Newspaper Page Text
An ordinance to prevent the spreading
o f disease* through the keeping and ex
posing for sale of second hand and cast off
clothing, to provide for the disinfection of
such clothing by the Board of Health of
the City of Griffin, to prescribe fees, for
the disrniection and the proper registry
hereof, and for other purposes.
Sec. Ist. Be it ordained by the Mayor
and Council of the City of Griffin, that
from and after the passage of this ordi
nance, it shall be unlawful for any person
or persons, flrm or corporation to keep
and expose for sale any second hand or
cast off clothing within the corporate lim
its of the City of Griffin, unless the said
clothing has been disinfected by the Board
of Health of the City of Griffin, and the
certificate of said Board of Health giving
the number and character of the garments
disinfected by them has been filed in the
office of the Clerk and Treasurer of the
City of Griffin; provided nothing herein
contained shall be construed as depriving
individual citizens of the right to sell or
otherwiie dispose of their own er their
family wearing apparel, unless the same
is known to have been subject to conta
geous diseases, in which event this ordi
nance shall apply.
Sec. 2nd. Be it further ordained by the
authority aforesaid, That for each garment
disinfected by the Board of Health of
Griffin, there shall be paid in advance to
said board the actual cost <;f disinfecting
the said garments, and for the issuing of
the certificate required by this ordinance
the sum of twenty-five cents, and to the
* Clerk and Treasurer of the City of Griffin
for the registry of said certificate the sum
of fifty cents.
Sec. 3rd. Be it further ordained by' the
authority aforesaid, That every person or
persons, firm or. corporation convicted of
a violation of this ordinance, shall be fined
and sentenced not more than one hundred
dollars, or sixty days in the chain gang,
either or both, in the discretion of the
Judge of the Criminal Court, for each of
fense. It shall be the duty of the police
force to see that this ordinance is strictly
enforced and report all violations the
Board of Health.
Sec. 4th. Be it further ordained by the
authority aforesaid, That all ordinances
and parts of ordinances in conflict here
with are hereby repealed.
An Ordinance.
Be it ordained by the Mayor and Coun
cil of the City of Griffin that from and
after the passage of this Ordinance:
Sec. Ist. That it shall be unlawful for
any person to damage, injure, abuse or
tamper with any water meter, spigot, fire
plug, curb box, or any other fixture or
machinery belonging to the Water Depart
ment of the City of Griffin ; provided that
a licensed plumber may use curb service
box to test bls work, but shall leave ser
vice cock as he found it under penalty of
the above section.
Sec. 2nd. It shall be unlawful for any
consumer to permit any person, not em
ployed by them, ok not a member of their
family, to use water from their fixtures.
• Sec. 3rd. It shall be unlawful for any
person to use water from any spigot or
spigots other than those paid for by him.
Sec. 4th. It shall be unlawful for any
person to couple pipes to spigots .unless
paid for as an extra outlet.
Sec. sth. It shall be unlawful for any
person to turn on water to premises or add
any spigot or fixture without first obtain
ing a permit from the Water Department.
Sec. 6th. It shall be unlawful for any
person to allow their spigots, hose or
sprinkler to run between the hours of 9:00
o’clock p. m. and 6:00 o’clock a. m., for
any purpose whatever, unless there is a
meter on the service. Spigots and pipes
must be boxed or wrapped to prevent
freezing; they will not be allowed to run
for that purpose.
Sec. 7th. The employes of the Water
Department shall have access to the
premises of any subscriber for the purpose
of reading meters, examining pipes, fix
tures, etc., and it shall be unlawful for any
person to interfere, or prevent their doing
so.
Sec. Bth. Any person violating any of
the provisions of the above ordinance shall
be arrested and carried before the Criminal
Court of Griffin and upon conviction shall
be punished by a fine not exceeding - one
hundred dollars, or sentenced to work on
the public works of the City of Griffin for
a term not exceeding sixty days, or be im
prisoned in the city prison for a term not
exceeding sixty days, either or all, in the
discretion of the court.
