Newspaper Page Text
An Ordinance.
* ■
An ordinance to prevent the spreading
of diseases through the keeping and ex
posing for sale oi second hand and cast off
clothing, to provide for the disinfection of
such clothing by the Board ot Health of
the City of Griffin, to prescribe fees for
the disinfection and the proper registry
Mavnr
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, firm or corporation to keep
ana 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
certiiwlßbf Said Board ot Health giving
the number and character of the gannents
disinfected by them has been filed in the
office of the Clerk and Treasurer of the
City of Griffin; provided pothing herein
contained shall be construed as depriving
individual citizens ot the right to sell or
otherwise dispose of their own or their
family wearing apparel, unless the same
is known to have been subject to conta
geoufi diseases, in which event this ordi
nance shall apply.
Sec. 2nd. Be it further ordained by the
authority aforesaid, That for eaehgarment
disinfected by the Board of Health of
Griffin, there shall be paid in advance to
said board the actual cost of disinfecting
the said garments^and tor the issuing of
the certificate required by this ordinance
the sum oi 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. Beit 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 morethtn one hundred
dollars, or sixty days In the chain gang,
cither or both, in the discretion of the
Judge of the Criminal Court, f>r 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.
Bec. 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with are hereby repealed.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.:
Bee. Ist. That it shall be unlawftil for
any person to damage, injure, abuse or
temper 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 his 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, or 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.
See. 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.wnd 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.
Bee. 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 ofthe 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 ofthe City of Griffin for
a term net exceeding sixty daysj 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 authbrity
and power ot 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 peryear:
1. Dwellings:
One f inch opening for subscribers'—
use only I 9.00
Each additional spigot, sprinkler,
bowl, closet or bath 3.00
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 SI.OO per year
rental of same, paid-in advance. A mini
mum of SI.OO per month 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 as follows:
7,000 to • 25,000 gals, month.. 15c 1,000
MA9fr< J 50,000 “ “ 14c “
50,000 “ 100,000 “ “ 19c “
100,000 “ 500,000 " “ 10c “
800,000 * 1,000,000 “ “ 9c “
The minimum rate shall be SI.OO per
month, whether that amount of water has
been used or not.
4. Notice to cut off water must be given
to the Superintendent of the Water De
partment, otherwise water will be charged
for full time.
5. Water wiH 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 ofthe 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
of the piping must be done by a plumber
. at the consumers’expense.
....
JACK AND HIS GROG.
SAILORS' DEVICES FOR SMUGGLING
LIQUOR ABOARD SMW».
Ingenious Schemes That Are Invented On
ly to Be Squelched What It Means
When Jackie Combs His Mustache With
a Marline Spike.
“Them is perhaps less drunkenness
among the enlisted men of the United
States navy than among the men for
ward cf any of the world’s big sea fit
outs, ” said a naval officer of experience
to the writer. “Drunkenness passed
with the old navy. In the days of- the
old Tuscarora or the Tennessee, as the
sailors put it, it was a common enough
thing to see about three-quarters of a
ship’s company returning from shore
liberty in such a state that they had to
be hoisted oyer the side x in bosun’s
chairs to save the trouble ot carrying
them up the gangway. But that sort of
thing is no longer endured. Men who
go ashore after having remained aboard
ship for a considerable period are ex
pected by the officer of the deck to re
turn just a trifle exhilarated, but they
never return quite incapable. •
“Men who exhibit thealightest indi
cations of being addicted to drink are
turned down flatly by the examining
surgeons when they present themselves
for enlistment nowadays. The surgeons
tell me that they can tell from a man’s
eyes whether he has ever suffered severe
ly from excessive drinking,, no matter
how long the man may have abstained
from drink before seeking enlistment.
“If men addicted to drink do happen
to get by the examining surgeon and re
veal their weakness by going on tears
every time they go ashore, the navy
gets rid of them by simply ’beaching’
them—that is, by putting them on the
beach with their bags and hammocks
whereVer their ship may happen to be
in a homo port. A man cannot be
‘beached’ for any cause .in a foreign
country.
“There are, of course, any number of
men in the navy, and rattling fine sail
ormen, too, who have a natural predi
lection for drink, and these men the
officers keep an eye on for their own
good. Sailors are bound to try to smug
gle liquor aboard ship. If they drink
considerably on their shore liberties,
they know that when they return
aboard they are in for ‘ big heads’; when
they awaken in their hammocks the
□ext morning, and in trying to safely
bring a bit of liquor off to the ship they
have in mind the taking of ’a hair of
the dog’ to sort of ease them up when
they turn to at ‘all hands’ the next
nrnrning.
