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FOOTSTEPS OF GOD.
» 1 • •
REV. DR. TALMAGE FINDS HIS IM
PRINT EVERYWHERE.
Th* Beauties «f Mature Faraiah *
Theme F*r a Pawerfal leraea.
Weald Abolish AU Creeds wad »♦-
aemlaatioas.
[Copyright. 1898, at^« rlcan I>reM A ”°'
Washington, Oct. 10.—Dr. Talmage in
Sta foaiah xxxv, «’ “ Streamß ln the
dooert; p g “He toucheth the
Jrfy first text means irrigation. It means
the water* at the Himalaya or the Pyre
neesor the Sierra Nevadas poured through
and aqueducts for the fertilization
of the valleys. It means the process by
which the last mile of American barren
ness will be made an apple orchard, or an
orange grove, or a wheat field, or a cotton
plantation, or a vineyard—“streams in the
dtaert.” My second text means a volcano
lite Vesuvius or Cotopaxi, or it means
the geysers of Yellowstone park or of
California. You see a hill calm and still
and for ages Immovable, but the Lord out
of-the heavens puts his finger on the top
of it, and from it rise thick and impres
sive vapors. “He toucheth the hills, and
they smoke I”
Although my journey across the con
tinent this summer was for the eighth
time, more and more am I Impressed with
the divine hand in its construction and
with its greatness and grandeur, and more
arid more am I thrilled with the fact that
it [s all to be irrigated, glorified and Eden
i«od. What a change from the time when
Di nisi Webster on yonder Capitollne hill
M d to the American senate in regard to
th > center of this continent and to the re
gions on the Pacific coast: “What do you
want with this vast, worthless area, this
region of savages and wild beasts, of des
erts and cactus, of shifting sands and
prairie dogs? To what use oould We ever
put these great deserts or these great
niouptains, impenetrable and covered
with eternal snow? What can we ever hope
toido with the western coast, rook bound,
cheerless and uninviting and not a harbor
on it? I will never vote one cent from the
public treasury to place the Pacific coast
one inch nearer Boston than it now is."
What a mistake the great statesman made
when he said that 1 AU who have crossed
the continent realize that the states on the
Pacific ocean wUI have quite as grand op
portunities as the states on the Atlantic,
and all this realm from sea to sea to be the
Lord’s cultivated possession.
A Cross oa the Mountain.
Do you know what In some respects Is
the most remarkable thing between the
Atlantic and Pacifier It is the figure of
a cross on a mountain in Colorado. It is
called the “Mount of the Holy Cross.'*
A horizontal crevice filled with perpetual
snow and a perpendicular crevice filled
with snow, but both the horizontal line
and the perpendicular line so marked, so
bold, so significant, so unmistakable, that
all who pass in the daytime within many
miles are compelled to see it. There are
some figures, some contours, some moun
tain appearances, that you gradually make
out after your attention is called to them.
a man’s face on the rocks in the White
mountains. - So a maiden’s form cut in
the granite of the Adirondacks. So a city
in the moving clouds. Yet you have to
look under the pointing of your friend or
guide for some time before you can see the
similarity. But the first instant you
glance at this side of the mountain in
Colorado, you cry out: “A cross!- A
cross!** Do you say that this geological
inscription just happens so? No! That
- cross on the Colorado mountain is not a
human device or an accident of nature or
the freak of an earthquake. The hand of
God out it there and set it up for the na
tion to look at Whether set up in rock
before the cross of wood was set up on the
bluff back of Jerusalem or set up at some
time since that assassination, I believe the
Creator meant it to suggest the most nota
ble event in all the history of this planet,
and he hung it there over the heart of this
continent to indicate that the only hope
for this nation is in the cross on which
our Immanuel died. The clouds were
vocal at our Saviour’s birth, the rooks
rent at his martyrdom, why not the walls
of Colorado bear the record of the crucifix
ion?.
First, consider the immensity of this
continental possession. If it were only a
small tract of land, capable of nothing
better than sagebrush and with ability
only to support prairie dogs, I should not
have much enthusiasm in wanting Christ
to have it added to his dominion. But its
immensity and affluence no one can imag
ine unless in immigrant wagon or stage
coach or In rail train of the Union Pacific
or the Northern Pacific or the Canadian
Pacific or the Southern Pacific he has
traversed it.
