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ORDINARY’S OFFICE,
w Spalding County, Qa«
Mrs Marie Ford, m administratrix of
the estate of P. 8.8- Ford, deceased makes
application for lj*ve to sell the following
re part t oflanfl Stilb in 14th District of
Fulton ctenfr,
the west fids of ftotey «g«*80 feetnorth
from theN. vV. comer oi west nunrer
and Doray streets, thence north along
Doray street 40 ft and back west same
width 80 ft to Leach street being part of
land lots 40 and 41 ofthe Leach property
as per ptet of Harry Krouse of April 15,
1 Alan part of land lot No. 47 in the
14th District of Fulton county, Ga., com
of tty*
same being south-west corner of a
Mrtain tract sold by Miss Mary Smith to
W F. Spalding and W. B. Sheldon on an
unnamed street, thence running south
along said street 114 ft, thence east along
an unnamed street 300 ft, more or less,
thence north 114 ft, thence west 200 ft,
more or leas, to starting point, same lying
south and adjoining said property con
veyed by M. Smith to W. F. Spalding and
W. B. Sheldon, April 18th, 1891.
Also, part of land lot No. 55 in the
14th District ofFu.ton county, Ga.,- com
mencing at point on east side of Violet
Are., 200 ft north of intersection of said
avenue and Haygood street, thence east
120 ft to a 10 foot alley, thence north along
the west side of said alley 50 ft, thence
west 120 ft to Violet Ave., thence south
along gist side ofViolet Ave., 50 ft to
starting point. The same being known
as lot No. 105 as per plat of Auction sale
of S. W. Goode $ Co., of said property
April 19th, 1887.
Also, part of land lot No. 79 in 14th
District of Fulton county, Ga., situated as
follows: Commencing at the south east
comerof Venable street and Orchard Ave.
and rtfnning east along the south side of
Orchard Ave. 501 ft to Fowler street,
thence south along the west side of Fowl
ler street 110 ft, thence west parallel with
Orchard Ave., 501 ft to Veneable street
thence north along the east side of Vena
ble street 110 ft to the starting point, be
ing lots 8-4 5-6-7-8-9-10-11 and 12 of the
Harris property as per plat of Frierson
& Leach, January 14th, 1892.
Also part of land lot 55 in the 14th Dis
trict of Fulton county, Ga, commencing
at a point oh the east side of Violet Ave.,
350 it north of Haygood street, thence
north along east side of Violet Ave., 50 ft,
thence east 120 ft to 10 foot alley, thence
south iilohg said alley 50 ft, thence west
120 ft to Violet Ave., the starting point,
same being known as No. 11l of 8. W.
Goode 4 Co., plat of the A. P. Wright
property, April 10th, 1889.
Also Land lot No. 188 in 14th District
of Fulton county, Ga., one quarter acre
mote or less, adjoining the land of Samuel
Bland south east,and the land of Smith on
the north east and R. Pickens on the
west and also Albert Thompson on the
south, said lot known now as Felix
Bland’s home.
Also one half undivided interest of city
lot No. 8, Commerce street, , Albany,
Dougherty county, Ga.,lmproved,for the
purpose of paying debts of the deceased
and for distribution among the heirs.
Detailpeponß concerned show cause, if
any there-be, before the Court of Ordinary,
in Griffin,Ga.,on the first Monday in
November, 1898, by 10 o’clock, a. m., why
such order should not be granted. Oct.
Brd, 1898.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
E. A. Huckaby, administrator de bonis
non, on the estate of Nathan Fomby, de.
ceased, mikes application for leave to sell
forty-two acres of land off lot No. 18, in
Line Creek district, of Spalding connty,
t Georgia, bounded as follows: On the
north by C. T. Digby, east by R. W.
Lynch and J. A. J. Tidwell, south and
west by J. A. J. Tidwell—for the purpose
of paying debts of deceased, and tor distri
bution among the heirs. Let all persona
concerned show cause, if any there be, be
fore the court of Ordinary, in Griffin, Ga.,
on the first Monday in November, 1898, by
10 ©[clock a. m., why such order should
not pe granted. October term, .1898.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
Q TATE OF GEORGIA,
O Spalding County.
J. H. Grubbs, guardian of H. W., Sarah
L„ Mollie, T. J. and C A. McKneely and
Amanda M. Burke, has applied to me for
a discharge from the guardianship of the
above named persons. This is therefore to
notifyall persons concerned to file their
objections, if any they have, on or before
the first Monday in November, 1898, else
he will be discharged from his guardian
ship, as applied for. Oct. 3,1898.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
Administrator’s Sale.
