Newspaper Page Text
An ordinance to prevent the spreading
of diseases through the keeptagandex
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
thereof, and for other purposes.
from and after the passage of this ordi
nance, it shall be unlawfal for any P®”O“
or persons, firm or corporation to Keep
ana expose for sale any t «oond hwd or
cast off clothing within the ““j
ila nf thp Citv of Griffin* unless the said
dotting h« been dlsinfectedby the Board
office of the ClWk and Treasurer of the
City oi Griffin: provided nothing herein
contained shall be construed as depriving
individual citizens oi 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
geous diseases, in which event this ordi
nance shall apply.
Sec. fold. Be it further ordained by the
That for each garment
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 sutpiot twenty-five cents, and to the
Clerk and Treasurer of the City of Griffin
for the registry of said certificate the sum
of fifty ><ieutß.
Sec. Bird. Be it further ordained by the
authority aforesaid, That every person or
pertonspfifm or corporation convicted of
a violation of this ordinance, shall be fined
And sentenced not more than one hundred
dollars, or tfxty days in the chain gang,
either or both, in the discretion of the
Judge oftte Criminal Court, for each of
fense. It shallbethe duty of the police
force to see that this ordinance is strictly
enforced jind report all violations the
Board of Health.
Sec. 4th. Be it further ordained by the
authorityaforea&id, That all ordinances
and payts of ordinances in conflict here
with are hereby repealed.
An Ordinance.
Be it ordained by the Mayor and Coun
cil of the City oi Griffith 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 bis work, but shall leave ser
vice cock as he found it under penalty of
the above section.
Sec. fold. It shall be unlawful for any
consumer to permit any person, not em
ployed by them, or not a member ot 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 pines
must be boxed or wrapped to prerent
freezing; they will hot 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
rereading 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 pnnished 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 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 x and
after the passage ot this ordinance, the fol
owing rates will be charged for the use of
water per year:
1. Dwellings:
One f-inch opening for subscribers'
use only .-... 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 |I.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.
8. Meter rates will be as follows:
7,000 to 25,000 gals, month.. 15c 1,000
25,000 “ 50,000 “ •* 14c * ’
50,000 “ 100,000 “ “ 12c “
< •* - vOC ’*
500,000 “ 1,000,000 “ 9c “
The minimum rate shall be SI.OO per
month, whether that amount ot water has
been used or not
A Notice to cut off water must be given
to the Superintendent of the Water-Pe
otherwise water will be charged
y ate r will not be turned on to any
P"™ B ’* ““lew provided with an approved
In™ o T, &Stecock P ro Perly located in
Position.
th ®-_/J® Department shall hare
the right to shut off water for necessary
they are not liable for any damages or re
bate by reason of the same.
7. Upon application to the Water De-
I •
□fsnAf*ATP PETL/S oraci f
faara Behind the Tl—.,
As is well known to all who have looked
into tho matter carefully—for instance,
such men as Lum bolt a, Starr and SovUte
-there are tn remote parts of Mexico to
day to be found portions of tribes of In
dians who are practical!y » much given
to Idolatry, superstition and witchcraft as
were their forbears in the vanished years
when tho gleaming banner of Castile and
Aragon glanced amid the peaks and val
leys of Mexico, announcing the advent of
a stronger race and more victorious faith.
The other day while making a little trip
over the Interoceonic, that runs through
so many picturesque Indian towns, I hap
pened to meet in one of these villages a
very Intelligent Indian who told me the
following. Whether it is true or not Ido
not know—"l tell the tale as ’twas told to
me." He said that on the northern slope
of Popocatepetl, near the foot, there is a
largo cave almost unknown to the outside
world. In this cave lives an old white
haired Indian who to tho oracle of a small
tribe of Indians In that vloinity, whose
language is unlike that of any of the
neighboring towns.
This little tribe has never been con- I
quered either by the Spaniards or by the
church, or by the modern government of
the republic. The Indians have preserved
all their old customs and traditions until
this day And are practically as they were
400 years ago. One of the Very curious
institutions among them is that of the
oracle, or seer, who dwells in the above
mentioned cave all alone. He ts always
the oldest and wisest man of the tribe. He
is looked upon with the same supejxtltlous
reverence as were the oracles of Dodona
and Delphos in the boyhood of the world.
In that cave are preserved rare gomsof
enviously carved emeralds, such as the
great “Malinche" sent home to Spain;
idols of gold and silver and copper and
stone, pearl necklaces from the faroff gulf
of California and strange robes of feather
work, of which but very few examples are
known today outside the pages of Saba
gun, Prescott or Clavlgero.