“Sometimes they get the liquor safe
ly aboard, but generally they do not.
Every enlisted man on a United States
man-of-war, except the chief master at
arms and the top sergeant of marines, is
searched at the gangway upon his re
turn from shore liberty by the gangway
corporal of the marine guard, under the
inspection of the officer es the deck, for
the purpose of ascertaining if he has
any liquor concealed about his clothes.
The men have picked up some ingenious
schemes for smuggling liquor in such a
way that the corporal of the guard is
fooled. For example, the men on the
China station buy long eelskins from
the coolies, fill the skins with about
a quart of liquor and wind them around
their necks beneath the collars of their
shirts.
“It took the officers on the China sta
tion a long while to get on to this
scheme. Then the men who felt that
they surely needed a drink the next
morning after returning from liberty
discovered the plan of filling a rubber
bag with liquor while ashore and of
stowing the bag next to their waist
bands. The liquor, smugglers, who ob
served that the searching corporal only
passed his hands up and down on the
outside of their clothes, then resorted
to the plan of tying bottles of liquor
with string on the inner side of their
legs, beneath their trousers, but any
searching corporal knows all about this'
one nowadays.
“The cox’un of the steam cutter, who
makes dozens of trips ashore a day
when the cutter is ‘running boat, ’ has .
to be careftflly watched, for he is liable
to be tampered with by the men who
want liquor pretty badly, and his op
portunities for getting liquor aboard
are many. Every once in awhile, upon
the cutter’s return to the ship, it is
searched by the officer at the deck, and
the latter often finds liquor neatly
stowed among the cutter coal, in the
cutter bilges or even in the boiler tanks.
When this happens, the cox’un of"the
cutter is in trouble. He gets a big rake
off from the men for his liquor smug
gling, which accounts for the chances
he will take.
“The ship’s painter has to be watched
too. He is a petty officer, and he has
charge of the ship’s alcohol, which is
chiefly used for the making of shellac
to paint the lowqr decks.
“Some of the sailors like a dose of
alcohol mixed with coffee for ‘toning*
and sobering up purposes, and as the
ship’s painter is occasionally corruptible
and carries the keys of the alcohol tanks
there is quite a little drinking of this
mixture on some of the ships where did
timers predominate. The old flat feet
have indeed been known to drink the
shellac after it has been prepared for
the sake of the alcohol in it, and there
is an expression in the navy among the
enlisted men, ‘lf you see a jackie comb
ing his mustache with a marline spike,
you know what he’s been at,’that is
very significant.
“But for all this, as I say, there is
an exceedingly small percentage of
drinking men in our navy in compari
son with similar figures for other big
navies. The occasional drinkers in our
service, when they return from the
beach a bit under the weather, are
merely put in the brig overnight and
permitted to go to work without pun
ishment the next morning. ”—Wash
ington Star.
A REPRESENTATIVE PIRATE.
„ ~ u —
It is said that Kidd showed no re
pentance when he wus tried, but insist
ed that he was the victim of malicious
persons who swore falsely against him,
and yet a more thoroughly dishonest
rascal never sailed under the black flag.
In the guise of an accredited officer of
the government be committed the crimes
he was sent out to suppress. He deceiv
ed his men. He robbed and misused his
fellow countrymen and his friends, and
he even descended to the meanness of
cheating and despoiling the natives of
the West India islands with whom he
traded. These people were in the habit
of Supplying pirates with food And other
necessaries, and they always found their
rough entirely honest and
willing to pay for what they received,
for as the pirates made a practice of
stopping at certain points tor supplies
they wished of course to be on good
terms with those who furnished them.
But’Kidd had no ideas of honor toward
people of high or low degree. He would
trade with the natives as if he intended
to treat them fairly and pay for all he
got, but when the time came for him to
depart and he was ready to weigh an
chor he would seize all the commodi
ties he could lay his hands on and
without paying a copper to the distress
ed and indignant Indians he would gay
ly sail away, his' black flag flaunting
derisively in the wind.
