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fARDINABY’S OFFICE,
VJ Spalding Co duty, Ga.
Mrs. Marie Ford, as administratrix of
SMsiftrass;
real estate, described aa follows:
Part of land lot 110 in 14th District of
fto«lh.N.W. eorair ».'»'« Holer
and Doray streets, thence north along
Doray street 40 ft an<T back west same
width 80 ft to Leach street, being part of
land lots 40 and 41 ofthe Leach property
Mjgsr plat of Harry Krouse of April IS,
Also, part of land lot No. 47 in the
14th District of Fulton county, Ga., com
mencing at a point 150 ft south of North
Av*, same being south-west corner of a
certain tract sold by Miss Mary Smith to
IF. F. Spalding ana W. B. Sheldon on an
unnamed street, thence running south
along said street 114 ft, thence east along
an unnamed street 800 ft, more or less,
thence north 114 ft, thence west 200 ft,
mare 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 of Fu.ton county, Ga., com
mencing at point on east side of Violet
Ave., 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 east aide of Violet 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. p
Also, part of land tot No. 79 in 14th
District of Fulton county, Ga., situated as
follows: Commencing at the south east
corner of Venable street and Orchard Ave.
ant running 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
ata print on the east side of Violet Ave.,
350 ft north of Haygood street, thence
north along east side of.Violet Ave., 50 ft,
thenceeast 120 ft to 10 foot alley, thence
south Along said alley 50 ft, thence west
120 ft to Violet Ave., the starting point,
same being known as No. 11l of 8. W.
Goode & 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
more or less, adjoining the land of Samuel
Bland south eastjind 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., improved,for the
purpose of paying debts of the deceased
and for distribution among the heirs.
Let all persons 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.
3rd, 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, makes application for leave to sell
forty-two acres of land off lot No. 18, in
Line Creek district, of Spalding county,
Georgia, bounded as follows: On the
north by O. 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 persons
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 o’clock a. m., why such order should
not be granted. October term, 1898.
J. A. DREWRY, Ordinary.
OF GEORGIA,
OR 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
notify all 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 county,
Georgia, at the October term of said court,
1898,1 will sell tothe 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 FJS. 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. Shackelford, Adm’r
of I. J; Bowdoin, deceased.
Guardian’s Sale.
OTATE OF GEORGIA,
O’ 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 wftrsell to the highest bidder, be
fore the court house door in Griffin, Ga.,
between the legal hours of sale, on the
first Tuesday,ln November, 1898, fifty
acres of landTn Uniob District, arid coun
ty, bounded 1 aafolfoWß: On the North by
A-QMrtree, East, Soutb and West by J.
J -Effier. Bold for kd purpose of en
croaching on corpus of wards estate for
®&intenance and education. October
8 > Martha J. Coleman,
Qqardian.
Dn t Tobacco Spit aad Smoko Toor IJfc Away.,
net?. 'V' « £ bac * > caall y and forever, be mag
h. i?' 1 * Bc< * e aad vigor,
t i. • ***&'***'’ liirc-rmran.
Stent I1, ,’ o!:le » and sample free. Address
etc ling Kemdy Ca- cbirwOi- New Yor>
AM ANCI£NT CHESB KING. '
BaplysMßo first tn the ages gone
Amid Ma languid ladle, fingered Um,
WMte a Mack atghtingala, mm swart aa te.
Bang his one wtfs love’s pawionate oraiaon;
Haply thou mayat have pleased Old Prester
Am<mg Ms pastures when full royally
Be apt JU tout, grave sbenhetda at his knee.
WMlaßmpo of balsam winted and gllamered
thou beret Thy masters are all
By haarFia full of ruth and yearning pain
At right of thee, O king, that hast a crown
Outlasting their., and tellat of greatness fled
Through cloud hung nights of unabated ring
And murmurs of the dark majestic town.
—Juan Tngetow-
“A SAD NIGHT.”
——y? -■ /11
Raw Carlyle aad Lel*k Hast Dlfi.
sered Rvel Akeet the Mry. f
Leigh Hunt and Carlyle were once
present at a small party of equally well
known men. It happened that the con
versation rested with these two, and the
Others sat, well pleased to listen. Leigh
Hunt talked on in his bright and hope
ful way, when Carlyle would drop some
heavy tree trunk across his pleasant
stream and bank it up with philosophic
al doubts and objections at every inter
val, but Hunt never ceased his joyous
anticipations nor saturnine Carlyle his
infinite demurs. The listeners laughed
and applauded by turns, and now fairly
pitted them against each other aa the
philosophers of hopefulness and unhope
fulnees. The contest continued with
ready wit, philosophy, pleasantry and
profundity and extensive knowledge of
books and character.
