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Ordinary'* Adv*rti**m*nt?,
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rARDINARY’S OFFICE,
VZ Spalding County, Go.
Kn. Marte Ford, aa administratrix of
the estate of P. 8 B. Ford, deceased, makes
application for leave to sell the following
real estate, described as follows:
Part of land lot 110 In 14th District of
Fulton county, Ga., beginning at point on
the west side of Doray street, 80 feet north
from the N. W. corner of West Hunter
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
asjper plat of Harry Krouse of April 15,
Alim, part of land lot No. 47 in the
14th District of Felton county, Ga., com
mencing at a point 100 ft south of North
Ava. same being south-west corner of a
certain tract sold by Miss Mary Smith to
ff. F. Spalding and W. B. Sheldon on an
unnamed street, thence running south
along said street 114 ft, thence east along
an unnamed street 200 ft, more or lees,
thence north 114 ft, thence west 200 ft,
more or less, 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 Fulton 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 side of Violet Ave., 50 ft to
starting point. The same being known
as lot No. 105 as per plat of Auction sate
of 8. W. Goode & Co., of said property
April 19th, 1887.
Also, part of land lot Nd. 79 in 14th
District of Fulton county, Ga., situated as
follows: Commencing at the south east
corner of Venable street and Orchard Ave.
and running east along the south side Os
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 on th*east side of Violet Ave.,
850 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 along said alley 50 ft, thence west
120 ft to Violet Ave., the starting point,
same being known as No. til 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 east/md 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 tn
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.
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 therefoie 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. 8,1898.
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 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. 3,1898.
A. B. Skackblfobd, 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 sate, 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. Sold for the-purpose of en
croaching on corpus of wards estate for
their maintenance and education. October
8,1898. Mabtha J. Coleman,
Guardian.
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 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 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.
D<>«:: Tohnrrn Spit and Smoke Tear Lift Away.
1 o quit t< banco easily and forever, be mag
of life, nerve and vigor. take No-To
tile wnr.-Jcr-wo- kor, mat wakes weak men
Strong. AU. druggists, 60c or Cl. Cureguaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling iiemcdy Co. Chicago ©* New York
LONDON’S HAIR TRADE.
11 ■
Dwrt MaKews *■« CoSna Cea
trtfcata—Seerata u< Price*.
In the little house in Bloomsbury where
■heaves nf human hair are garnered weak
la heavy®
Now is the season when the British
matron renews her scant locks: when the
Adonis ot 90 buys himself another scalp,
and the fair maid whose thatch is light
padsit out with hair harvested fnem other
Before folk go on a holiday they pay a
visit to the hairdreseef, and the demand
for fringes, bandeaux, invisible coverings,
scalpettes, top curls, fancy toupees and
semioovered hair stems Waxes great.
Bnt the hairdresser does hot always keep
these things in stock. He goes to the
dealer in human hair, apd thither a Daily
Mail representative went—to the second
door round the comer down a street be
neath the shadow of the grim facade of
the highly respectable British museum.
A comely Soot, in the prime of life,
stood behind the counter. “This lot,” he
said, “is known, in the trade ah rag pick
ers’combings." It was a large sheaf of
hair, black, of coarse texture, about six
inches in length. “These tresses,”' he
went on, “are the combings of many
heads. Paris ragpickers gather them.
They are then cleansed, sorted in length
and sold at a very cheap price. Theatrical
wigs are their final destination. They
curl beautifully.”
How to keep the hair th cirri is a knotty
problem in some boudoirs. And yet it is
easily done. Twist the hair tightly round
a pipe. Then boil it; afterward bake ft.
It will never come uncurled.
Italy and. Stance are the fields which
supply the English human hair markets.
The coarser grades coms fifoxn the former
country, from Naples and Palermo and the
finer ones from France. Girls in the sun
ny land clothe themselves, as did Godiva
of old, in their long locks—only they do
it in a more conventional manner. When
the hair is grown, they attend a fair. Here
are merchants of Paris, reafiy to clip and
pay cash down. And the girls sell their
hair, buy garments, go home, rub in
pomatum and start growing another crop.
A healthy girl with a vigorous scalp will,
grow'two or three marketable crops in
the course of a year.
Prices range from 10 francs to 40 francs
per head of hair. Color purity is the de
termining factor. The hair must be the
same shade throughout from stem to tip.