But although in reality Captain Kidd
was no hero, he has been known for a
century and more as the groat American
pirate, and his name has been repre
sentative of piracy ever since. Years
after ho had been hung, when people
heard that a vessel with a black flag—
or one which looked black in the dis
tance-flying from its rigging had been
seen, they forgot that the famous pirate
was dead and imagined that Captain
Kidd was visiting their part of the coast
in order that he might find a good place
to bury some treasure which itwas no
longer safe for him to carry about.—
Frank R. Stockton in Century.
RARE OLD DISHES.
Tried Graoahoppors and Scorpions Delica
cies of the Arabs Long Ago.
An erudite Egyptian writes in The
Revue des Revues of the diet of the an
cient Arabs. Dog meat, it appears, was
one of their favorite dishes, and young
dogs were as precious in old times among
the Arabs as spring chickens are among
the people of today. They were also
fond of cat meat. The “flesh of a black
cat had the virtues qf curing them of
the effects of a hoodoo and the evil eye.
Fried grasshoppers and scorpions also
formed a very choice dish. The natural
ist, Al-'Djahey, who lived in the tenth
century, speaks of his visit to the Ara
bian tribes of Bassorah and of his sur
prise on discovering that they did not
eat grasshoppers, “nevertheless,” says
he, “there is nothing more delicious.”
He also says that when he went to see
his friend, the poet Roohah, he found
him seated on the ground enjoying a re
past of roast rat. Afterward he had
fried lizards.
Notwithstanding the almost religious
worship which the Arabs profess for the
horse, they ate hdtseflesh, but only the
flesh of draft horses, never that of sad
dle horses. They ate all sorts of mol
lusk* and insects. The Arabs were also
very fond of black snakes, and they
hunted them at the time when the rep
tiles were about to change their skins,
the flesh in that season being extremely
tender.
Why He Finish.
Fred Buskirk was born at Ports
mouth, 0., and lived there until he was
a young man. Fred naturally thinks
Portsmouth is one of the nicest places
in the state of Ohio. Fred said: “Every
body evidently doesn't think as well of
Portsmouth as I da
"Not long ago I went over the Ches
apeake and Ohio road and when the
train reached South Portsmouth, which
is across the river from my native place,
quite a long stop was made. Most of the
male passengers got off the train and
walked up ands down the platform. It
was after dark, and the mstay lights of
Portsmouth were plainly visible, I stood
Jooking across the river at the city,
thinking what a fine place Portsmouth
was, when a fellow paseenger on the
train came alongside of toe -and add,
‘Con you tell me what place that is
across the rivferl' Os course I could tell
him, and I threw out my chest and with
considerable pride said': *That is Porte
mdhth, O. Have you ever been there?*
My fellow traveler In a very weary
voice, replied: ‘Yes, I have been there.
I spent about two weeks there one aft
ernoon. ’ I had intended telling that
man about what a charming place
Portsmouth is,*but after his rudeness I
concluded not to.’’—Cincinnati En
quirer.
DM**t WMt Mneh.
Here is an advertisement from an old
copy of an English provincial journal:
“Wanted, for a sober family, a man
of light weight, who fears the Lord and
can drive a pair of horses. He must oc
casionally wait at table, joip the house
hold prayer, look after the horses and
read a Chapter of the Bible. He must,
God willing, arise at 7 o’clock in the
morning and obey his master and mis
tress in all lawful commands; if he can
dress hair, ring psalms and play at
cribbage, the more agreeable. Wagea
15 guineas a year. **
Hospital rw Trow.
There- is a hospital for tree* on the
banks of the Seine in Paris. Trees
which grow sick along the boulevards
are taken hero to recover.
The ur-heey, or Chinese violin, in
shape resembles an ordinary hammer
with its handle. It has two strings and
is played with a bow.
His honor the magistrate is about the
only hptior to be found among thieves.
—Chicago News
THE KING SNAKE.
DOES HARM TO NO ONE, BUT KILLS
POISON REPTILES.
:
Battlers and Copperhead* Ave the Prey
Lorca to TackU-He Kate a Moose
or a Toad After Zach Mattle to Prepare
•- *•”
The distant murmur of the waterfall,
Abe bum of Aha bees among the flowers,
wade feel lazy, and, laying aside
my fishing rod, I stretched myself cm
the soft spring grass under a weeping
Willow anil watched the blue, cloud
•pecked sky. I had almost fallen psleep
when I was aroused by a voice inquir
ing, “Ketched enny fish, mister?”