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
By virtue of an order granted by the
court of Ordinary of Spalding connty,
Georgia, at the October term of said court,
1898,1 will sell to the highest bidder, be
fore the court house door, m Griffin, Geor
gia, between-the legal hours of sale, on
the first Tuesday in November, 1898: Two
hundred acres of land in Mt. Zion district,
said county , bounded as follows: On the
north by F. E. Drewry and J. F, Dickin
son, on the east by Dickinson, south by
Sing Dunn, and Widow Yarbrough, for
the purpose of paying debts of deceased,
and for distribution among the heirs.
Terms cash. Oct. 8,1898.
A. B. Shacxnlfobd, Adffi’r
of J. J. Bowdoin, deceased.
Guardian’s Sale.
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
By virtue of an order granted by the
Court of Ordinary „of Spalding, county,
Georgia, at the October term of said court,
1898, I will sell to the highest bidder, be
fore the court house door in Griffin, Ga.,
between the legal hours of sale, on the
first TueaS# In November, 1898, fifty
acres of land in Union District, said con*-
tv, bounded as follows: On the North by
A Ogletree, East, South and West by /.
J. Elder. Sold for tbe purpose of en
croaching on corpus of wards estate for
their maintenance and education. October
3,1898. Maktba J. Coleman,
Guardian.
P Teheera Spli sad Smoke Joar Lift Away.
'<■ ’ ;;;;it'tct>acco easily and forever, be mag
r *<«;. lull ot life, nerve and vigor, take No-To
*; 3c ‘ the WonJer-wo' kcr, timt luakes veak men
Ail druggists, 60c or 81. Cureguaran-
Booklet and sample free. Address
•sterling Kemedy Co - Chicago®* New York
TEMPLEB Os BILENCI.
| faatrieiM. t aa America* Wko la
▼a4lad a Peraiaa Death Tawcr.
“I know one place where people have
no doubt as to which way the souls of
their dead go,” said Smith.
Smith had traveled aU over the world.
He was as well acquainted in Cape Town
as at St. Petersburg, he had lolled in the
flower .decked teahouses of Japan and
eaten tallow beyond the land of the Mid
night Sun. The clubs of London and the
coffee houses of Budapest were as well
known to him as the streets of New York,
and he knew his way in the streets ot
Stamboul as well as In those of his native
Rhode Island town. He saw things as he
journeyed through the world and had a
happy way of telling them, and when ho
said, without cause or prove ~»jon, that be
knew something about soi F we knew he
had a story to tell, so we filled our pipes,
and then some one asked, ‘ Where?”
“You fellows don’t know anything
about the far east, and when your time
comes you’ll be perfectly willing to be
planted in the orthodox way or cremated
according to the modern usage, but if you
died down there the higher distinction ot
being disposed of in the Temple of Silence
might await you. There are heathens
down there who will not bury their dead
because the earth is sacred, and they
will not burn them because they wor
ship the fire, and the dead would defile it,
and so they have towers built where they
take their dead and let the vultures do the
rest. They have men to attend to the
business of placing the bodies on shelves
in the inside of these grewaome structures,
and it’s death to any one who is not em
ployed there to go into one of the places.
Well, we were in Teheran and we wanted
to get jnto the teffiple there in the worst
way and did not wish to die to enjoy the
privilege nor to be killed for running the
blockade. We took a native to show us
the country, mounted <m camels and rode
toward the temple. The man in charge of
the place was drawn into conversation,
and we Went so far as to offer him a drink
out of a bottle -of wine, but he refused,
wine being prohibited by his faith. We
had a flask of Scotch whisky in our kit
and offered him some of that. He had a
little argument with himself and
ed that Scotch whisky was not wine and
took a drink that would have staggered a
Russian sailor. He did not refuse a second
drink when it was offered, and between
the. heat and the whisky he was soon fast
asleep in front of the sacred building
which he was under solemn obligations to
bamboo trees, which we leaned against
the walls, and presently we were looking
over the top of the charnel house on the
gallery where the partly consumed bodies
were laid out. It was an easy matter to
get ip, and we went and picked up a few
souvenirs in the way ot teeth, and my
companion took a section of vertebrae,
saying that he was going to bore a hole in
-It and use it for a candlestick. There were
shelves and galleries below, and all were
delighted with thegrewsome burdens, and
when we had seen all we stole away, gave
a parting look to the drunken guard, who
was still in a stupor, and returned to town.
“Next day we made inquiry of one of
the officials as to the temple. We told him
that we knew that no one was allowed in
the structure, but we had heard that there
were upper and lower shelves for the
bodies and asked if the arrangement had
any significance.