The opponents were so well matched
that it was quite clear that the contest
would last indefinitely, but night wan
far advanced, and the party now broke
up. They all sallied forth, and, leaving
the close room, the candles and the ar
guments behind them, found themselves
under a most-brilliant and starlight sky.
They looked up. Carlyle can have no
answer to this, thought Hunt, and
shouteds "There! Look atthat gloriMs
harmony that sings with infinite voices
an eternal song of hope in the soul of
man!”
Carlyle looked up, They all remained
silent to hear what he would say. They
began to think he was silenced at last,
but out of the silence came a few low
toned words in a broad Scotch accent:
“Eh, it’s a sad night!”
They all laughed and then looked!
thoughtful. There might be some reason
for sadness, too—that brilliant firma
ment perhaps contained infinite world*
each full of struggling and suffering
beings. •“
Unrecognlaed.
Perhaps when one makes that oonver
sational blunder which is known as a
“break” it is best to say nothing what
ever about it. Extenuation only ren
ders a bad matter worse.
Not long ago a lady was visiting th»
studio of a per trait painter and trying
to make herself as agreeable as possible
in return for a welcome and afternoon
tea. She enjoyed the pictures, although
in each case they seemed to her much
idealized, and she went from one to an
other, civilly expressing her approba
tion.
“Ah,” she said to her hostess, “you
must tell me all about them! Whois
this!”
“Mrs. Lorraine.”
"I don’t know her; charming, but
of course I can’t speak for the likeness. **
“I try to be faithful, ” said the artist
humbly.
“Oh, I know I I know! And who is
the very pretty lady in brown?”
“That,” said the other, with some
frigidity, “is myself!”—Youth’s Com
panion. '
Below Decks Darina a Fi*kt.
. The position of the men below decks
on a modem vessel of war, they being
isolated by the watertight hatches and
doors, has been frequently commented
upon, but their position is not always
se hard as has been supposed. On the
Brooklyn, during the fight before San
tiago, Admiral Schley sent orderlies
among the men behind casemates and
below decks telling them the effects of
the shots and how the fight was going.
When the chase ‘of the Colon began, the
orderlies went down to the stoke holes
and engine room and told the men
there that the race had begun and ev
erything depended upon them. The wis
dom of the action was partly shown in
th ft rmt/mmci —» AygXMMWt*
Peqple of Stone A*e.
“The stone .age” is not, properly
speaking, an expression of time. It re
fers to a stage in oivilization which
passed long ago in Europe and Aria,
but still lingers in some out of the. way
corners of the world. A report of La
Plata museum in Paraguay describes
the Quayoqui* a small tribe of 500 or
600 living near the headwaters of the
Acaray river, as a true stone age people.
They are timid, harmless folks, desper
ately afraid of the whites, and with
reason, as they have been shamefully
abused by them. They have no weapons
for defense save bows, lanoes and stone
tomahawks. They are undersized and
round headed.
Impreaain* the Nei*hbors.
Mr. Wigsby—See here, my love,
there is sosne mistake The baggage de
livery man has left seven trunks on our
front porch.
Mr* Wigsby (who ha* just returned
from tire mountains)—lmbecile! Don’t
you understand? He’s coming back after
dark for the extra fiva—Cleveland
Plain Dealer. -res. « aate
Het Buiaere-
"Fightbkls hotburiaesft \risid Willie
as he read about the “Skat
thing, they got peppered at by the ene
my, an they they get mustard out by
their own gov’ment ’’—Harper’s Baser.
It take* 72,000 tons of paper to make
the post cards used in Efland each
y®**- Z
In Ptolemy’s time afoytoie Who Idlled
a cat waa put to death.
iw,
DR. GATLING’S GRIT.
W-- .
Tba VtaMos levMter Paaaiit Three**
Manx Herdahlpe So Meal SeooeM.
In spite of a trade with an unhappy
name there is a kind of humane second
thought in the ingenuity of the death in
strument maker.