There are also ranged in fitting order
the ancient gods of this strange ’ people,
of whom this old man is the high priest
Once a month a commission of toe oldest
men of the tribe visits the cave and takes
with it, in the name of the people, offer
ings of fruit and flowers and eatables and
incense in honor of the gods and their
oracle.
Upon all affairs of importance to the
tribe this old man IS consulted, and his
judgments are as those of tod Medes and
the Persians
I asked whether it would bo poeaible to
visit him or, not and was told one, I
not even members of the same t»Ufe, out
side the before mentioned “corpinteslon"
had ever seen the inside of that strange
and mysterious cave. My informant told
me that at a certain point all persons are
stopped b£ a guard and told that they can
proceed no farther upon pain of death.
And this is not a tale of 400 years ago, but
of today.
The tribe and the cave are at the north
side ot Popocatepetl, and every Saturday
in Ailixco members of this tribe are at the
market to buy and sell their simple neces
saries of life. It is enough to see them to
realize at once the great difference be
tween them and the other M&xtoan In
dians who are to be seen there at that
time. Not only is their style of clothing
very different, but also their language.—
Mexico Two Republics.
Grown In Hawaiian Islands.
The soil of the Hawaiian Islands is of a
very rich volcanic nature an<b nearly all
the plants and trees of the tropical and
temperate zones may be grown on it, but
only a small portion of the land is under
cultivation. When irrigation is perfected,
there Is scarcely a limit to the productive
capabilities of the Islands.
Citrus fruits, oranges, lemons, limes and
grapefruits can be grown, ripening in
time to supply the deficiency of the Cali
fornia market when that gives out. All
vegetables, breadstuffs, mangoes, dates,
figs, pomegranates, mulberries, strawber
ries, guavas and cocoanuts grow in profu
sion. There are hundreds of acres of land
which might be used for oocoanut groves
with great success. Thousands of acres
are covered with guavas in the wild state,
which tire falling to the ground ungath
ered. The fruit makes a fine jelly, and
United States capital might make guava
jelly factories profitable. -
Celery is grown if the proper soil is se
lected. That this vegetable thrives in a
warm climate was proved in southern Cal
ifornia, where five years ago not enough
was produced to supply the home market,
but on the introduction of skilled methods
from Michigan celery raising has become
a great industry. Dairying might be made
a profitable business in the Hawaiian Is
lands, but at present is neglected.
llnddliA'a Bones. *
Some remarkable Buddhist antiquities
recently discovered in India have been de
scribed in the Allahabad Pioneer by Mr.
Vincent Smith, a well known antiquary.
Some years ago the discovery of an in
scribed pillar, erected in the third century,
indicated with certainty the site of Kapila
vastu, the home of Guatama Buddha, who
lived about 500 B. C. The ruins of this
ancient city are now covered by jungle,
but are being excavated, and thus build
ings more ancient than any previously
known in India arebeing brought to light.
Another also in Nepalese ter
ritory, close to the British frontier, is that
of a brick tumulus containing relics of
Buddha himself. These are fragments of
bone, in a decayed woodea vessel, with
which we found five small vases of soap
stone and a very fine bowl of-rock crystal,
all containing gold ornaments, pearls and
precious stones, besides various objects
delicately wrought in crystal and agate.
This collection was deposited in a mas
sive coffer of sandstone, fturiejJ under 18
feet of masonry. An inscription on one of
the vases states that the relics are those of
Buddha and indicates that the tumulus
was constructed, about 300 B.C.—Gham
bere’„Tournal. , . 1 Z 'a. ,
diMU nos Tatwt
FJ 1 v 11 '< t
The New Tolk Central station at New
York has just been rebuilt The office of
Mr. Buchanan on the top floor and partly
under a mansard roof is lighted by deep
little round windows like tho portholes of
a warship. One of Mr. Depew’s jokes has
already left Its imprint oh these porthole
window*; A day or two after Mr. Buch
anan moved in Mr. Depew paid him a
visit and after commenting on the oozy
and shipshape appearance of things glanced
curiously at the round window* “Ah,
you have portholes here, I see,” he re
marked.
‘•But Xhe company has not allowed me
any cannon yet," said the superintendent
of motive power.
“Well, you can shoot with Buchanan,"
retorted Mr. Depew promptly.—New York
Times. •
' Bought Tham si S®.ls Md Bbl 4 ]
An old time detective the other day
in the profession the methode of up to
date swindlers. After deprecating the
originality of the modern crook he told
of what he considered the sharpest game
he ever saw worked.