Sec. 9th. The employees of the Water
- Department shall have the same authority
and power oi regular policemen of the
City of Griffin, for the purpose of enforc
ing the above ordinance.
Sec. 10th. All ordinances and parts of
ordinances in conflict of the above are
hereby repealed.
An Ordinance.
Be it ordained by the Mayor and Coun
cil of the City, of Griffin, That from and
after the passage ot this ordinance, the fol
lowing rates will be charged for the use of
water per year:
1. Dwellings:
One i-inch opening for subscribers'
use only| 9.00
Each additional spigot, sprinkler,
bowl, closet or bath 8.00
Livery stables, bars, soda founts and
photograph galleries 24.00
Each additional opening 6 00
2. Meters will be furnished at the city’s
expense, at the rate of |I.OO per year
rental of same, paid in advance. A mini
mum of |I.OO per will be charged
for water while the meter is on the service.
The reading of the meters will be held
proof of use of water, but should meter
fail to register, the bill will be averaged
. from twelve preceding months.
3. Meter rates will be re follows:
7,000 to 25,000 gals, month. .15c 1,000
25,000 “ 50,000 “ “ 14c “
50,000 “ 100,000 “ “ 12c “
100,000 “ 500,000 « “ 10c “
500,000 “ 1,000,000 “ “ 9c “
The minimum rate shall be $ 1.00 per
month, whether that amount of water has
been used or ndt.
4. Notice to cut off water must be given
to the Superintendent of the Water De-
, partment, otherwise water will be charged
fe for full time.
5. Water will not be turned on to any
premises unless provided with an approved
stop and waste cock properly located in
an accessible position.
6. The Water Department shall have
the right to shut off water for necessary
repairs and work upon the system, and
they are not liable for any damages or re
bate by reason of the same.
7. Upon application to the Water De
partment, the city will tap mains and lay
Pipes to the sidewalk for $2 50; the rest
°f the piping must be done by a plumber
at the consumers’ expense.
-
BUYING A BURNING VESSEL.
u uuuwas as** upctuiaiiuu OI M *OOr
Yoang Collage Stad.nt,
There is • certain minister in a New
England town who, his friends are accus
tomed to declare, half jokingly, half seri
ously, has undoubtedly missed his voca
tion. They base this opinion not upon any
lack ot the clergyman's ability in bis pro
fession, but upon unmistakable oommer
clal qualifications of his which would have
made him an unusually enterprising man
of business. Their favorite illustration in
support of the idea is the story of a daring
speculation which tho minister conducted
successfully in his college days.
In common with a largo number of oth
er students in the small seacoast town
where the institution was situated, young
B was desperately poor. The facilities
there were not particularly good for en
abling a man to work his way through
his college course, and ho had tried in vain
to find anything at which he could earn
enough to pay his expenses. At the time
when the following incident occurred he
had just |4O left of the sum with which
he had begun the year. He owed most of
this and could see no prospect of obtain
ing any more. He had lain awake for
somb tune one night wondering if, after
all, he would be forced to leave college for
a year or two, and it seemed to him that
he had scarcely dropped asleep when he
was aroused by a confused noise outside
and by a brilliant glare illuminating the
sky. Going to the window and looking
off toward the sea, he was startled to dis
tinguish the outlines ot a burning vessel,
which was slowly making her way toward
the shore. Dressing hastily, he rushed out
and soon reached the wharf, which was
already thronged with the townspeople
and students. The flames on the vessel,
which was a small steam propeller, were
making only moderate headway, arid it
was evident that she would get ashore be
fore the lives of her crew were threatened.
This was in fact accomplished, but by the
time the last man had been brought safely
to land the fire was raging furiously, and
the’ little steamer seemed doomed. Her
captain, who proved to be also her owner,
stood gazing at his property ruefully for
a moment, then turned his back upon.lt
and started to walk away. Young B——
stopped him, struck by a sudden idea.