In Scandinavia and Germany the color
varies greatly. The last Wave Will be the
yellow of wheat straw, while at its source
it is almost ruddy. Such hair tees .no
use for the English market. It is sent to
America.
Human hair is of al! lengths, but the
longest grows on corpses. There is no
telling which is cut from the living or
from' the dead. But from the coffin are
gleaned beauty’s loveliest tresses. And
the price of them is 12 shillings an ounce.
Many ladies visit the little house in
Bloomsbury. They shake out their locks
and say: “Isn’t it beautiful! What will
you give!” And they ask a fabulous price,
as if their head carried 10 to 12 pounds of
hair instead of 10 to 12 ounces.
It is comforting to know that In the
matter of hair England still holds her
own. Thirty years in the trade show that
we are not becoming more bald. The de
mand for scalps is even less than formerly.
In Germany it is different. Teutons don’t
keep their hair on in the way they used to.
If nations resemble Samson and their
strength lies in their flowing locks, Brit
ain in her old age grows no weaker.—
London Mail.
A Famous Fencing Master.
In Bertrand, the old fencing master,
who, at the age of 81 has just laid down
his foil forever, lovers of the armeblanche
have lost a teacher who in his day was un
surpassed and who had the honor of
founding not merely a school of fencing,.
but an epoch in the art he taught. For it
was the elder Bertrand who perfected (if
he did not originate) that most deadly of
all strokes, the riposte, which is a light
ninglike reply to the adversary’s attack,
delivered so swiftly after the parry that
the opponent has not had time to recover
from the effort and protect himself.
The Italian school has developed out of
this a system of “offensive parries,”
which combines the guard and the riposte
in one movement, and is of very fatal ac
curacy with such a weapon as that of Plni.
But it was Bertrand who really developed
the full beauties of foil fencing, just when
dueling had been definitely stopped. Such
paradoxes are common in the history of
the sword, for it was the invention ot
gunpowder and the consequent discard
ing of heavy armor that introduced the
supremacy of the rapier and the point.
The superiority of Bertrand in his early
days in Paris was testified in a manner
that has distinguished classical preced
ence. For every maitre d’armes interro
gated on the subject by M. Legouve placed
Bertrand second in the list of honor with
out a single exception.—St. James Ga
zette.
Turtles In tfce Bahamas.
The shallow seas around the Bahama
islands abound with turtles, and turtle
shell valued locally at £5,600 was export
ed last year from the colony. The edible
turtle is known as the “green” one and is
also plentiful in these waters. When small
ones are caught, they are deposited in large
ponds known as “crawls,” where, after
having been branded with their owner’s
mark, they are left to feed upon a particu
lar kind of marine grass until they have
attained a marketable size. Turtle meat
sells in the local markets at threepence per
pound of live weight, and it is probable
that an enterprise for the preparation of a
concentrated form of turtle soup, such as
has recently been established in Jamaica,
would prove a profitable undertaking.—
London Telegraph.
Jack Rabbit and Bulldog.
The Emporia (Kan.) Republican tells
the following queer story: “An Emporia
man heard a disturbance in the night, and
on getting up to see what was the matter
found his bulldog engaged in a desperate
struggle with a jack rabbit. Concluding
that it was dangerous to interfere, he
went back into the house and shut the
door. In a short time the outside struggle
ceased, and, looking up, he was surprised
to see a jack rabbit looking in over the
transom of the front door. In the morn
ing he went out and found the bulldog
dead in the front yard with marks of rab
bit teeth all over hie person, bearing mute
testimony to his breve and desperate
struggle.”
RailrMdiug In Baa* la..
On the new Russian military railway
from Europe teAndijan, on the borders
of the Chinese empire, a treelike shrub
called the sascaoul had to be planted all
along the line through the desert to pre
vent the rails being covered by sand. For
further protection a ribbon of wild oats
runs along both sides of the railway.
A TALE AMORAL. S
Always Propose Beneath a Tree, and ths
Bing May Be Tftrewa In.