~ A Vast Domain.
I supposed in my boyhood, from Its size
on the map, that California was a few
yards across, a ridge of land on which one
must walk cautiously lest he hit his head
against the Sierra Nevada on one side or
slip off Into the Pacific waters on the
other. California, the thin slice of land,
as I supposed it to be iff boyhood, I have
found to be larger than all the states of
New England and all New York state and
all Pennsylvania added together, and if
you add them together their square miles
fall far short of California. And then all
those newborn states of the Union, North
and South Dakota, Washington, Montana,
Idaho and Wyoming. Each state on em
pire in size. -nV? L -
“Butk”says someone, “in calculating
the Immensity of our continental acreage
you must remember that vast reaches of
our public domain are uncultivated heaps
of dry sand, and the ‘Bad Lands’ of Mon
tana and the Great American Desert.” I
am glad you mentioned that. Within 95
yean there will not be between the Atlan
tic and Pacific coasts 100 miles of land
not reclaimed either by farmers* plow or
mlnen* crowbar. By irrigation, the wa
ters of the rivers and the showers of heav
en, in what are called the rainy season,
will be gathered into great reservoirs
and through aqueducts let down where
and when the people want them. Utah
han object lesson. Some parts of that
territory which were so barren that a spear
grass could not have been raised there
m 100 yean are now rich as Lancaster
county farms of Pennsylvania or Westches
ter faring of New York or Somerset ooun
ty farms of New Jersey. Experiments
have proved that ten acres of ground irri
gated from waters gathered in great hy
drological basins will produce as much as
, aores from the downpour of rain as seen
in our regions. We have our freshets and
our droughts, but in those lands which
"a to be scientifically Irrigated there win
oe neither freshets nor droughts. As you
take a pitcher and get it full of water, and
then set it on a table and take a drink out
of it when you arc thirsty and never think
of drinking a piteherful all at once, so
Montana and Wyoming and Idaho wIU
catch the rains of their rainy season and
take up all the waters of their riverain
great pitchers of reservoirs and refresh
their land whenever they will.
The work has already been grandly be
gun by the United States government.
Over 400 lakes have already been officially
taken possession of by the nation for the
great enterprise of irrigation. Rivera that
have been rolling idly through these re
gions, doing nothing on their way to the
sea, will be lassoed and corralled and pen
ned up until such time as the farmers
need them. Under the same processes the
Ohio, the Mississippi and all the other
rivers win be taught to behave themselves
better, and great basins will be made to
catch the surplus of waters in times of
freshet and keep them for times of drought.
The Irrigating process by which all the
arid lands between the Atlantic and Pa
cific oceans are to be fertilized is no now
experiment.
Jehovah’s Throne.
It has been going on successfully hun
dreds of years in Spain, in China, in In
dia, in Russia, in Egypt. About 800,000,-
000 of people of the earth today are kept
alive by food raised on irrigated land.
And here we have allowed to Ho waste,
given up to rattlesnake and bat and
prairie dog, lands enough to support Whole
nations of industrious population. The
work begun will be consummated. Hero
and there exceptional lands may be stub
born and refuse to yield any wheat or
corn from their hard fists, but if the hoe
fail to make an impression the miner’s
pickax wi|l discover the reason for it and
bring up from beneath those unproduc
tive surfaces coal and iron and lead and
copper and silver and gold. Godspeed the
geologists and the surveyors, the engi
neers and the senatorial commissions, and
the capitalists, and the new settlers, and
the husbandmen, who put their bibln and
hand and heart to this transfiguration of
the American continent. “Streams in the
desert!” .OC.-T] I ■
But while I speak of the immensity of
the continent I must remark it is not an
Immensity of monotone or tameness. The
larger some countries are the worse for
the world. This continent is not more re
markable for its magnitude than for its
wonders of construction. Yosemite and
the adjoining California regions! Who
that has seen them can think of them
without having his blood tingle? Trees
now standing there that were old when
Christ lived! These monarchs of foliage
reigned before Cmsar or Alexander, and
the next 1,000 years will not shatter their
scepter. They are the masts of the con
tinent, their canvas spread on the winds,
while the old ship bears on its way
through the ages.
