzini broughThte
record up to 545.—San FraaeMe Argo
naut.
—— - " ' • *
A D EVOTEP PIGEON.
(he Broke Through a Well to awoor Mot
Wonttlng.
In the animal kingdom there are
many strong examples of mother love,
and the birds are particularly noted for
displaying it. A remarkable instance at
this maternal instinct was recently no
ticed near Elwood, Ind. A mother pi
geon whose young one had mysteriously
disappeared searched unceasingly for
weeks for the little one, and one day*
last December she was seen flying vio
lently against the side of aframe build
ing in the city.
Each time she oame in contact with
the house she chipped off a small Mt of
wood with her bill. For nearly two
days the old bird kept this practice up,
often during that time failing exhausted
from the repeated shocks and fatigue.
In the afternoon of the second day she
had pecked a hole in the wall, the wood
of which was old and soft from tire
weather. This hole was large enough to
admit a man’s head, and through this
the mother bird went and came.
Every time she entered she carried
grain or seeds or grass. Some curious
people investigated the hole while she
was absent, and there they found tire
little lost pigeon, just below the hole,
wedged in between the weatherboards.
For two days more the bird continued
to bring the little one food, and would
stay fluttering near the hole, chirruping
and trying to cheer the little prisoner
up. Many times it entered and seemed
to be trying to extricate Its young one,
but it could not succeed i» doing so, try
as it would. The prisoner had flown in
to the building, which was empty, and
managed to get between the weather
boarding, near the top of the inside.
Falling a considerable distance, it lodg
ed in the narrow space, which did not
permit it to use its Wings in rising
again. Its plaints had reached the
mother, and she, not beingable to reach
it from the inside, had cut through
from the out. An admiring man thrust
his hand through the hole and brought
out the fluttering young thing, to the
great delight of the anxious mamma
bird.—Chicago Chronicle.
BREEDS SNAKES TO SELL.
Tho Peculiar Discovery Made* by an Eng-
Hihmtn Tn India.
The bounty given by the Indian gov
ernment for snakes* heads in order to
exterminate these reptiles has led to a
few of the dishonest natives breeding
them for a living.
An Englishman recently traveling
through central India made a peculiar
discovery.
In the heart of a dense jungle he
came across a rude hut, and close at
hand was a large pit covered with a
tight fitting wooden cover. He found
the occupants of the hut, two disreputa
ble looking natives, and asked them the
meaning of the peculiar pit.
They informed him that they were
breeders of snakes and put them In toe
pit, the bottom of which was covered
over with dried grass and leaves.
They kept the snakes there some six
months, feeding them on all kinds of
small animals and birds.
They then filled a large earthen pot
with poisonous herts, < lighted-dt, low
ered it into the pit and secured the
tight fitting wooden cover, and thus
smothered the reptiles.
The cover was allowed to remain on
for a few days. It was then removed and
the snakes were taken ont by means of a
long pole with a spike at the end of it
Their heads were then cut off, and
one of the rogues set out for the nearest
government agenoy to obtain the boun
ty, while the other one caught fresh
snakes for the pit.
The snakes very often devoured one
another, but the mothers generally man
aged to bring up their young, though it
was a marvel they bred at all in such
a place, it. being, one would think, con
trary to'their nature.—London Corre
spondence.
The Shah’s Turkish Embotaadcr.
• His excellency Mirza Mahmoud Khan,
the shah’s embassador at Constantino
ple, holds his distinguished office upon
conditions which are quite without prec
edent in the diplomatic world. The
Lord of the Lion and the Sun does not
devote a penny of his revenue to main
taining a representative at Stamboul.
He has in that city about 16,000 sub
jects, and these are duly taxed for the
purpose. Mina Mahmoud has no reason
to complain of the arrangement, for by
the help of half a dozen ablebodied col
lectors he secures an income of about
£30,000. True, he is compelled to hand
over £4,000 yearly to his colleague at
Vienna, but the balance enables him to
live very comfortably. The contribu
tors, however, insist upon his.spending
a certain amount on hospitality, and
whenever be gives a dinner party to the
corps diplomatique a committee of tax
payers is posted in an anteroom, whence
they can satisfy themselves that their
embassador does the thing in propel
style and keeps up the dignity of the
nation.—London Chronicle.
A Division rt .Boorention.