"X suppose you fellows know," he
said, "that during Centennial year Phil
adelphia was a hotbed of bunkosteerers
and sharpers of every description. Well,
I was detailed to keep an eye on there
gentry, and in time I became acquainted
with most of the 'big ones, * who were
generally exceedingly bright men. One
in particular, who was known a* ‘Slick
JPete/ Itook a great liking to, for he
had an inexhaustible fund of humor and
was a good hooted /chap. Toward the
end of the OentMtnial exhibition one
day I dropped into a down town auction
room where some fake jewelry was be
ing sold. A lot of watches were offered.
and X saw that they had been made evi
dently for bunko steering purposes, for
the works were good, and the cases were
made to look like solid gefid. They were
finally knocked down for *3.15 apiece,
and l saw tint the buyer was'Sltok
Fete.’ Jewelry was out of his line, but
X knew he had some scheme in view.
Two months passed before I again saw
Pete, and then X asked him what he had
done with the watches. He began to
laugh and said, ‘Oh, skinned some
pwindler with them!’ Then followed
the explanation. He had hired a room
and inserted an advertiMtfttti invurl
oub papers something like this: ‘Found
—A solid gold .watch; Elgin works;
loser pay costs. Apply, etc.’ Nearly
every crook in town the ad.
and claimed the watoh. Pete, who
made up as An old man, seemed a mark,
and the ‘fly’ crook, in the hurry to de
part, made but a ouraory examination.
1 The costs, 1 wert invariably handed
over, and in two daysJPete had disposed
of his stock. ’’—Philadelphia Record.
THE CAMPFIRE.
Wartime Bemlalseeneea of a Veteran el
the Civil War.
■ "Men build fires in various places to
cook their coffee by or to make them
selves warm or for company's sofas;’’
said a civil war veteran, "and any fire
is likely td be more or less a gathering
point, but I suppose that the fire to
which the name of campfire properly
belongs, the campfire of song and story,
is the cook’s fire at the end of the com
pany street, built on the ground, under
a pole supported at the ends by crofched
sticks driven in the earth and from
which the camp kettles are suspended.
This was the gathering point of the
company.
"Men did not always stand about the
campfire. It depended upon circum
stances and on the weather. They met
here, of course, at mealtimes; and there
were times when men would stand
around the fire and smoke and talk, and
then it might be that the men would'
keep their tents, playing cards or smok
ing there, or mending their clothes, or
polishing up their accouterments, so
that there were times when Mie fire was
quite deserted or when perhaps there
might be' seen there a solitary figure, a
man who had come to light Iris pipe.
‘‘But, though it aright be deserted,
the fire still burned. Sometimes on cold
and windy nights the wind would
blow it about and scatter it, and some
times, when it was no longer attended,
the rain would put it out black, but
there was usually a living fire there by
day and a bed of embers by night, and
here was the soldier’s hearthstone.”—
New York Sun.
( Barrote Are Never Original.
I have read of a'father who would
not let his children tell their dreams
because there is in such narrative too
great temptation to wander from the
truth. Parrot stories are too often like
dream storiea—one-half true, and they
are sometimes; plainly to any who
knows the true talking power of these
birds—made up entirely or greatly ex
aggerated. While the parrot has a cer
tain unmistakable sense of humor, and
is correspondingly wise, none of the
various species is or ever was capable
of the original wise and witty talk fa
miliar to us in newspaper anecdotes.
In fact, the parrot is never original
in speech. It is altogether imitative,
and a bird that has never heard spoken
words has surely never uttered a sylla
ble.
But, judging from parrots’ clever use
of wh*t they learn to say, it is almost
certain that they come to know in a
measure the meaning of the phvazns
they learn.—-Charlotte Boner in St
Nicholas.
The Bamboo Gan.
The natives in the Buoherganj dis
trict of Bengal have been deprived et
their guns, and since then they have re
sorted to the native bamboo in the hunt
for defensive weapons.
They hollow out the bamboo, load it
with an ounce or two of native powder
and a handful of Iron slug* and touch it
off with a fuse in the immediate neigh
borhood of the offending person.
Another way, as the cookery books
say, is to employ the bamboo as a fork
wfih k cobra pitmed-to tife far fend. An
application of the cobra to the sleeping
body of an enemy is all that is neces
sary.—London Tit-Bits.
Customers.
Little Boy—Please, I want the doc
tdr to come and see mother.
Doctor’s Servant Doctor’s cot.
Where do you come from?