"When I was 20 years old, ” said a vet
eran of many dollars, “I was working on
a farm in Massachusetts not far from
Springfield, where lived a pretty little girl
as poor aa I was, ths daughter of a Meth
odist minister. One day under the shade
of a big tree in the churchyard I told her
how mneh there was in my heart and how
little there was in my pocket and asked
her to marry me. She was 17 and silly,
and she consented on the spot. For an
hour or more after that we sat under the
tree talking over the fair and foolish
things that lovers dream, when it occurred
to me that an engagement ring was the
correct thing for such an occasion, and I
began bemoaning the poverty which pre
vented my getting one for the dearest hand
on earth. It was absolutely true, too, for
I really did not have enough money to
buy a tin ring, much less the only kind I
thought Janie ought to have.
“But Janie didn’t care for the ring. She
said we ought to thank Providence that
we had each other and let the old ring go.
She was on the point of saying more, when
she stopped suddenly, gave a little scream
and pointed to something bright in her
greeting to us. At first we were afraid to
touch it, hot we soon got over that, and
as wo looked it over we wondered where
It' had come from, and though we knew
that the days of miracles had passed we
were both inclined to think it was a bless
ing from heaven on our sweet and pure
love.
“There was no one in the tree to have
dropped it as a joke, but as it could not
have reached us by any why other than
from above we proceeded to search the
tree. Nothing could be seen from the
ground, and I climbed up, and there over
in the fork above us, high up, I found a
bird’s nest building and knew that the
builders had picked the ring up some
where, for VariOuii bits of colored ribbon
and rags fluttered about the nest. One of
these pieces bf iilk Janie recognized as the
trimming of a lady's gown who came to
seo her mother, and we decided at onoe
that it was right to see if it belonged to
the lady.
“Thither we went, happy as two chil
dren, and Janie went in and I waited out
side. Presently she called me in, and
When I bad, with many blushes, told the
story of the ring on Janie’s finger she
kissed her, and said it was now mine to do
With as I pleased. She hoped I would not
forget those Who had been my friends
when I had Do diamonds, and then right
there before the lady I had never seen be
fore I slipped Che ring on Jante’s finger
and, kissed her. As soon as I had done
that the lady kissed Janie, and I’ll be shot
if didn’t kiss me, too, and as we went
out there were tears in her eyes glistening
like the diamond on Janie’s finger.”—
Washington Star.
The Übiquitous German.
All that education in its various forms
—primary, technical and even physical—
can do for the German workman is being
done for him. Weak industries receive
bounties. Lines of steamers are heavily
subsidized to carry Germah exports to all
parts of the world. The state railways are
authorized to make special rates for the
oversea trade. German diplomatic agents
abroad exercise pressure in favor of Ger
man merchants. German commercial
houses are planted in every Important for
eign port, and even where they represent
foreign firms they keep a benevolent eye
upon the produce of their own country.
In the conduqt of private undertakings
money is not grudged either for practical
experiment of Tor research. Manufactur
ers submit to sacrifices In order to force an
entry into foreign markets and recoup
themselves with the aid of protective du
ties at home. The whole commercial pol
icy of the country is directed toward the
encouragement and extension of foreign
trade.
Such assistance and encouragement,
given to a population as laborious and
well endowed as the German people, have
produced the results which we are begin
ning to see. Germans are übiquitous.
They have gained a footing In almost ev
ery market.—Nineteenth Century.
Husbands In Brackets.
All the bluestocking sisterhood—the
elderly females addicted to bloomers and
the spectacled, strong minded advocates of
woman’s rights—are performing a mental
jig. Hyphenated husbands have become
a byword, but it remained for the Ken
tucky Federation of Women’s Clubs to dis
cover that man’s proper position is in a
bracket Hereafter we shall hear not of
Mrs. Mary Sullivan-O’Brien, but of Mrs.
Mary Sullivan, With an Inconsequent
“O’Brien” added at the tail end of the
name in small letters and in brackets.
The woman who had the honor of sug
gesting the bracket aa a sort of scrap bas
ket in which to throw the inconvenient
appendage of a husband’s name is Mrs.
James Leech of Louisville, Ky. Accord
ing to her own convictions, Mrs. Leech’s
name should be recorded Mrs. Maria Smith
—[Leech].
The resolution read as follows:
“That it shall hereafter be the custom to
enroll all women under their own full
names, and in cases of married women
with their husband’s names in brackets. ”
—New York World.
Injections of Perfume*.
Would you like to give out a perfume
like the body of one who died in the odor
of sanctity! Nothing Is easier. If you
want to smell like violets, make a sub
cutaneous injection of essence of these
flowers. You can vary your perfumed es
sence as you please. The perfume is scarce
ly noticeable unless one gets warm. This
mode of scenting one’s person was discov
ered accidentally.