“ ‘Yes,’ he said, ‘it has. The bodies are
all placed on the upper shelves when they
are taken in, and then the carriers watch
for the coming of the vultures. If the first
of these attacks the rlght eye, the soul of
the body has gone to heaven, and the body
remains there; if it picks at the left eye,
the soul has gone to the other place, and
the body goes to the shelves below. * They
believe that implicitly, and that is why I
say that I know one place where people
have no doubt on that subject.”
in the
Seed of Corm 3,000 Years Old.
Three or four years since an Indian
mound iu'Arkansas was being excavated
when an earthen jax waa found, hermetic
ally sealed, that contained a small quan
tity of grains of Indian corn. Some of the
grains were the next year planted in Mis
souri and several bushels raised. On the
top of the mound from which the jar was
dug out a large tree four feet in diameter
was growing, and It is thought the corn
lay buried about 8,000 years.
Squire James L. Neal,’ one ot our most
prosperous and progressive farmers, sent
and procured a small quantity of the oom,
paying over 2 cents a grain. This he
planted last year, but the yield was small
on account of the drought. He saved
enough, however, to get in a good patch
this year. He has used it for roasting tare
and says it Is the best he ever had. The
ears are not large, but grow two to three
on a single stalk. The one thing peculiar
about this edm Is its color, or rather col
ors. On the same cob are grains of differ
ent colors, and in the row you can find an
ear that is white, another blood red, one
salmon colored and another perfectly
black.—Harrodsburg (Ky.) Sayings.
A Municipal Public Monse.
‘‘ln Scotland,” says an English paper,
“a modification of the Gothenburg system
seems to bo making headway. A little vil
lage near the Dunfermline, named HUI of
Beath, has municipalized Its public house
and installed the electric light out of the
profits. This success has raised envy in
the soul of another village close by, called
Kelty. Kelty does not see why It should
not municipalize Its whisky drinking, so
a public meeting has been held, with areal
live county councilor In the chair, to pro
pound a scheme. A sum of £2,000 is to be
raised as capital wherewith to erect the
public house. There are to be eight direct
ors—six elected by the shareholders and
two by the county council. The share
holders are to get a 5 per cent dividend on
their capital, and the surplus profits are
to be handed over to the county council
to be applied as it sees fit.”
England'A Tramp Card.
In the fleet question England wUI never
have the las* word. Tha load Ims the ad
vantage of tradition. It stands far ahead
In the art of shipbuUdlng. Its material,
its means, are almost inexhaustible. Its
mercantile marine gives it dlscipl|Md and
experienced seamen, and, above aIL it is
impossible that its millions ater-
ling, whtaii it devotes to ftSnsflEniDa
and increasing of its fleet, can ever
trumped with millions of «nlee, i 'ftance
or coppers I Bucharest Rumanlscher-
Lloyd.
The Moea la Daagop.
The Shanghai magistrate has issued a
proclamation warning his people that
there will be an eclipse of the moon—
“eaten up” is the phrase—and caUlhg
upon all loyal citizens to help him in
making as much noire as they can “to
rescue the devoured luminary.”—H<mg
kong Press.
popocat!peTl’s oragle.
A JCeaieaa Tribe That I* Several HaaAred
»*" B **‘“<* ’*■*•
As is well known to all who have looked
Into the matter carefully—for instance,
such men as Ltltaholta, Starr and Sovilis
—there are in remote parts of Mexico to
day to be found portions of tribes of In
dians who are practically as much given
to idolatry, superstition and witchcraft as
were their forbtars in the vanished years
when the gleaming banner of Castile and
Aragon glanced amid the peaks and val
leys of Mexico, announcing the advent of
a stronger race an* more victorious faith.
The other day vdifierohklfig a iftfle trip
over the Tntaroneanie, that runs through
so many picturesque Indian towns, I hap
pened to meet In one of three 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
large eave almost unknown to the outside
world. In this cave . Uvea an old white
haired Indian who is the oracle of a small
tribe of Indians in that vicinity, whose
language is unlike that of any of the
neighboring towna ;
This little tribe has never been con
quered either hy the Spaniards or by tbs
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
orade, or seer, Who dwells la the above
mentioned cave all alone. He Is always
the oldest and wisest man of the tribe. He
is looked upon with the same superstitious
reverence as were .the oracles ot Dodona
Delphos in the boyhood of the world.
lOGihat cave are preserved rare gems ot
curiously carved emeralds, such as the
great “Mallnche” 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
kpown today outside the pages of Saba
gun, Prescott or Clavigero.