Little Boy—What! Don’t yon know
me? Why, we deal with you—we had
a baby from here last week.—London
y ° a * *■ ..J '
Hiadoee Use Uttle Weq>
The only soap which the Hindoos of
the orthodox type employ is made en
tirely of vegetable products. But soap
io little used in India, being almost an
AID TO WOUNDED.
• ■ I
OamreOm of Thsm VaU Taaght to
I U not k** ** tha
at the guns of an Amortaaa wwritip are
provided by tho navy rargoons with. ap
pliance* for jmickly ministering to the
needs of thelrsrimnded nnmwMlm during
tho progress of a fight. There is a supply
of rubber bandages and dressings near
each of tho big guns, and the crew is told
just what to do for an Injured man before
It is possible for the doctors to attend to
him. Tho important thing Is to stay the
loss of blood, which is the cause of at
least throe-fourths of the deaths In battle.
As soon as a man fells cue of his com
rades runs to hie aid. If he is wounded in
the leg, the leg is quickly bound with rub
ber tubing in such away as to stop the
hemorrhage, if poasflile, and antiasptle
dressings are applied uoooriUng to tho in
structions already given by the surgeons.
The injured log is tin it bound to the un
injured one for protection and support,
and tho man is dragged to of safe
ty. Then his comrade, who has acted as
surgeon for the time being, rushes back to
his place by the gnn»
In the most protected places on the ship
dressing stations uro cbteblished. In this
way the wounded cun be more quickly at
tended to than was possible In the old
days, when they had to be carried to the
sick boy before receiving tho first asrist
anoo. There to a mala nurse assigned to
of the dootorw. This nune carries
drtsslnits and other thinos necessary for
immediate use and assists the doctor in
any way required. The nurae’s duty may
foe anything from binding up a wound to
giving a hypodermic injection of morphine
to easa some poor fellow’c sufferings.
In a modern naval battle moat wounds
are caused by fragments offliurzting hells.
Such wound* are said by co competent an
authority as Surgeon General Stevenson
to be generally less dangerous to Ufa than
those produced by the ordinary small bore
bullets on the field of battle. They are
often superficial rather than deep, though
the flesh to generally much bruised and
tom. In the case of wounds from frag
ments of shell there to much danger from
the lodgment of foreign eubstanot*, bits
of the projectile Itself, shreds of clothing,
etc., often being deeply imbedded la tho
flesh. These must bo removed carefully or
they Will cause serious trouble. Thecloth
ing immediately over the wound Is always
carefully examined to see if any part ot
It to mtoziag, which has probably been
carried, into the flesh.
The men at the guns are carefully in
structed to avoid touching wounds with
their hands smeared, as they must bo,
with powder and grease. Il is not until
the guns are silent that tho surgeon’s real
work begins. The most urgent caseo, such
as thoceof hemorrhage, are always taken
first, the question being how to save as
many lives as possible. Whisky and other
stimulants are given to those who are suf
fering from shook, and wounds are covered
with pads of gauze wrung out in antisep
tic solution until such time as their treat
ment oan be undertaken in detail.—Now
York Sun. - , '; , ' _, ’ '
Artiste In photography will be interested
in a statement made in The Engineer,
London, that Arthur W. Claydsn, fellow
of tho Royal Meteorological society and
head ot the college at Exeter, exhibited In
a reoent lecture on photographing meteor
ological phenomena some lantern slide
views of clouds taken by him after a proc
ess recently invented by him—photo
graphs showing beautiful blues in all their
clouds, from ultra marine down to perfect
white, various grays and some iron red
and greenish tints. The revolutionizing
feature of the Clayden process consists in
the fact that these colored photographs
are positives—that is, according to the
statement given out he has succeeded in
obtaintogeotared prints by a purely chem
ical way of developing the same on a spe
cially prepared plate. The process at pres
ent is restricted to lantern slides, but
these are not colored by painting, but by*
development, while colored paper prints
loom - up distinctly in tho near future.
Bright red rays, the Inventor says, have
so far eeoaped him, but he believes that
further experiments and probably a longer
devourment will realize the mastery of
that defect. As an intermediary stage be
tween plate prints and paper printing,
ivory or thin celluloid plates have been
suggested.