He may Invent something so tetrfbto as
to make war impossible. This view lands
aa internet to the week of De. H. J. Gen-
Ung, the creator at the famous gun that
fires 900 shots a minute. Our eitfpriaa to
bo told that be is really a tender faartod
man grows less when we know how he
was led toeontetvu his muadsrouSwoapem
Seeing Jte tndnfohdsof wounded and
wrecks of regiments return from the front
during the great war for tire Union, ha
thought at the waste of inOwtey and Mme
and life in sending so many men Into a
deadly service. If war must slay, what a
saving would be a single firearm that
would shorten the slaughter ftom months
to minutes md *n*iiy aagmii cntrtsMtag
armies so that they woulilrefueetofooeitl
Dr. Gatling was a man in middle Ilfs
then, but from the ageof fit he had shown
shill as sat invwatar. ThlftMt fruit of IM
was a steamboat propaUar whaaL
hail also originated several labor saving
devices for use in cotton culture, made a
furrow drill thM brought him a fortdne
from the western wheat farmers and pat
ented • hcixiD breakinfir maohine and <
steam plow. He is 80 years old now and
still inventing- Lately congress voted him
840,000 foe his proof experiments in a new
method of casting cannon.
When he invented his propeller and took
it to Washington, he found that Ericsson
had just secured a patent for a similar de
sign, and all his labor was thrown away.
A few years later he lost two-thirds of the
money he had realised and Invested from
the sale of his wheat drill. After he com
pleted the “Gatling gun" a fire destroyed
all hta WoA and hie patterns. When a
year er two later he had duplicated hir
patteKM aad placed aa instrument before
the public, a rascally agent ran off with
every «Mt of the sale* It Is a robust
quality at seel «ba» can fight disappoint
ment repeatedly and try again.—Chicago
Tribune.; J '
Wasted, eifoafo-
.x A fin* whirit deals in Angora cats re
cently received two applications far pets
vridaaftakfoat follows:
From a* engine builder In Kanns City:
“Specifications for oat—not too vicious,
not toe gentle, not too old, not too young,
any color ereept Spaniefo ’’
And the foUowluir from a druggist in
Grand Bapids: ,
“It seems ridiculous to Introduce anoth
er cat to the alseady overcrowded cat pop--
ulattea of Grand RapMa, because in these
warm eummer evenings a stranger might
readily Infer that the cate own the town.
It is said that among tiro feline tribe we
have an undue number of what are called
moon cate This special variety of cate
when the moon is shining bright are ad
dictod'towhat doctors caß curVaturoof
the spine.
“Theyareoollefi moon cats becanaeJ>
has been ascertained from reliable souroea
that their tails during the process of spinal
curvatureare pointed in tiro direction of
that luminary. The electrietty from the
moon is attracted to the end of the tall
and runs along tire course of tirot append
age to tire spinal ettfimn. From this It
travail to the cerebellum, which organ be
oomes surdtarged and finally emtte sound
through tiro natural meretnre.
“I tab* ft for gronMFWti Angora
belongs tea distinct breed, domestic in its
habita, WHI nOt goeut wlth tbe boy* at
nigMend return with mutilated features
in the sacMilng. We will await Itevree
enoeStti anxiety, will treat Hm well and
trust that hte respeetoble suTToundllngs In
New York have so fanpreased him that he
will never wander from Ms own fireside. ”
—New ToHt Mast and Express.
A Darin* Bobbery.
Between 1 and 2 o’clock on a recent
afternoon a daring theft Was committed In
the banking department of the Bank of
England which Is reserved for purely
banking transactions, general or public
banking btuttrere being done In other de
partments. TsT"w'alk darks” or mes
sengers wart sttit from Messrs. Courts to
the Bank of England with an order for
£B,OOO. One of the clerk* It appears, re
mained outside in a cab, white his col
leagues proceeded to obtain the money,
which was handed to him across the coun
ter in three canvas bags, each of which
contained £I,OOO. The clerk seems to
have had his attention diverted In some
way, and he left the counter. Hlsabsence,
however, was quite momentary, but on
his return one of the bags was missing.
k An alarm waa at once raised, and the po
lice of Old Jewry station were immediate
ly communicated with. It is stated that
almost at the moment of the discovery of
the theft a respectable looking, wdl dressed
man left the banking department, cany
ling a bag in his hand, and it is assumed
that this was the stolen property. The
thief or thieves, however, succeeded In
escaping. The robbery was a particularly,
audacious one and It la believed that the
culprit had “shadowed" Messrs. Courts'!
messengers for some time in order to as
certain the latter’s movements before act-'
Ing.—London Times.
Is ths Klondike Kikiuted?