That valley of the Yosemite is eight
miles lohg and a half mile wide and 3,000
feet deep. It seem* a* if it had been the
meaning of Omnipotence to crowd into as
small a place as possible some of the most
stupendous scenery of the world. Some
of the cliffs you do not stop to measure by
feet, for they are literally a mile high.
Steep so that neither foot of man nor beast ■
ever scaled them, they stand in everlast
ing* defiance. If Jehovah has a throne on
earth, these are its white pillars. Stand
ing down in this great chasm of the val
ley, you look up, and yonder is Cathedral
rock, vast, gloomy minster built for the
silent worship of the mountains. Yonder
is Sentinel rook, 8,870 feet high, bold, soli
tary, standing guard among the ages, ita
top seldom touched until a bride one
Fourth of July mounted it and planted
the natfonjd standards, and the people
down in’the valley looked up and saw the
head of the mountain turbaned with stars
and stripes. Yonder are the Three broth
ers, 4,000 feet high; Cloud’s rest, North
and South dome, and the heights never
captured save by the fiery bayonets of the
thunderstorm.
He Toucheth the Hili*.
No pause for the eye, no stopping place
for the ipfod. Mountains hurled on
mountains. Mountains in the wake of
mountains. Mountains flanked by moun
tains. Mountains split. Mountains
ground. Mountains fallen. Mountains
triumphant. As though Mont Blanc and
the Adirondacks and Mount Washington
were here uttering themselves in one
magnificent chorus of rock and precipice
and waterfall. Sifting and dashing
through the rocks the water comes down.
The Bridal Veil falls so thin you can see
the face of the mountain behind it. Yon
der is Yosemite falls, dropping 2,684 feet,
16 times greater descent than that of Ni
agara. These waters dashed to death on
the rocks, so that the white spirit of these
slain waters .ascending in robe of mist
seeks the heavens. Yonder is Nevada
falls, plunging 700 feet, the water in ar
rows, the water in rocks, the water in
pearls, the water in amethysts, the water
in diamonds. That cascade flings down
the rocks enough jewels to array all the
earth in beauty and rushes on until it
drops into a very hell of waters, the smoke
of their torment ascending forever and
ever.
But the most wonderful part of this
American continent is the Yellowstone
park. My two visits there made upon me
an Impression that will last forever. Go
In by the Monelda route as we did this
summer and save 250 miles of railroading,
your stagecoach taking you through a
day of sce*ery as captivating and sublime
as the Yellowstone park itself. After all
poetry has emanated itself concerning
Yellowstone park, and all the Moran* and
Blerstadta and the other enchanting artiste
have completed their canvas, there will be
other revelations to make and other stories
of its beauty and wrath, splendor and
agony, to be recited. The Yellowstone
park is the geologist's paradise. By cheap
ening of travel may it become the nation’s
playground! In some portions of it there
seems to be the anarchy/of the elements.
Fire and water, and fne vapor born of
that marriage, terrific. Geyser cones or
hills of crystal that have been over 5,000
years growing! In places’the earth, throb
bing, sobbing, groaning, quaking with
aqueous paroxysm. At the expiration of
every 65 minutes one of the geysers toss
ing ita boiling water 185 feet in the air
and then descending into swinging rain
bow* “He toucheth the hills and they
smoke. ” Caverns of pictured walls large
enough for the sepulcher of the human
race. Formations of stone in shape and
color of calla lily, of heliotrope, of rose, of
cowslip, of sunflower and of gladiolus
Sulphur and arsenic and oxide of Iron,
with their delicate pencils, turning the
hill* into a Luxemburg or a Vatican pic
ture gallery. The so called Thanatopsi*
geyser, exquisite as the Bryant poem it
was named after, and Evangeline geyser,
lovely as the Longfellow heroine it oom
memorates.
Sunrise and Sunset.