Mrs. Chugwater—Josiah, it seems to
me you are very stingy In taking that
new novel yourself before anybody else
in the family has had a chance even to
look at it.
Mr. Chug waters What are you kick
ing about? There’s the second volume.
Can’t ypu read that while I’m going
through the first?—Chicago Tribune.
Distinctions,
It is not pretty to say of a woman
that she talks too much, but she looks
complimented when you tell her that
she is a fine conversationalist—Somer
ville (Mass.) Journal.
There are parts of the Ganges valley
in India where the population averager
1,200 to the square mile.
Since 1870 Victoria, Australia, has
voted mere than (500,000 for the de
struction of rabbits.
INTELLECTUAL ANTS.
THEY ARE SAID TO’BB THE MOST IN
-lEU.IGENT OF INSECTS.
They Have Political and Social Organlxa
tiooa That May Ba Ukuaed to Thoee ot
Maa-Some Work, Whßa Other* Do No
Tabor, bat Live Samptaoasly.
“Go to the ant, thou sluggard; con
sider her ways and be wise,’* said Bolo
nwttrover 8,000 years ago, and the re
searches of modern naturalists have
only confirmed the excellence of the
wise man’s advice in holding up the ant
as an example for mao, for among in
vertebrate animals tho ant holds the
same position that man does among the
vertebrate. The ant is the most intel
lectual of all inserts.
•, Ants are truly wonderful Insects.
They build bouses, train soldiers, en
slave ante and other insects inferior to
themselves; they are capable agricul
turists, for they keep a species of milk
kine, clear the ground, sow grain, reap
and gather into barns. They are social
insects, and in many respects are exam
ple* In miniature of man. They have
their monarchs, pride themselves on
their aristocracy, and also indulge to
excess in intoxicating liquor*
Ants are divided into three classes
males, females (or queens) and neuters
(workers). The two former are winged,
and their sole duty in life is to multiply
their species. Immediately after pairing
the male anta die, and the queens, re
nouncing the pomps and vanities of this
world, henceforward devote themselves
to the duties of maternity. To the lot
of the neuters falls all the work. Some
of them are told off to wait on the
queens, whom they feed and care for’
with the greatest attention. Each batch
of eggs, as soon as they are laid, are
carried away and deposited in the hatch
ing chambers open to the rays of the
sun. The workers nurse the ant babies
when they appear, putting them in the
warm upper galleries by day and re
moving them at night into the snuggest
lower chambers.
After several months’ careful nursing
and feeding, the larva passes into the
pupa stage, and spins itself into a co
coon, from which it emerges a full
grown ant. It is these cocoons that are
sold as “ants’ eggs;’’ the real eggs are
so minute that even the ants themselves
could not pick them up in their mandi
bles were not several fastened together
by a natural gum. Queen ants, accord
ing to Sir John Lubbock, live as long as
ten years, while Dr. Dallinger states
that worker ants live from four to six
years. The queen ants are treated with
the utmost reverence, and while the
corpse of a worker ant is usually imme
diately disposed of the body of a queen
is often preserved as long as 18 months
after its death.
The ant has three simple and two
compound eyes, the latter consisting of
from 250 to 1,300 lenses each. In pass
ing, it may be mentioned that the ordi
nary house fly has 4,000 lenses, the gad
fly 11,000 and the dragon fly 20,000
lenses to each eye. Physically, as well
as intellectually, ants are the giants of
the insect world; they can easily carry
even ten times their own weight
The ant houses are most marvelous
examples of construction. Part of the
neat is above the ground and part below
it These houses are often 40 stories in
height and are built of stones, leaves,
sticks and earth. The subterranean part
is honeycombed into passages and cells
and all the tunnels and galleries run
into one common center—the public
ball of the ant colony. The government
is a republic, and various colonies have
been known to mass together for the
purpose of defense. A Swiss scientist
has discovered a regular empire of ants,
covering an area of 200 square yards,
and containing 200 colonies or republics
with a population of 40,000,000 ante.