“The Klondike bubble has about burst,”
said Mr. W. W. Altman of Colorado to a
Pott reporter. “While millions have been
taken out of the placers, aH the best
claims have been appropriated long riamu
and ft is problematical whether any freshl
discoveries approaching these tn rtohasas
will ever be made. The experience of pros
pectors this season in the Copper river
country, of which so much was expected, l
has been an unvarying record of hardship,
failure and disaster. Scores of me* in try
ing to get over the glacier* have test their
live* others have had their health ruined
permanently by exposure to thfr -tateuM
cold, and all have suffered financially. X
saw a number at old friend* after tirotr re
turn from that section, and X *tarest|r'.re*
ognized a man In the party. Nearly ell
of them seemed physical wreck* They
sold their outfits for less than one-fourth
what they cost, and they will never again
turn their laces toward Alaska te search ■
es the yellow metal.”—Washtagton Post.
His Proto.
The Kennebec Journal prints • story of
a witness who refused to tall the smorat
M his gross income. Finally when the
judge ordered him to answer the question
he said: “Your honor, I have no gross in
come. I'm a fisherman of Machias bay,
and it’s all net.”
Tka Ml at asareh.
“Wdl,” Mid the patron of the arts and
muss* “whet do you think of tiro girl’s
voice bow that you have heard her? I—IS
was I who discovered it. *
“I cannot,*’ said the critic, “say too
much for pour industry. tewn Topics.
«===
A fj\;‘ . _ ’ I
n M I■£ 1. M w 1 ■ .■- I
SAN QUENTIN PRISON.
? V-j, ‘
One of ths Most Bemarkabto Oases at
Jail Br»akta«eu Wi.srfi ts.ssapMslied
MF • WIMMi ••
Um '
It is on* thing to entob * thief and it
to another thing to hold him. During a
■rotting of th* ohlefoaf police of all the
larger cities of the United States and
Canada, which occurred at Milwaukee,
there were reminiscences of remarkable
captures and of escapes which bordered
ulosely upon the minculoua
“The most remarkable escape from
prison that I can recall,” said William
A. Pinkerton, “wm that of Frank
Bteadman from the Sun Quentin prison.
But I’ll not tell you about it, for here
le John Glass, who caught Steadman
and aunt him back to San Quentin. ”
Chief ft lass pinched the brown im
perial on his under lip reflectively for
a moment before he responded to the
looks of inquiry bent upon him by those
not familiar with the story.
"The esoap* to which you refer, Pin-
was made after I eant Steadnum
to San Quentin and not before. I was
not the fortunate one to get him after
that last wonderful break. And to tell
the truth, I have never taken to myself
much credit for taking him the time I
did, for it was to a considerable degree
a matter of good fortune. You aee, we
were just at that time keeping our eyea
open for a bank robber by the name of
Barnes, who had gone into one of the
banka out there, covered the one man
who happened to be alone in the place
at the time, looked him up in the vault,
and then coolly walked out of the bank
and out of sight with all the funds he
oould get his hands on.
“One day a man answering closely
the description we had of Bane* step
ped off the train at Dos Angele*. We
took him in tow at once, but found
we did not have the bird we were after.
However, we managed to hold him
long enough to find out that he waa
Ifrank Steadman, who had become no
torious even at that time as a nooessful
jail breaker. He toad four or five escapes
tram prison in southern Indiana credit
ed to him, had got away from Joliet
and had still seven yean to do at the
Illinois prison;'had also been at San
Quentin, and had escaped from there
with five yean unfinished.
“Steadman was a machinist
session, and a burglar by inclination.
When he wfi* rent back to San Quentin
to finish hi* time, he was put to work
with other convicts in the engine room.
It was here that an idea came into his
brain that for absolute daring and fear
lessness was typical of the man. Ha had
noticed that every evening at th* time
the man working in the engine room
were lined np to be marched away, th*
machinery waa stopped at exactly th*
same moment. He had observed aa well
that a window leading to an adjacent
'raoCMfokmakte from the top of the big
belt of the engine. From that
roOfdifima possible to reach the outer
wall-of the priaou. Beyond the wall
was freedom. He had eaoapad ao many
time*that hl* mind reverted again and
again to the window high up on the
wall of'th* engine room. Apparently it
was beyesid all possibility of being
reached. Nd ladder was to be obtainad.'
Had such a thing been even atandlng
in piaoa agafaist the wall, to break
from the Une and scale it with eatlik*
dexterity, although the work of but*
few aecooda, he wall knew would be
futile posribiy foteL Bultete travel
fastek than J«ga, and th* guard* were
not bad shot* But desperate deed* de
mand > desperate nareu* Some mind*
may wotto with an ingenuity bora of
despair; but flteartrmm’a waa of « differ
ent caHbar. Hi* piana were the out«
growth es steadfast optimtoan.