Looking up, I saw a typical moun
taineer and assured him I had not.
“I say, mister, this here is a power
ful bad kentry fur snakes. One bit Jim
Sloan’s bay mare last night, an week
afore last another bit Sally Milligan.
Some on ’em air powerful pizen, spe
cially the rattlers an coppers, an that
'minds me, es 1 wus yerself, I’d move
a little further from that ’ere copper.
He ain’t jactly petty to look at, an es
Jtewnz torile 'im with yer boot he
mom git vicious. ”
Long before that speech had ended 1
had turned a someMult backward, which
caused the mountaineer a great deal of
genuine pleasure to behold. I was about
to exterminate the big, sluggish reptile
With a stick that I had seized when my
companiop asked me to wait a few mo
ments, as a king might come along.
Not, exactly understanding whether
he Cipected a person of that name and
failing to see what that event had to do
with my laudable desire to smash the
big, ugly thing that had presumed to
take my leg for a pillow, I asked him
for an explanation.
“Air it possible yer town folks dunno
what a king air? Why, a king air the ,
boss snake uv the woods. He don’t do
no harm to nothin, 'ceptin snakes, an
he don't pester them as hain’t pizeu.
But he do love a copper an a rattler,
which is the wurst snakes uv these dig
gin’s, an he’s death on 'em.
"T’other day I wuz gwine long a old
road, an all uv a sudden I heerd a singin
as though a camp meetin had just tuck
in. I knowed it wuz a rattler, an lookin
round I saw him on a knoll, an a pow
erful big tm he wuz. He wuz quilled up
like a corkscrew, an his rattles wuz
a-makin the air jingle. But at first I
couldn’t 'soever the cause, an I knowed
a rattler never got ready fur business
fur nothin. Presently I seed the grass
a-swayin an a-bendin, an then the rat
tler, he gets nervius an skeered, an un
quillin hisself he made a break to run.
"But it wuz too late, fur on came the
king like a hurricane, an'puttin hisself
just ahead the fattier showed him his
jig wuz up. Seeiu he couldn’t*’scape,
the rattler quilled ag’in an showed
fight. The king, he commenced to run
ronnd his inimy in a wide circle, the
rattier watchin, Hckin out his tongue
an makin his rattle sing like a banjer.
Closer an closer the king drawed his
circle as he dashed round until he
wuzn’t more’n three feet from the ini
my.
"Then the rattler, thinkin he saw
the last show to save his bacon, made a
powerful spiteful lunge at the king,
an thar is whar .he slipped up, fur the
king he dodged, an quicker’n gunpow
der wuz on to the rattler. Thar wuzn’t
nothin but a ball uv snakes in sight fur
a few minutes as they fought an tus
sled: over the grass, but arter a little I
could see the red an black king
wound jround the big rattler just like
a grapevine on a tree.
"Then I seed the king hold ’im by
the back uv the neck, an I could hear
him crushin the rattler as he tightened
on him. It wuz all over in half an hour,
an the king, unwindin hisself from his
victim, got behind an waited fur ten
minutes. Then be crept up an put his
nose on the rattler’/ to see It he wuz
breathin. Ye see, other makes know
the king an sometimes possum on him
by pretendin to be dead.
j. "But the rattler wuzshore ’nuff gone,
an when the king wuz satisfied uv this
he crawled in a old stump hole an
presently came out with a mouse’s tail
stickin ont his mouf. But he soon
swallowed the mouse, an, wipin his nose
on the grass, went off sarchin for more
trouble. A king aßen eats a I rat ora
toad after a fight to make him strong
fur the next un.
“An now, mister, I could tell ye a
powerful lot more’n that, fur I knows
makes, I do, but I’ll help ye kill the
copper, which mout not meet a king
until he bites some un es we didn’t, an
then I must hurry on -after my oxen,
what I wuz huntin when I seed that
varmint a-try in to go to sleep with
yerself. ’’—Philadelphia Times.
Rejected BLeMins*.
A Lewiston man recently found a dog
on his doorstep. He drove her away again
and again, but she would continually re
tain. Last Thursday he found her in his
shed with seven pups lying contentedly
on a rug. He was minded to drown them
all, but did not, and Saturday a stranger
came Who knew dogs and gave him $lO
apieee for three of them. Sunday a man
from Auburn who had heard of them
came over and bought one for $lO. Mon
day he sold thereat tar $8 apiece. “If I
see any more dogs on my steps, I shall
find out what breed they are before I drive
’em off," he said.-—Kennebec
Wonsan’s Sweet Way.