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 the 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 the Medes and
the Persians
I asked whether it would be possible to
visit him or not and was told that no one,
not even members of the same tribe, out
side the before mentioned “commission”
had ever seen the Inside of that strange
and mysterious cave. My informant told
me that at a certain point all persons are
stopped by 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 of Popocatepetl, and every Saturday
|ia Atllxoo 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
jealise at once the great difference be
tween them and the other Mexican 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 and nearly all
the plants and trees of the tropical and
temperate sones may be grown on it, but
only a small portion of the land is under
cultivation. When irrigation u perfected,
there is scarcely a limit to the productive
capabilities of the islands. ,/
Citrus fruits, oranges, lemons, limesand
grapefruits can be grown, ripening in
time to supply the deficiency of the Call
.fornia market when that gives out. All
vegetables, breadstuffs, mangoes, dates,
figs, pomegranates, mulberries, strawber
ries, guavas and ooooanuto 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 are falling to the ground ungath
ered. The fruit makes a fine jelly, and
United States capital might make guava
folly Stories profitable, ,
Celery is grown if the proper soil isse
warm climate was proved m southern Cal
ifornia,.wb«ro, five years ago not enough
was produced* to sqpply the home market,
but oh the introduction of skilled methods
from Michigan celery raising has become
a great Industry. Dairying might bemads
a profitable business in the Hawaiian Is
lands, but at present is neglected.
Buddha’s Bones.
Some remarkable Buddhist antiquities
recently discovered in India have been de
scribed in the Allahabad Pioneer by Mt.
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 Ksplla
vastu, the home of Gnatasna Buddha, who
lived aboutdOO 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 are being brought to light.
Another discovery, 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 wooden vessel, with
which we found five small vases of soap
stone and a very fine bowl of rock crystal,
aU 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, burled 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 800 B. C.—Cham
bers’ Journal.
Chaaaeey*a * Lstal.
The New York 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 desp
little round windows like the portholes of
a Warship. One of Mr. Depew’s jokes has
Already left its imprint on these porthole
windowa A day or two after Mr. Buch
anan moved in Mr. Depew paid him a
visit and after commenting on the coxy
and shipshape appearance of things glanced
curiously al the round window* “Ah,
you te|*o portholes here, 1 see,” he re
marked.
‘ • But Jhc company has not allowed me
1 any cannon yet,” said‘the superintendent
of motive power.
" “Weil, you can shoot with Buchanan,”
retorted Mr. Depew promptly.—New York
Times.
TftK COOL RAMBLER.
HOW HC BETS, WINS AHO LOSES AT
MOHTC CARLO.
A aesew by Night la the Greet Gfidsd
Den at Monaee-Tem»«ta« Vtekle Fee
tene an a CeM Bteeded Bastaare Treas
estfoo—A IsMky XagMsh Couple.
Not to see the gambling roans at
Monte Carlo by night would be to mire
the grand show of the plaoe. There axe
not people enough in the town to make
up the crowds that press through the
big corridor and the atrium in the even
ing. They come in trains from all the
neighboring places—from Cannes, Nioe,
San Remo, Mentone, sometimes from as
far as Genoa. People ride down from
Paris, 20 hours in the rapidd, just for a
little “shy” at the tables. AU outside
is as bright as day, though chilly.
H When I set out for the casino, I came
upon a young English couple standing
near the big fountain, discussing some
thing with great earnestness. They
were good looking, well dressed, with
something of an air of a bridal couple.
What became of them at the moment I
did not notice, ahd Inside I stood for a
few minutes watching the roulette ta-
Wte. Tpn minutes later I went into the
trente et quarante room and met them
just inside the big arched doorway.
They were on their way out Her rosy
cheeks were rosier than before, and her
face was wreathed in smiles. He was
fairly radiant and looked “very fit,” as
the Londoners say. In one hand he held
a great bundle of French notes, all
stretched out at full length, just as they
came from the tables. It took no great
shrewdness to see that for ten minutes
they had been leading active, industri
ous lives and had reaped the reward of
industry and virtue and were getting
out of the plaoe before they were tempt
ed tq tiyagain and lose.
One elderly gentleman was at the
moment doing the leading business in
that room and attracting the most at
tention by risking ten 1,000 franc notes
(12,000) at every dealing ot the cards.
He wai particularly interesting tome,
because he wm beyond doubt an Ameri
can. "He waa a fine looking man, with
gray hair, iron gray beard, well trim
med, a shrewd eye that watohed evary
move tito dealer made, and of course in
the regulation black evening clothes.