Wide reaches of stone of intermingled
colors, blue as the sky, green as the foliage,
crimson as the dahlia, white as the snow,
spotted as tbo leopard, tawny as the lion,
gristly as the bear, in circles, In angles,
in stars, in coronets, in stalactites, in
stalagmite* Here and there are petrified
growths, or the dead trees and vegetables
of other ages, kept through a nrocess of
natural embalmment. In some places wa
ters as innocent and smiling as a child
making* first attempt to walk from ita
mothers lap, and not far off as foaming
and frenzied and ungovernable as •
maniac in struggle with his keepers.
But after you have wandered along the
geyserite enchantment for days and begin
to feel that there can bo nothing More of
interest to see you suddenly ocrae upon
the peroration of all majesty and gran
deur, the Grand canyon. It is here that it
seems to mo—and I speak it with rever
ence—Jehovah seems to have surpassed
him self. It seems agreat gulch let down
into the eternities. Here, hung up and let
down and spread abroad, are all the colors
of land and sea and sky. Upholstering of
the Lord God Almighty. Bost work of the
Architect of worlds. Sculpturing by the
Infinite. Masonry by an Omnipotent
trowel Yellow! You never saw yellow
untesa you saw it there. Red I You never
saw rad unless you saw it there. Violet!
You never saw violet unless you saw it
th«M> Triumphant banners of color. In a
cathedral of basalt, sunrise and sunset
married by the setting of rainbow ring.
Gothic arches, Corinthian capitals and
Egyptian basilicas built before human
architecture was born. Huge fortifications
of granite constructed before war forged
ita first cannon. Gibraltar* and Sevasto
pol that never can be taken. Alhambras,
where kings of strength and queens of
beauty reigned long before the first earth
ly crown was empparled. Thrones on
which no one but thaKing of heaven and
earth ever sat. Fount of waters at which
the hills are baptized, white the giant
cliffs stand around as sponsors. For thou
sands of years befoae that boom was un
veiled to human sight the elements were
busy, and the geysers were hewing away
with their .hoi chisel, and glaciers were
pounding with their cold hammers, and
. hunteanes were cleaving with their light
ning strokes, and hallstones giving the
finishing andafter all these forces
of nature had done their beet in our cen
tury the curtain dropped, and the world
had a new and divinely inspired revela
tion, the Old Testament written on papy
rus, the New Testament written on parch
ment and this last Testament written on
the rocks.
A Hall of Judament.
Hanging over one of the cliffs, I looked
off until I could not get my breath; then,
retreating to a less exposed place, I looked
down again. Down there is a pillar of
rock that In certain conditions of the at
mosphere looks like a pillar of blood.
Yonder are 50 feet of emerald on a base of
500 feet of opal. Wall of chalk resting on
pedestals of beryl. Turrets of light trem
bling on floors of darkness. The brown
heightening into golden. Snow of crys
tal melting into fire of carbuncle. Flam
ing red cooling into meet. Cold blue
warming into saffron. Dull gray kin
dling into solferjno. Morning twilight
flushing midnight shadow* Auroras
crouching among rock*
Yonder is an eagle’s nest on a shaft of
basalt. Through an eyeglass w* see
among it the young eagles, but the stout
est arm of our group cannot hurl a stone
near enough to disturb the feathered do
mesticity. Yonder are heights that would
bp chilled With horror but for the warm
robe ot forest foliage with which they are
enwrapped. Altars of worship at which
nations might kneel. Domes of chalced-1
ony on temples of porphyry. See all this
oarnage of color up and down the cliff*
It must have been the battlefield of the
war of the elements. Here are all the col
ors of the wall ot hoaven, neither the sap
phire, nor the chrysolite, nor the topaz,
nor the jacinth, nor the amethyst, nor the
jasper, nor the 12 gates of 12 pearls want
ing. If spirits bound from earth to heav
en could pass up by Way of this canyon,
the dash of heavenly beauty would not be
so overpowering. It would only be from
glory to glory. Ascent through such
earthly scenery, in which the crystal is so
bright, would be fit preparation for the
“sea of glass mingled with fire,”
Standing there in the Grand canyon of
the Yellowstone park for the most part we
held our peace, but after awhile it flashed
upon me with such power I could not help
but say to my comrades, “What a hall this
would be for the last judgment 1” * See
that mighty cascade with the rainbows at
the foot It. Those waters congealed
and transfixed with the agitations of that
day, what a place they would make for
the shining feet ot a Judge of quick and
dead I And those rainbow* look now like
the crown* to be oast at his feet. At the
bottom of this great canyon is a floor on
which the nations of the earth might
stand, and all up and down£he*e galleries
of rock the nation* of heaven might sit.