“One d«r thareoame to him a* if by
inspi**ti<m the thought that the big belt
might be the m**na es carrying him to
his goat He found that it was imp oast
ble to oonnt the revolutiona of the driv
ing wheel, het there were lacinga in
the broad belt, which he waa able to
distinguish as a aortof blur aa it paaaed
a given point For days and days he
counted, ’•nd In hie cell at niffh* he
spent his Mme In calculations. He dis-
CUVUrQu Wl® 6XaCt duxumtox
the wteOaieter minute He learned
also by eonatant observation just how
many tifte* the belt went round after
the
"Wtaft the Hm tad
a -ft if-.. - -a--
D66D wlMlWl W*TURmi ■ • wTO CIOW OX Win
Wheel tagMß
to loee ite nwmratom, suddenly • tab'
-A At- I^—A_
viot spriiny Trom vne nne v leßpen to tne
Deis, wivn otnwcrwoßeci ams grappiwg
taither. He tad
rnlortattrf 1 Wfffl tfao wtittorth that w<mM
be reguirefr for iifo terrific wrench did
not leenurhla grafoL Outward and up-
‘ Meatotl IL -r <'
WaTtoK m wrung iinwi no rtncireci win
topam«KMtrt«f ffrooftoumfisNaoe. The
niotvy or ms eatonumoß naa reapea iw
ttm * ■ tort,
FOWraavU XaW Dnlv BvOppOCU Xlu MMpnU VO
M« foreh thrnngh the windott
ana wwgvree oeme convicts or guaraa
had iherMred ttem their Mtotririimant
He fofafclil Wjift guards coat and hat,
dropped from the Wall and got away in
the <huk of the evening. lamincHned
to beHevu that a* amathematioal propo
sititet that was about as perfect a piece
cf ttdafr assuymmeveracaompliatari.”
“And did he get avry without re
capture?*’ some one asked.
“No, X am almortaorry to my, he did
not,** answered the Loa Angahre chief,
“for that righto to bo the de
bine* so much dt dariuf and foeverorosa
Steadman waa tefctß d»lm Mt * aboai
time and put-to work at hi*. oM job.
There are bare ever that high window
above the big drive belt now. Not long
after thia fltefidiaftt cat aad nearly MH
€Q Oun OK VBO OCOOk CCuITimWD<X XS DOW
serving out an additional aentencefor
attempted murder at the Folsom prison,
which la situated some 28 miles from
Sacramento. ” Chicago Inter Ocean.
Ur NX ll] rl h 1 I
The Kind You Wave Alwayo Bought, and which baa been
in use fdr ovtor 30 year*, baa borne the aignatttre es
AL -JZ- Ma Mr-
. aonal supmwiakmainca Itainilanegr-
AllirairaoMtodeMforayMtbtiSL
AH Counterfeits, Itnltatfama and Substitute* arw but Ex
periment* that trifle with and endanger the hraitb of
Infhnta and ClrfMren—Experience agUn*t Experiment.
What is CASTORIA I
*> Castoria i* a substitute for Castor Oil, Phregorle, Ifiropa
and Soothing Syrups. It i* Harmless and Pleasant. It
contain* neither oipium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. It* age is its guarantee. It dtoati ujM Worm*
and allay* Feverishness. It cure* Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It rctteTM Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It aasimfiate* the Food, rfiffnlate* the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural atees.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
OKMUIN* CASTORIA ALWAYS I
Bears the Signature of _ I
The Kind You We Always Bought |
In Use For Over 30 Years.
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—GET YOUB —
JOB PRINTING
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DONE AT
The Morning Call Office. M
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We have just supplied our Job Office with a complete line ol Stabosrorv
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way at
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADB
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STATEMENTS, IRCULARB,
ENVELOPES, 4 None,
MORTGAGES, PROGRAM*
CARDS, POSTERS
DODGERS, n.d ETC |
Wc c*ny ue >st ine of FNVEI/TFES vw ifvti : this trad*.
An allracfivc POSTER cf aay size can be issued on short notux.
Our prices for work oi all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained roe
aay office in the state. When yon want job printing dj anj ifiurijiWr
tai Sata&ctloii guarantaue*
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2LLL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.
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i Out of town orders will receive
prompt attention.
J. P. & S B. Sawtell.
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