“Aren’t you going to try to save any
thing from your vessel F” he asked.
“No,” replied the disgusted captain,
with a shrug of his shoulders. “I’m
tKrjugh with her—for the present, any
way. If there’s anything left tomorrow
morning, I may try to get it, but I guess
there won’t be. I’m going to look for a
lodging now. Goodnight.”
“Will you sell me that boat just as she
lies, for |4of” eagerly inquired B ,
naming the'entire sum in bls'possession.
The captain stared at him In astonish
ment. “Yes, I’m hanged if I won’t,” he
replied, with a grim loolj of amusement.
“I’m sick of the whole business.”
B lost no time in making his ar-
rangement*. Galling a classmate who was
on the wharf, he whispered seme direc
tions in bis car. Then, turning to the
captain, be said:
“If you will go with thia young man,
he will give you.the |4O at onoe. I can’t
spare the time, because I’ve got to get
right to work en the vessel. ”
This was Ro sooner said than done.
With a few students and some of the men
from the town, whom he promised to re
pay liberally as soon aa he had disposed
of his new property, the young speculator
went to work vigorously upon the burning
steamer. Their efforts toward putting the
fire out were even more successful than
they could have hoped for, and when morn
ing dawned it was evident that a consid
erable amount of valuable property, in
cluding the machinery, had been saved.
To cut the story short, B sold the hull
and wreckage for 1500, only a very small
percentage of which had to be paid to the
men who had assisted him. In speaking
of the incident since he has often said that
it gave him a keener pleasure than he re
members feeling after any other achieve
ment of his career.—New York Tribune.
Preparing Searchlights.
The importance of the mirror in search
lights is shown by the fact that there is
not at the present time a sufficient num
ber of t hese articles to supply the demand
of the U nited States. These mirrors must
be made with the utmost nicety, and the
work Is such that it is not easy to hurry
it. It requires at least a week with pres
ent facilities to complete a mirror in the
best style ot the art. The glass, which
must be of extreme fineness and purity, is
molded into the proper form. It is in
reality a concave lens with a backing of
silver and protection of the finest hard
ened vulcanite.
The operations of grinding and polish
ing must be conducted on the most scien
tific principles to produce perfect results.
There is neither guesswork nor question
about it. The preparing of the aro lights
is relatively easy when onoe the mirror is
ready. The first searchlight mirrors were
made in 1881 in England. Franco and
Germany took up the business later, and
a majority of the best work is done in
these two countries. It is possible, how
ever, to turn out perfectly satisfactory ,
mirrors from our own shops. Our fortifi
cations are at present most .imperfectly
equipped, very few of them having any
facilities for producing searchlights. In
almost all of them a dynamo must be set
up. This, however, is not difficult, tho
business ha'ving been reduced to such a
fine art that within three or four months
every fortification in the country could be
furnished with these very necessary ad
juncts. —New York ledger.
Clock Face Without Figures.
When you look at your watch and it
reads 20 minutes to 19 o’clock, do you no
tice the hour marks VIII and XII, or do
you only glance at the position of the
ha»ds on the dial and instantly under
stan'd what time it is?
It all the arbitrary hour and minute
hands were wiped out, couldn’t you tell
what time it is by the town slock t
The olty of Detroit is deeply involved in
the settlement of these points. A huge
cloak has been put in the tower of the fine
new poetoifflee buildings Instead of the
customary numerals, a plain black* band
has been put' on the dial and gilded dots
mark the fleeting hours.
A local inventor and mathematician de
vised It. He claims, and he is supported
by Sir Edward Becket, the groat clock and
watch authority, that nobody but the very
ignorant’believes that the people "tell the
time” from the figures on the dial. •
If the clock proves satisfactory, proba
bly other federal buildings will be sim
ilarly equipped. Some of the Michiganders
are grumbling, but almost everybody ad
mits that he can tell when it’s dinner time
by looking up at the big clock, so long as
the hour and second hands work, no mat
ter whether there are any numerals on it
or not.—Detroit Letter.