There are many species of ants which
are incapable of managing their own
nests or of rearing their young, and
these in consequence impress into their
service tho .workers of other species of
anta and leave all the rough work to
their captives. Periodically the master
ants set off on a slave hunting expedi
tion. They find outthe nest of a special
ant whose aid they need. They raid it
and, overcoming its defenders, enter and
bear off triumphantly the pup®. These
are carried to the masters’ nest, where
they are speedily hatched, and knowing
no other home and forced by instinct
to work they toil industriously for their
masters. So lazy and dependent upon
their willing slaves do the master ants
become that at length they* are unable
to feed themselves. Food has been
placed before these lords of the ant cre
ation, and they would not even take the
trouble to eat. Then some slave ante
were introduced. They tidied up the
place and fed their masters.
The ants have some method of know
ing members of their own tribe. If an
aht is put into a strange colony, it is in
stantly killed as an intruder, while if
one is taken from its home and restored
to it after a long lapse of time It is im
mediately welcomed and recognized.
Sir John Lubbock took 12 ants, 6 from
each of two different colonies, and made
them drunk. Then they were all put
book into one of the colonies. The ants
inspected them, carried away their com
panions and took care of them until
they recovered, while the foreigners
were dropped into the water. A large
dead fly was put on the table, and one
ant immediately went over and pulled
at it, but found himself unable to
move it. He then went away, and
speedily returned with three compan
ions, and by their united efforts the fly
was curled away.
It has long been known that some
species of anta are in the habit of acting
in exactly the same manner as man in
keeping insect cows far the sake of the
• milk they supply. The ordinary green
fly, or aphis, is to the ant what the
cowls to man. This green fly is capable
i of exuding from two nipplelike projec
tions a sort of liquid gum, of which
anta are extremely fond.
What is
f fa i
Wff mm f f B fmm ■
Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription far
and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups and Castor Oil.
It is Pleasant. .Its guarantee is thirty years* nse by
Millions of Mothers. Castorin destroys Worms and d
allays Feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour
Curd, cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. C:istorla relieves
Teething troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency.
Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach '
and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. CaMoria
is the Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Friend.
s
Castoria. A Castoria.
"Cmlotl* is ZU excellent medicine for “Castoria is so well adapted In cHMrea
children. Mothers have repeatedly told me that I recommend it as superior to say < te
rt its good effect upon their children.” scrlption know! to me." ’■ 5
Dr. G. C. Oaoooo, Ixrwell, Mass. • 11. A. Ancnza. M.D, Brooklyn. N. V.
“ The use rt Castoria is so universal and its “For several yiars I have recommended «
merits so well known that it seems a work Castoria, and shall always continue to dp 1
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the so as it has invaricbly produced beue&nsl "fa
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria results." '
within easy reach." Edwin F. Faamtn, M. D., New York Chy.
Caxixm Martyn, D.D., New York City. —r—
» “We have three children and they‘Cry for ,
" I prescribe Castoria every day for children Pitcher's Castoria.’ When we give one a done.
Who are suffering from constipation, with the others cry for one too. I shall always
better effect than I receive from any other take pleasure in recommending this best
combination rt drugs." child's medicine”
Dr. L. O. Morgan, Sonth Ambcy, N.J. ' Rev. W. A. Coora, Newport. Ky.
x Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
SHOES, - SHOES I
IN MENS SHOES WE HAVE THE LATfcBT STYLEB-COIN TOW,
GENUINE RUSSIA LEATHER CALF TANS, CHOCOLATES AND GREEN
AT (3 TO (3.50 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 BLACK! SANDALS AND OXFORDS IN
CHILDREN AND MISSES SIZES, AND CHILDREN AND MISSES TAN LACK
SHOES AND BLACK.
WE HAVE IN A LINE OF
SAMPLE STRAW HATS.
—GET YOUB —
JOB PRINTING
DONE JLT
The Morning Call Office,
We have Juzt supplied our Job Office with s complete liae of StihoßsrV
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way w
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS
STATEMENTS, IRCULARB,
ENVELOPES, NOTES,
MORTGAGES, PROGRAMS
JARDB, POSTERS?
DODGERS, Etal, ETb
We tr*ry tae 'xwt iue of FNVEI/VES vw jftrxd : this trada.
An attractive. POSTER of aay size can be issued on short notice.
X
Our prices for work of all kinds will compare fitvorably with thorn obtataad NB
any office In the state. When you want job printing oQany [descriptton five
call Satisfaction guaranteed.
*
——
ALL WORK DONE
■ - . -I
With Neatness and Dispatch.
j\* / ' J?