A morphino maniac was called sudden
ly to Russia. She had not time to lay in
* provision of her favorite drug, but a
complacent doctor promised to send it aft
er her. He did so. But the Russian cus
tom house would not let it pass. The pa
ternal government of Russia forbids the
importation of morphine unless by chem
ists. The morphino maniac as a substi
tute tried essence of violets. She remem
bered that an infusion of violets is sopo
rific. She made her subcutaneous Injection
ath a Pravaz syringe. She fell asleep
a, to her great surprise, awoke in a per
spiration, smelling like a bed of violets.—
London Truth.
Cleaning Carpet*.
Carpets can be cleaned without remov
ing them from the floor by a machine
which has metal strips act inside a casing
to beat the carpet as the cleaner runs over
the floor, a fan being mounted in the top
of the muring to draw the dust into a wa
ter compartment, which has an air passage
covered by a moistened screen to retain
the dust particles.
HE WILL ENLIST NEXT TIME.
A May at Homo Otoervc* the Luck eC a
Maa Who Was a Vol ante* r.
“If there is ever another war, I am go
ing to enlist, regardless of the cause."
This was the oontinustiou of a dinner
talk at a club in this ottj. The speaker
proceeded:
“The other day I saw Mrs. Blank try
ing to hail the driver of aa ice wagon by
yelling at him. I was duinfounded, be
muse the is generally a helpless creature,
and I never heard of her interesting her
self Ln any of the domestic duties of her
bouse. I mentioned the unusual occur
rence to my wife at dinner, and she Said
she thought it was very commendable in
Mrs. Blank. 1 ventured to reply that ft
was not graceful ami that I should not
care to nee my wife yelling a* an iceman
or any man.
“ ‘But, you see,' rejoined my wife m
she passed my cup, ‘lira. Blank’s husband
was a volunteer.’
“ ‘True,’ said I, 'tut bls command nev
er got to the front. No fault of his, I ad
mit. And now he is home and is as
healthy and robust us I am. He told me
himself his army experience was an outing
for him, and that he never felt bettor in
his life.’
“ ‘Quite fmc,’ said my wife, Tmt Mrs.
Blank probably thinks ot what might
have been. I saw her calling to the ice
man—she was not yelling, as you put It,
and she explained to me, deer, that her
husband expressed a desire for a dish ths
preparation of which required an extra al
lowance of ice, and that as he had said he
had not tasted the dish in question since
he enlisted she thought she would have it
prepared, and in order that there might be
no mistake she just put on her hat and at
tended to the order herself. And I think
it was very sweet of her.’
“I immediately-changed the topic. Aft
er a cigar I said I would call up my livery
man and have him send around the vic
toria and team. I thought an evening on
Riverside in the face of the moon about
the proper thing. As I was starting to
the telephone my wife put her arms around
my neck and said she had sent the team
around to Mrs. Blank’s because Mrs.
Blank had said that Mr. Blank had not
been out for a drive since he enlisted.
“Last Saturday I concluded I would
give my wife a bit of a surprise, and at 10
o’clock in the morning I called her over
the wire and told her to have the man
bring her traps for a bit of a cruise. She
thanked mo and said I was thoughtful
and put in some very pretty talk. She said
to-the same treacle tone:
“ ‘Say, Jim, dear, do you care if Mr.
and Mrs. Blank join us!‘
“ ‘Why!’ I shouted back. ‘They had
the rig the other day when I wanted it.
Confound it, can’t we have our yacht one
night alone!’ I asked.
“Well, I waited a minute for the effect,
and then I heard her voice, low and sweet:
‘Jim, dear, I know ft was not just right,
but I had asked them to go aboard this
evening after you came up. I was going
to surprise you. And Mrs. Blank said Mr.
Blank had not been on a yacht since he
enlisted. I thought it would be nloe.’
“And so it goes. Mr. and Mrs. Blank
were at a card party at my house, and my
wife said she hoped I would not skin Mr.
Blank as I used to do, because he had not
been to a card party since he enlisted. Mr.
Blank sent over for my fishing outfit—you
know that outfit, which cost me 8800 three
years ago; never had it out but twice.
Well, I was out of town, and my wife sent
it over, and when I howled about it she
said poor Mr. Blank had not been fishing
since he enlisted.