“The woman next door,” said the fat
man, "owing to some sort of missed con
neotion* had t* fall to and do the wash
Ing herself last’ what do you
suppose my wife dldf”
"Went over and wore herself out help
ing hert” asked the lean man.
"Not she. She sent out a hurry call to
a bunch of her cronies, and- they had a
perfectly lovely game of lawn tennis while
that poor unfortunate In the next yard
was hanging out clothes.”—lndianapolis
journal
Rlfht of Neatrala
Spain's report of "one mule killed at
Matansas” has excited the hilarity of
European newspapers. They all agree in
their respective languages that It was a
grave violation on tbe part of the United
States at the rights at neutrals.
_ , • / ' 7 •
''‘"-v Sg
Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for I.rihnto
4 and Children.- It contains neither Opium, Morjrlrlncn.r
other Narcotic substance. It Is a luir;nlc.u
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrup 1 ami Castor OIL
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years’ n>.- b.
Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms ami
allays Feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Soar
Curd, cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria rcltovt s
Teething troubles, cures Constipation and Fiatuh-iwy.
Castoria assimilates the Food, regulates the sionuu h
and Bowels, giving healthy and natural steep. Castoria
is the Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Friend.
Cagtoria. I Castoria.
“CMtorta i* an excellent medicine for “Cnxtorln i» *o well aiUptol toe:::’. ->
children. Mothetl have repeatedly told n>e that I reCommend it a* suprricr i i
of its good effect upon their children.'' scrfpUoii known to vie.”
Dr. G. C. Osgood, Lowell, Maas 11. A. AxcitKH. M. D., F.r*ok'n, ' . - ?
. . • ■
“ The use of Castoria is so universal and itR •‘For several yearn I have recon nrx
merita no W»ll known that U seems a work Castoria, and aha'l ojy.-.v» ■
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the »o as it has inyariabir’produced
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria results.” s ? ■
within easy reach.” Edwiw r t raaosr.. M. D.. Kev/ York City.
Carlos Martyn, D.D., New York City.
■ “We hare three children and they 1 Cry for
“ I prescribe Castoria everyday for children Pitchers GMtoriA.' Whoiweftive one a
who are suflhring from constipation, with , the others cry for one too, 1 shall always
better effect than I receive from any other ' take pleasure in this best
combination of drugs.” ! child's medicine.” -y-
Dr. L. O. Morgan, South Amboy, N. Ji j kcx. W. A. Coor&R. Kcwport, Ky.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
ths aswravn weawv, „ wuaasv araesv. new vom cm. ‘
■' 11 ~T—. Trr
SHOES, - SHOES I
„ .... „ „„ ™ «...
GENUINE RUSSIA LEATHER CALF TANS, CHOCOLATES AND GREEN
AT |2 TO $3.50 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 BLACKI SANDALS AND OXFORDS IN
CHILDREN AND MISSES SIZES, AND CHILDREN AND TAN LACE
SHOES AND BLACK.
i • *
■umMwmmww aagßaam ■■■■■■ HHwmm ■■■■■■■■
ZEP- ZEZCOE&IsnZ.
w
WE HAVE IN A LINE OF
SAMPLE STRAW HATS.
1 '• 11 '■ ■ i --i. | . | !Jßg. | Jß!a«A..'iae i ui | ai|i.tUb‘
GET YOUR —
JOB PRINTING
DONE XT
The Morning Call Office.
■
‘We have Juat supplied our Job Office with a complete Hue of Stattoneiv
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way oi
LETTER HEADS, ’ BILL HEADS
STATEMENTS, IRCULARB,
ENVELOPES, - NOTES,
MORTGAGES, PROGRAMS
JARDB, POSTERS
' DODGERS, «Y<X ( ETU
We c*try tor xwt ine of FNVEI/>FEB vm : this trade.
An allracdvt POSTER of any size can be issued on short notice.
Ou prices for work of all kinds will compare fovorably with thodb obtained rag
any office in the state. When you want job printing ofjany [description jive
call Satisfaction guaranteeu.
■ /
ALL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.