Mr. Wang, who has charge of the Tien
tsin telegraph office, was so unfortunate
recently a* to delay transmitting an im
perial decree destined for a southern vice
roy. This mtodemenor having been re
ported to Vtoeroy Wang, the unlucky man
ager was hauled over the coals ta hto
senior officer’* pzuMnoe, who also sternly
asked-fittether he (Mr. Wang) were not
ashontodtoatlll retain the button on his
official hat after having been aprilty of
such a serious mtodenwaiMir. Upon this
Mr. Wang humbly took off his official hat
—all this time, be it remembered, being
in a kneriing position—and penitently
unserSWSd Ms < batten from th* jHnnstole
<4 hto conical hat, having done which both
hatand button were gently placed on the
floor, the wearer net daring yet to place
hi* shorn hat upon the shot usualfy re
served for it by its owner. A* soon as the
viceroy considered Mr. Wang had received
sufficient kneeling punishment he told
him to clear out, promising at the same
time that the case would be at once re
ported to the throne and the delinquent
denouaeed.—North China Herald.
' *’ - —'y— - 1 • «
indtati Sapglr of the May Be Iteptoted-
We are again compelled to protest
agatafet the nonchalant manner in which
many teyore x>*Mß|iapsr* pentet in aosum
iqg that rise Punjab contains an inex
haustible supply of fighting men, abte and
willing to undertake the defense of any
portion of the British empire. Tho offend
erin the present instance is The Spectator,
which airily assumes that "we can gazri
son Wei-Hai-Wel with 10,000 picked Sikhs
a*d Afridis on special pc/.” This is not
- tabflret oocMfen Mi* Spectator
ha* helped— ooun* through lack of pre
cise inftwatMan tn mialsad the British
Mblfo into the belief that the Punjab U
tapable of producing army after army, not
\only for Indian service, but far permanent
duty beyond the ores. It to time that it
was clearly understood that there are 11m-
Itaßow totite posribUittos of zwlting
in the Punjab, as well as in England, and
that those Mmltatioae preclude ttny prat
p«at ot raising an indefinite number of
regiments for service in the far east and
In Africa.—Times of India.
T>M Superstition Braved.
Patty Patettto—l reed that one of thorn
Klondikers is goln to have gold shoes put
on his horse.
Wayworn Wateon—Say, it wouldn’t be
(good luck at all to pick up one of them
shoes! Oh, no!"—Cincinnati Enquirer.
... ' ..' ' ... . • -i
AN OPEN LJsO 5| ER ®i
To Wl ATHW? St w
I V IvlVw I t ilserawi
WE AKE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO
THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD "CARTORIA" AND
** la* —vs l en< mnuw atv>wsnT • • • n*a <vrv*a
♦•WTCHER’S CASTORIA/* AS OUR TRADE MARK.
/, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, Hyannit, ■llassacluuettt
was tie origin -CUSTOM*,' tte san, tM »
has borne and dues now bear on every
the facsimile signature
This is the original “CASTORIA M which has been used in
lhe °! *™ riCafOr mer . thirtv
LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that iLie A
the kind you have always bought i < ®
and has the signatureof wrap-
•per. No one has authority from me to use my name except
The Centaur Company, of which Chas. H. fletcher is President.
Manh34,1898.~ J
Do Not Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting
a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you
(because he* makes a few more pennies on it); -Hie in- *
gredients of which even he does not knoift
“The Kind Ton Have Always Bought”
BEARS THE SIGNATURE OF
w.. m - -i— • ——
The Kind That Never Failed You.
▼ME SCWTAUffi ••MPANVt TV WMHMAT BTMffiCT* NCW •ITV.
• .
" ——ll l I ,■! I,
. ? /'.’J
*■* 4>
—GET YOUK —
: • ' .. ' • ' ■ - I-
JOB PRINTING
DONE JLT
The Morning Call Office.
-ora—
■
' '
We have Juat supplied our Job Office with a complete Hue ol BtatooMir*; ,
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted iu the way m ,
: * '. • MK/-■ 3 ■ . ‘ .AsW
LETTER HBADB, BILLHEADS
STATEMENTS, IRCULARB,
KNVKLOFEb, 1 '
MORTGAGES, PROGRAM* ( - g
JARDB, POSTED
DODGEHB, 8.0. M
Wr c*ny tee beet lueoi FNVEWFKI tn : thtotred*.:
Aa aUracJvc POST aay size caa be issued on abort aotie*
Oar prices tot work of all ktatds wfU compare fitvorably with those obtaiasd ras
a»y office in the state. When you want fob printing o£any ‘dftcrlptfon yne
. tafttatbetton [jptsrsntary
*
: •• e ■ ■ • \ ’’ ■' "'CwiiMl
■
LA-luXd WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch,
-*r , 4 •v. ♦ ,• 1 J
1 ■ t - - ■
Out of town orders will receive
prompt attention.
J.r.&S RSawML
■ .v. ‘
.-zi-