“And now Mr. and Mrs. Blank and my
wife are away up in the Adirondacks,
'cause Mr. Blank has not been anywhere
since he enlisted. And when he looks at
me and sees me getting red in the face he
shuts one eye and says, ‘Jim, you missed
it when you didn’t enlist.’ Why, d—n his
head, he hasn’t been out of the state J”—
New York Sun.
Philippine Island Eagle A
The Insurrection in the Philippine is
lands, now followed by the attack on Ma
nila by the United States fleet, has brought
to a close a very interesting set of expedi
tions to explorerthe animal life of this very
little known archipelago, says a writer In
Country Life Illustrate. These were con
ducted by Mr. John Whitehead, and
among the results of his labors was the
discovery in 1896 ot the largest eagle in
the world. It was shot on the Island of
Samar, one of the Philippines, where it
lives above the level of the enormous for
est, consisting of trees 80 yards high, and
feeds on monkeys. It is larger than the
golden eagle, more powerful than the harpy
eagle and has a beak higher, deeper and
more formidable than that of any other
raptorial bird. It weighs from 16 pounds
to 20 pounds, while the average weight of
a golden eagle is only 12 pounds.
The only full grown specimen of the
great forest eagle obtained there is In the
Museum of Natural History at South Ken
sington. It was disabled by a single buck
shot in the neck and ultimately taken down
from the tree to which it clung byanatlve
hunter. Its claws are as formidable as its
beak and resemble those of the harpy eagle.
Wanted to Begin a Beeord.
An anecdote he told me with keen relish
was of two “bad men” who “shot it out”
with Winchester rifles on the main street
of Medora. One of them fell with a bullet
in his hip, his rifle dropping out of reach.
His antagonist was aiming for the coup
de grace when he felt a touch on his arm.
Looking round, he saw a meek and ven
erable old person called “Uncle Billy,”
who gained his livelihood by sweeping
out a saloon, cleaning the cuspidors and
serving an occasional drink.
“Jake,” said the old man imploringly,
“let me finish him. I never killed a man
yit. ’’—Chicago Record.
A Quition ot Time.
A certain strapping private is as good a
soldier as ever munched hard tack, but
he has no more sense of humor than the
barrel of his gun. After the midday meal
a lieutenant set him rather a difficult task,
remarking:
“If you accomplish that this afternoon,
I shall say you may become as great a man
as General Merritt. ”
“Lieutenant,"declared the private very
solemnly, “I’ll do it this afternoon if It
takes me till morning. ” —St. Louis Globe-
Democrat.
Not a Criterion.
“They ray that Dewey used to be a bad
what qf it!”
“Why, it proves that the boy you set
down as no good can generally be depend
ed upon to surprise you.”
"Nothing of the sort. I'll bet there were
5,000,000 boys in this country who were
just aa bad as or worse than Dewey was
when he was young. Have you ever
heard of any great things done by any of
the other 4,999,999 of them!”—Cleveland
Leader.
'■ ■ ■ ■
O" ' 9 ■ fl I ®Ja fl A ■
X® A ■■ Bv * W
HA He 'w? fsF
The Kind Yon Have Always Bonght, and which has been
in use for over 30 yearn, has borne the Kignatare of
and has been made under his per
i senal .r s I since ft* tn fancy-
' Allow no one to deceive yon in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex.
perimenU that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants anil Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a substitute for Castor OIL Paregoric, Drop* <
and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cure* Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food* regulate* the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bean the Signature of _
S S * /?
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The Kind You We Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
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GET YOUR —
JOB PRINTING
DONE JLT
The Morning Call Office.
’
We have just supplied our Job Office with a complete line oi Btationcrv
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the wsy oi
LETTER HEADS, BILL HEADS
• ■ ■ ♦ * ■ -■4-' >
STATEMENTS, IRCULARB,
NOTES,
•• -.•£
MORTGAGES, PROGRAMS
•
JARDS. POSTERtf *
DODGERS, »**) ETL
We ertvy toe brat ine of FNVY)J>FES 7M : thistrads.
An aitrac.ivc FOSTER of aay size can be issued on short notes.
Our prices for work ot all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained ros
any office In the state. When you want fob printing of aij
call Satisfaction guarantees.
A.LIL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.
—_mammaaaaawwmaaMMiMmremm
Out of town orders will receive
prompt attention.
J. P.&S B. Sawtell.