His face showed him to be • man who
had made his money, not inherited it
I think that lumber waa the foundation
of his fortune in the northwest some
where, but long enough ago to give him
tima to have the sawdust brushed out
of hfa clothes, for ha waa very smooth
and Well groomed. Not • word was
said around the table, so there waa no
chance to hear what language he spoke.
He was one of those men who would
not look at all out of plaoe leading a
prayer meeting, but who might ba de
pended upon for a ready revolver if he
caught the dealer at any foul play.
The notes came out of one of his vest
pockets, but not carelessly. There was
none of the usual effort to look as If
risking >2,000 every three minutes was
an eve&day affair wjth him. Ha did
everything with caution, always delib
erating over what square he should lay
his money upon, and sometimes chang
ing it to anno other square after he had
laid it town. But whether he won or
lost heWiwed ho emotion whatever.
Be woq jifl&ter than he lost while I
watched hito, putting the winnings al
ways igtptfa same vest pocket. Atone
time the banker made a mistake in du
pHqatingfi pitaof his notes that had
won, bufithisdid not bring • word from
him. Bis eyes were open, and instead
of pickft# up tiie pile he merely pushed
it back toward the banker, which was
a sufficient hint for a recount When
the mistake was corrected and the miss
ing note supplied, he added the pile to
the big lump in his pocket
Like almost evtay player around the
treate et ffuhrante tables, be was there
strictly for business. It was not a few
dollars laid on for the novelty of the
thing, bnt a deliberate speculation in
the hope of winning. My experience of
gambling houses is fortunately rather
limited, but I have seen the big places
of Saratoga and Long Branch and one
or two in New York and some very
large ones Ih Cuba and Mexico. Never
have I seatt such a businesslike air in
any gambling room as there is here.
You may not be wicked enough to know
that generally a great deal of smoking
and drinking and some eating go with
fashionable rambling, but that is the
case. The Sideboard is almost as neces
sary as* the tablet and HecegejndHam
“*d Henr y «« busy carrying
chmmabte and cocktails to the thirsty
is pure business with
“the house,” even where these things
are ndt charged for, for does not a man
beoome the more reckless the more al
cohol heahsorbs?
But there is none of that here. There
is no smoking in the rooms, and ao
dtinMtateaamdwttha tabfes. As ter
aslhaye seen, thrift so no place in the
casino building where drinks can be
had, though poatibly there may be soma
ooay ooteMgAmfilhava not disoovored.
ft “ ri»:mtoh a businaw house as a
whohmte dry goods stare, and the
profits are larger for the firm. This
gives it a very cold blooded atmosphere,
for there is not a particle of interest in
either of the games outside of the finan
cial risks involved. They are stupid
games of doctored chance that a navvy
can play as well as an arithmetician.—
New York Times.
i
Tom—l’ve lost adosen pairs of gloves
to that girl, and I haven’t a sou to buy
them with,
Dick—Tell her no one keeps the stee
small enough for her little hands Shell
be just as pleased.-Pick Me Dpi
Tea M weh Tor Sw Maa. -
There taftaay one so good that it
doesn’t make him mad to go home to
dinner and find sone one sitting in his
chair at the tabla.—Atchison Globa.
*
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and. line been, made under Ua
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AU Counterfeits, ImHattone and Subotttates are but Ex-
periment* trfflo wrttM and endanger the taenttli of
Intents and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Caatoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops
and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Marcotte
substance. Ito age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend.
csnuine CASTORIA
Bearo the Signature of /
The Kind You Have Always Bought •
In Use For Over 30 Years.
VMS SSMTMMI OSMMLWT. TV MAHMMV STMSST. NSW VVM err.
!i at in gyAtA' . ■* I
. r~” ~~ IST ~ L
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I- * * ''
—GET YOUH —
JOB PRINTING
DONE A.T
The Morning Call Office.
I
:
We have just supplied our Job Office with a complete line oj Btateoaerv
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way <m
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADB
BTATIMENTB, IROULARB,
ENVELOPEa, NOTES,
MORTGAGES, PROGRAM
I
/ JARDB, POSTERS
DODGERS, E.J ETL
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We eery tar tairt ine ts ENVELOPES w.i ifovd : thixtrada.
—s. .
An attractive. POSTER cf aay rise can be issued on short notice
Our prices for work of all kinds will compare thvorably with those obtained n>»
•ay office in the state. When you want fob printirg oil ar j ;c»i«»i| i‘< r *m
'"’X
eaU SatiaflMJtfon guaranteeu.l
» •
i.
r . ;•
jSIILIL work done
With Neatness and Dispatch.
/
Out of town orders will receive
prompt attention.
J. P.&S B. Sawtell.
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