And what reverberation of archangel*’
trumpet there would be through all these
gorge*and from these cavernsand over all
these height*. Why should not the great
est of all the days the would shall ever see
close amid the grandest scenery Omnip
otence ever built?
Christ’* Dominion.
Oh, the sweep of the American conti
nent I Sailing up Puget sound, its shores
so bold that for 1,500 miles a ship's prow
would touch the shore before Its keel
touched the bottom 1 On one of my visits
I said, “This is the Mediterranean of
America.” Visiting Portland and Tacoma
and Seattle and Victoria and Port Towns
hend and Vancouver and other cities of
tbo northwest region I thought to myself,
“These are the Bostons, New Yorks,
Charleston* and Savannahs ot the Pacific
coast. ” But after all this summer’s jour
neying and my other journey* westward
in other summers, I found that I had seen
only a part of the American continent, for
Alaska is as far west of San Francisco as
the coast of Maine is east of it, so that the
central city of the American continent is
San Francisco.
I have said these things about the mag
nitude of the continent and given you a
few specimen* of some of ita wonders to
let you know the comprehensiveness of
Christ’s dominion when he takes posses
sion of this continent. Besides that, the
salvation of this continent means the sal
vation of Asia, for we are only 86 mile*
from Asia at the northwest. Only Bering
straits separates us from Asia, and these
will be spanned by a great bridge. The
36 miles of water between these two conti
nent* are not all deep sea, but have three
islands, and there are also shoals which
will allow pier* for bridges, and for the
most of the way the water is only about
20 fathoms deep.
The Americo-Asiatic bridge which will
yet span those straits will make America,
Asia, Europe and Africa one continent.
So, you see, America evangelized, Asia
Will be evangelized, Europe taking Asia
from ore side and America taking it from
the other aide. Your children will cros>
that bridge. America and Asia and Eu
rope all one, what subtraction from the
pangs of seasickness and the prophecies
in Revelation will he fulfilled, “there
shall be ho more fittt do I msaa
literally that this AmeHcan continent is
going to be all gospel! -<>d? Ido. Christo
pher Columbus, when he went ashore
from the Santa Maria, and his second
brother Alonzo, when he went ashore iron
the Pinta, and his third brother Vincent,
when be went ashore from th* Nina, took
possession of this country tn ths name of
the Father and th* Son and the Holy
Ghost. Satan has no more right to this
country than I have to your pocketbook.
To hear him talk on the roof of the tern-
C* where he proposed to give Christ the
ngdoms of this world and the glory of
them, you might suppose that aatan was a
great capita] Ist or that he was loaded up
With real estate, when the old miscreant
never owned an aero or an inch of ground
on thte planet. Far that reason 1 protest
.against something 1 heard and saw thte
sbqimer and cjj>*B Mtutuers in Montan*
and UrcgorrTCul Wys.nlng and Idaho and
Colorado and Cwffoi nla. They have given
devil tetic nainta to many places in th*
west and nori I: west.
Away With Weed*.
As soon as you get in Yellowstone park
or California you have pointed out to you
places cursed with such names as “The
Devil’s Slide," “The Devil’s Kitchen,"
“The Devil’s Thumh,” Th* Devil’s Pul
pit,” “The Devil's Mushpot,” “The Dev-.
H’s Teakettle," “The Devil’s Sawmill,”
“The Devil’s Machine Shop,” “The Dev
il’s Gate" and so on. Now it is very much
needed that geological surveyor or con
gressional committee or group of distin
guished tourists go through Montana and
Wyoming am! California and Colorado
and give other name* to these places. All
these regions belong to the Lord and to •
Christian nation, and away with such
Plutonic nomenclature. But how is thte
continent to be gospelised? The pulpit and
a Christian printing press harnessed to
gether will be the mightiest team for the
first plow. Not by the power of cold,
formalistic theology, not by ecclesiastical
technicalities. I am sick of them, and the
world is sick of them. But it will be done
by the warm hearted, sympathetic presen
tation of the fact that Christ is ready to
pardon all our sins, and heal all our
wounds, and save us both for thte world
and the next. Let your religion of glaciers
crack off and fall into the Gulf stream and
get melted. Take all your creeds of all
denominations and drop out of them all
human phraseology and put in only scrip
tural phraseology, and you will see how
quick the people will jump after them.