AUSTRALIAN SHEEP YARDS.
Work That la Uke War aa General Bhe>
man Described Cao Latter.
The shearing season in tho wool coun
tries, says a writer in The Sketch, is tho
most Important and the busiest of *iy
which occur in sheep roaring. The swag
man has an opportunity which he does not
like and usually disregards, and the Eng
lish cadet has no reasonable exouse to re
main idle. The opening of the sheds is not
simultaneous, for, as the hot weather
comes down from the equator, those runs
away back—where it is too hot to curse
and one never sees the kangaroo—start
cutting out some weeks before sheep walks
in less temperature, but cooler regions.
Tho shearers and the musterers travel in
their own mobs and in many eases work
the same circuit. Shearing in Australia
is earlier than in New Zealand, so much
so that when the merry band has tallied
out the contracts with the “cornstalk,’’
“gum chewing’’ and “banana” squatters
of New South Wales, Victoria and Queens
land it ships to Maorlland and, plying the
blades on the sheep of the Three islands,
returns ia time for the eariy wool dips
among the God forgotten backs of Queens
land.
Prior to the shearing is the sheep mus
tering. For weeks the homestead has been
bathed in red clouds of sand, which rise
from the drafting yards as the sheep play
“silly devils” when they are worked. The
yarders with despair written on their faces
know that they are coming to the end of
their oaths and the dogs to the limits of
their endurance. Drafting on cool days is
possible and may be compassed with but
few detonations of a sulphurous character,
but on a scorcher, when meat can be cook
ed on the zinc roofs and blisters are raised
by the drinking water, yard werk of any
description fs—hell, to accept the meres*;
and inadequate Australasian colloquial
ism. The wool washing crew is another
band of exports who * ‘hump the billy’ ’ from
shed to shed. They scour the wood and
attend to drying and packing. a ,
In New Zealand fleeces are baled up
without washing, but the sands of Aus
tralia increase the weight so much that
the expenses would swamp the returns.
The bales will hold about 73 floeees,
though this is no hard and fast rule. An
approximate value is £lO, and the carriage
price is all contract. Tho groan of the
wheels, the cracking of the whips, the
creak of the load, denote that the clip is
almost gathered, and when the journey
begins the patient bullocks work with a
will till they drop on tho burning sand,
exhausted by the scanty food, the short
ness of water, the pitiless sun and the
strain of the weight. Tho journey is al
ways a far one on those back runs, but
where they ship by barges the monotony
contains a pleasant change. To load the
barge and slowly to float down the stream
is an idleness which all men appreciate.
To lie upon a bale and gaze upon the
snow topped mountain range, the winding
river, the forests on the slopes, the undu
lating paddocks melting into space, to
listen to the bleating es the sheep, the low
ing of the cattle, the neighing of the
horses, engenders a passion for the life,
which seems supreme. It is finer than the
life es cities. It lifts the idle dreamer to a
paradise of nature where, with gun and
rod, horse and dog, he can enjoy sport, in
dulge tastes and love animals.
Medical Heroism In Cuba.
There seems to be no doubt that in
many respects the Cabans have received
cruel, not to say barbarous, treatment at
the hands of their Spanish masters, but
happily this grave charge is nbt of uni
versal application. The medical officers of
the Spanish army, as befits men practic
ing ihe art of healing, have in many in
stances acted noble parts, and at least one
of their number has exhibited heroism of
the very highest order. In the course of a
sanguinary engagement with the insur
gents Dr. Duran proceeded to the front line,
with the intention of affording aid to the
Spanish soldiers, who were falling rapidly
under a hot fire, bat scarcely had ho reach
ed the scene of action when he was struck
by a Mauser bullet, which shattered his
knee joint.
In this piteous condition Dr. Duran
managed, with the help of his orderlies,
to bind up his own wound and then forth
with commenced a series of no fewer than
20 major operations on others, inclusive of
reduction of protruding intestines with
suture of abdominal opening, extraction
of bullets in various situations, adjust
ment of compound fracture of the leg, eta.