On the Columbia river we saw the salm
on jump clear out of the water in different
places, I suppose for the purpose of getting
the insects. And if when we want to fish
for men we could only have the right kind
of bait they will spring out above the
flood of their sins and sorrows to reach it.
The Young Men's Christian associations
of America will also do part of the work.
They are going to take the young men of
thte nation for God. These institutions
seem in better favor with God and man
than ever before. Business men and cap
italists are awaking to the fact that they
can do nothing better in the way of living
beneficence or in last will and testament
than to do what Mr. Marquand did for
Brooklyn When he made the Young Men’s
Christian palace possible, These institu
tions will get our young men all over the
land into a stampede for heaven. Thu* we
will all in some way help on the work,
you with your ten talents, I with five,
somebody else with three. It.is estimated
that to irrigate the arid and desert lands
of America as they ought to be irrigated
it wUI cost about 1100,000,000 to gather
the waters into reservoirs. A* much con
tribution and effort as that would Irrigate
with gospel influences all the waste places
of this continent. Let us by prayer and
contribution and right living all help to
fill the reservoirs. You will cany a bucket,
and you a cup, and even a thimbleful
would help. And after awhile God will
send the floods of mercy so gathered pour
ing down over all the land, and some of
us on earth and some of us in heaven will
sing with Isaiah, “In the wilderness wa
ters have broken out and streams in the
desert,” and with David, “There la a river
the streams whereof shall make glad the
sight of God. ” Oh, fill up the reservoirs.
America for God!
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,J will sell to the highest bidder, be
fore the court house door, in 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. Bhackklvokd, Adm’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 Tuesday in November, 1898, fifty
acres of land in Union District, said coun
ty, bounded as follows: On the North by
A. Ogletree, East, South and West by J.
J, Elder. Bold for the purpose of en
croaching on corpus of wards estate for
their maintenance and education, October
3,1898. Mabtha J. Colkman,
Guardian.
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Spalding County.
E. A. Huckaby, administrator de bonis
non, on the estate of Nathan Fomby, da?
ceased, makes application for leave to sell
forty-two acres of land off lot No. 18, in
LineDreek district, of Spalding county,
Georgia, .bounded as fo'lows: On the
north by 0. 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 debt* of deceased, and tor distri
bution among the heirs.\ Let,*rll 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.
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Aatmaaoneta4te«BiYetM«iiiiiMto.
AU Counterfeits, Imitations aad tluhUtatas are bat Ex
periments that trifle with and health of
Infiusts and Children-Experienoe aflatast experiment, p
What X
Castoria is a substitute for Castor OS* Pareforta, Drops
and floothtaff Syrups. It Is Harmless and Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium* Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its a*o is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays. Feverishness. It cures Diarrheas and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, euros 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.
GENUINE CASTORIA always
Bears the Signature of _
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
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—GET YOUH —
JOB PRINTING
DONE AJT
The Morning Call Office.
X •. \
We have Just supplied our Job Office with a complete Hue ol Btatioacrv
kind* and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way 01
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS
STATEMENTS, IRCULARS,
ENVELOPES, NOTES,
MORTGAGES,
JARDB, POSTERS
DODGERS, E.U ETC
We o*tvy toe beet ins of ENVEIXIFES vw JTvvd : thia trade.
An attraedve POSTER cf any size can be issued on short notica
Our prices for work of all kinds will compare fkvorably with those obtained yob
any office in the state. When you want job printing of any druriititn i>n
call Batlsfection guaranteeu.
ALL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.
'Lu
Out of town orders will receive
...
prompt attention.
I
• : S- *a- *
J. P.&S B. SawtelL .
X