Many of Dr. Duran’s colleagues
killed in the course of this lamentable
campaign and others have died from dis
ease, while several more, having been un
fortunate enough to fall into the hands of
the Insurgents, who do not respect the
Geneva convention, have undergone the
most barbarous treatment. One of the
latter, a young and promising surgeon,
was taken prisoner and subsequently set
at liberty, but not until both his hands
had been severed at the wrists with a
hatchet.—Lancet.
The President Believes In Forgiveness.
In The Ladies’ Home Journal an illus
trated anecdotal biography of President
McKinley is published, and among the se
ries of characteristic anecdotes is one by a
personal friend which goes to prove tho
president’s Methodism and to attest his
quickness at repartee and his love of hu
mor. “President McKinley has always
shown the highest degree of generosity
toward his political opponents,” says tho
writer. “While governor of Ohio he was
about to appoint to an exalted and lucra
tive office a man who for many years had
been his ardent supporter, but who had
deserted him and gone over to the enemy
at a critical period. Later, when that crit
ical period had passed, the deserter slipped
back into his party and remained unno
ticed until he became a candidate for office.
Many es Governor McKinley’s loyal friends
earnestly protested against his appoint
ment. They argued that the man had
been a traitor when he was foost needed,
and that he was not entitled to considera
tion. The governor’s face lighted up with
a smile, and, taking his cigar from be
tween his lips, he remarked, ‘Gentlemen,
you seem to forget that I am a Methodist
and believe in the doetriae of falling from
grace.’ ’’
Beata the Taak Drama.
There is to be a balloon scene in a com
ing spectacle in a London playhouse. A
real balloon is poised* in midair. The ropes
are about to be released, when the villain
of the play, hotly pursued by the detect
ives, rushes breathless into the crowd.
Escape is barred in every direction but
one. Tho balloon is released and the fu
gitive sees his chance. He leaps into the
car, and up goes tho balloon amid tho tu
mult of the spectators. And by a wonder
ful mechanical contrivance tho balloon is
seen soaring higher and higher into tho
air, bearing the culprit from the clutches
of the law.
■
UNSTABLE QUICKSANDS..
•us PgirisagMa. ’
. Very llttlo b. known by tho general pub
lic about quicksand, and that little is
usually obtained from novels. Such in
formation is usually wrong, bring com
posed Os a pinch of truth and a handful of
fiction. The sensational novel goes even
so for as to give to quicksand ‘ same attri
butes that belong only to living creatures.
No ordinary observer could distinguish
quicksand from any other if It were dried,
and if he wished to restore Its fatal prop
erty artificially he would in all probability
foil. Suppose he fills a bucket with wa
ter. It does not in consequence become
mobile. If be drains the water off from
the bottom, the sand will bo found wedged
firmly in place, and if the water be meas
ured it will be found to equal 80 per cent
of the bulk of the sand, or about 80 per
cent of Its weight. From this we may in
for that a cubic foot of dry sand weighs
nearly 94 pounds.
This for sand Is n reiy light weight, for
tlifero are other qualities of sand which
weigh as mush as 171 pounds. Quicksand
when examined under a microscope will
be seen to have rounded corners like river
sand, as distinguished from angular or
“sharp” sand, which will pack more solid
ly than the other. It Is u quicksand that
is used in the hourglass and in the small
er egg boiler, partly been use of its fineness
and partly because it does not obscure the
inner surface of the glass by scratching.
The lightness of quicksand is tho quality
which will lead us most surely to the cause
of its reputation, and to illustrate this the
bucketful of sand must be loaded with
water from below and made to overflow
very slowly. Tho upward current will bo
found to loosen the sand and to raise the
surface very slightly, separating and lubri
cating the particles so that they are easily
displaced.
The bucket now contains quicksand,
and this sand from tho support it receives
from the water has its weight or support
ing power reduced. In the dry state it
weighed nearly 94 pounds, but if weighed
in tho water it is reduced to pounds,
and its mobility prevents any animal from
walking on it. Tho mixture of sand and
water weighs quite 112 pounds per cubic
foot, or nearly twice tho weight of a man,
but it is too thick to swim in, and the per
son engulfed would soon be too exhausted
to escape. He would probably die of suf
focation if not drowned by an advance
tide, for quicksands ore found mostly
within the influences of tides. He would
not be swallowed by the quicksand be
cause it is so much heavier than his body.
Quicksands require in all cases an up
ward current which Is not quick enough
to form what is called a spring or foun
tain. It may be formed in two ways In
tidal rivers and on the shores of tidal seas
tho rising tide may saturate a porous
stratum of ground below high water mark,
and when the tide falls the return current
Is established through tho same porous
(sandy) ground with sufficient velocity to
loosen the sand as above described. This
sand as soon as tho rising tidersverses the.
euirent qenyes to be The other
case is that when a slow current of fresh
water finds an exit through a surface of
sand above or below water. This is a per
manent quicksand. Any sand and almost
any material might have tho quality cd
quicksand imparted to it by means of a
suitable current.
Coal is separated from shale in an up
current of water so regulated that tho
coah is mado to float while tho shale falls
to tho bottom, and heavy iron tools have
been carried to the surface by the sudden
discharge of artesian wells. Quicksands
that are encountered during the sinking
of wells and foundations are all due to the
influx of water, when the work gets be
low “spring level,” or the level of water
in the* ground. The sand, being deprived
of the support of the excavated part, is
pushed from behind by the water current
flowing in from all sides.—lnvention.
Beggars’ Newspapers.
At the present day every trade must
have its paper, but it is not eyory trade
that has a daily paper devoted exclusively
to its interests. The beggars of Paris
can boast that they are thus favored. The
Parisian beggars, who, according to a
waiter in Household Words, number about
8,000, have two daily papers.
One of these is entitled Le Bon Guide.
It gives to its subscribers a complete list
of the baptisms, weddings and funerals to
take place on that day, so that they may
be well posted as to the best pfooes to pur
sue their codling. For begging letter writ
ers there is a list of the addresses, arrivals
qpd departures of persons of known chari
able disposition. The* paper is a mine of
information to its readers.
The Beggars' Journal is not so “high
class” a paper, but it is perhaps more in
teresting. It prides itself on the exclusive
ness of its information. It is unique in
form, being written and not printed on
the coarse browny white paper used by
grocers to wrap sugar in.
Its advertisement columns are suggest
ive: “Wanted, a blind man to play the
flute. Apply to the editor. ” “Wanted for
a fashionable watering place a one armed
man; good refdkenoea; security required.”
This paper contains, like the other, no
tices of bixths, deaths and marriages in
high circles. It does not boast of a very
large staff, for the editor, who is also sole
proprietor, writes out the single copy of
the paper and takes it round every morn
ing to each of his subscribers, who have
the privilege of looking over this unique
journal Mr a few minutes by paying the
munificent sum of 8 cents a month.
Different Views of a Haagman.
Thera is do lack of competitors for the
office of executioner when the operation
has to be performed in England, but in
Ireland there is a gxeat prejudice against
undertaking it and there have been diffi
culties sometimes in the colonies in find
ing an operator. Marwood used to say he
never experienced any unpopularity in
England and accounted for Calcraft being
sometimes badly received by saying that
“Mr. Calcraft never made himself agree
able.” Going to Wales on one occasion to
fulfill his office in the case of a foreigner
who had committed several brutal mur
ders, he found himself quite popular and
Was received at the station when about to
depart w'Hh a sort of ovation, to which br
responded affably, say life he hoped bo
might “before long have occasion to visit
them again.”
On the other band, on coming back
from Cork, where be had been to carry
out the duties of his profession because no
native could be found to do tho job, ho
bad rather a rough experience, for on
board the steamer he overboard a conver
sation between two Irishmen, one of whom
related that be heard the hangman was on
board, to which tho other replied that
could bo find him ho would throw him
overboard during tbe night. Marwood on
this thought it writ to retire to his bed in
a dark corner and did not make his ap
oearanee any more until tbe steamer was
well in the dock in England.—Chambers’
Journal.
xB-. ■. • ■
VYiiaL IS
■ ' J ;
1 HIM f a >
fiß
Castoria ta Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for bafonte
and Children. It contains neither Ophun, Morphine »;,«•
other Narcotic substance. It la a harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups and Castor Oil.
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years* use by
Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and
allays Feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Hour
Curd, cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colie. Castoria reUcvcs
Teething troubles, cures Constipation and Ftotukucy.
Castoria assimilates the Food, rceu lutes the Stomach
and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Costoria
is the Children's Panacea—the Mother's Friend.
Castoria. Castoria.
“Castoria ia an excellent medicine for “CaateriH i«ao well M-qred tocHliii
children. Mother* have repeatedly told me that I recommend it an »nperl.->r to ary < •
of its good eflVct upon their children." script ion known to me."
Dr. o. C. OCGOOD, Lowell, Maa*. H. A. AucxßF, M.D., brnokly:. I
——" , >■ «■. .W1.N...0
" The use of Castoria ia ao univeraaland its "For tevem! year* I have lecomr.r ’. '
merits so welltoiown that it seems a work Cnstorin, and shall a'k’.tys wsfinr.e I •
of supererogation to endorse it. Few arc the so as it has invariably
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria result*."
within easy reach.” Hdwix F. fuwc, M.D, KewVntkv*-;.
Cailos Mautyw, D.D., New York City.
j*** - —•“ We have three children rind liter ’ Cry fjr •
"I prescribe Castoria every day for children Pitchers Castoria.’ When wefciye one n dose
who are suffering- from constipation, with the other* cry for one too. I shall always ,
better effect than I receive from any other take pleasure in recomuieudiu,'; this Let
combination of drugs.’* child’* medicine."
Dr. L. O. Mono an, South Amboy, N. J. * Rev. W. A Coortea, Kcwi»art. Ky.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
ths sanTAua sensAnv, tt mussav arassv. aawv.s* stvv
■
- w -W ... >, .. .sgy
SHOES, - SHOES I
IN MENS SHOES WE HAVE THE LATEST STYLES-COIN TOES,
GENUINE RUSSIA LEATHER CALF TANS, CHOCOLATES AND GREEN
AT |2 TO |BAO PER PAIR.
IN LADIES OXFORDS WE HAVE COMPLETE LINE IN TAN, BLACK
AND CHOCOLATE, ALSO TAN AND BLACK SANDALS RANGING IN
PRSCB FROM 75c TO
ALSO TAN, CHOCOLATE AND BLACK! SANDALS AND OXFORDS IK
CHILDREN AND MISSES SIZES, AND CHILDREN AND MISSES TAN LACE
SHOES AND BLACK.
TXT’. X 3. XXOUXTE.
WE HAVE IN A LINE OF
SAMPLE STRAW HATS.
GET YOUH —
JOB PRINTING
DONE
The Morning Call Office.
We have just supplied our Job Office with a complete Hue of StaUonen
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way ot
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS •
STATEMENTS, IRCULARS,
’ * •
ENVELOPES, NOTES,
MORTGAGES, PROGRAMS
CARDS, POSTERS’
DODGERS. Eta, ETC
Wft~*y toe best iue nf ENVELOPES vw jfoW : this Irada.
Aa attraedve POSTER cf say size can be issued on short notice;
Our prices for work ot all kinds will compare favorably with there obtained fee
i ■
any office in the state. When you want job printing oi£auy jdt»crij Sion gm '
call Satisfaction guarantees.
J JLLV.JS!.1- 1 ...
ALL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.
*