Newspaper Page Text
ORDINARY’S OFFICE,
Bfalding County, Ga.
Mrs. Marie 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 of the Leach prop®*?
Mgwr plat of Harry Krouse of April 15,
Also nart of land lot No. 47 in the
14th District of Falto® G» , com
mencing at a point ISO ft south of North
a«a a£na being south-west corner of a
Miss Mary Smith to
W F. Bpaiding and W. B. Sheldon on an
' urtwiixi street, thence running south
along wdd street 114 ft, thence east along
an tuiutamed street 200 ft, more or less,
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 ofFu.ton county, Ga., com
meacfcng at point on east side of Violet
Ave., SOO 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
alopg east side of Violet Ave., 50 ft to
starting point. The same being known
as fol No. 105 as per plat of Auction sale
ofß. W. Goode & Co., of said property
AMfl 19th, 1887. F
Also, part of land lot No. 79 in 14th
District of Fulton county, Ga., situated as
, follows: Commencing at the south east
corner of Venable street and Qrchard Ave.
and 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 5-5-7-8-9-10-11 and 12 of the
Harris property as per plat of Frierson
& Leath, January 14th, 1892.
Also part of land lot 55 in the 14th Dis
trict of Fulton county, Ga , commencing
ata point on the east side of Violet Ave.,
850 ft north of Haygood street, thence
north along east side of Violet Ave„ 50 ft,
thenefc east 120 ft to 10 foot alley, thence
south along said alley 50 ft, thence west
190 ft to Violet Ave., the starting point,
sama 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 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,
Spawing 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.
QTATE OF GEORGIA,
O Bpawing 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. 8,1898.
A. B. Shackelford, Adm’r
of J. J. Bowdoin, deceased.
Guardian’s Sale.
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Bpawing County.
By virtue of an order granted by the
Court of Ordinary of Bpaiding county,
Georgia, at the October term of said court,
1898, I will sell to the highest bidder, be
fore the court ho&se 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.
I. Elder. Bold for the purpose of en
croaching on corpus of wards estate for
their maintenance and education. October
8,1898. Martha J. Coleman,
Guardian.
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Bpawing 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 Bpaiding 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 tLe first Monday in November, 1898, by
10 o’clock u. m., why such order should
not be granted. October term, 1898.
J. WRY, Ordinary.
P int -(“liinc Suit n»<t Smoke Year Life Away.
'i v <( alt kb&eco easily and forever, be mag
“e'-ic, lull of life, nerve and vigor, take No-Tc
the wonder-woikcr. that makes veakmen
strong. All druggists, SOc or Si. Cure guaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy O*. Chicago New York
A QUEER CALCULATION.
TNe Fawar That Wo«M Be Reqelreg
to Move the Barth.
Statisticians sometimes have queer
ideas. One of them has amused himself
by calculating how mnch energy, water
and Coal it would take to move the
earth a foot, supposing that it was sub
jected throughout its mass to a forco
equivalent to terrestrial gravitation.
Tbis is a gratuitous supposition, for In
spite of its enormous mass the earth
weighs nothing.
Starting with the fact that the earth’s
mass is about .6,100 million-milNoß*
million tons, our statistician calculates
that wo should require 70,000,000,000
years for a 10,000 horsepower ea
gine to move our globe a foot. The
boiler that should feed this engine
would vaporize a quantity of water that
would cover the whole face of the globe
with a layer 800 feet deep. The vapori
sation of this water would require 4,000
million-million tons of coal. This coal
carried in cars holding ten tons eaeb
and having a total length of 80 feet,
would require 400 million-million cars,
which would reach 80,000,000 times
around the earth. Thia train, moving
at the rate of 40 miles an hour, would
take more than 5,000,000 years to trav
erse its own length. It would require
for storage a shed that would cover
1,000 times the area of Europe.
If we realize that this fantastically
huge amount of energy is nothing at ail
compared with what the earth possesses
in virtue of its rotation about its axis,
its revolution about the sun, and its
translation in spaoe with the solar sys
tem, of which the earth is but an in
finitesimal part and Which itself is but
an infinitesimal part of the universe,
we may get some idea of the importance
of man in the universe and estimate his
incommensurable pride at its just value.
—Nature.
DANGEROUS PIGS.
The Peccary Is Wholly Fearless aad
Will Fight Man or Beast.
A writer in the St. Ifouis Republic
says that the most vicious and fearless
member of the brute creation is the pec
cary, or wild hog, of Mexico. This ani
mal seems utterly devoid of fear and dis
plays an intelligence in fighting man
strangely at varianoe with its apparent
ly complete lack of mental attributes.
Their ability to scent men is partson
larly marked. The only thing to do
when they get after you is to run away
from them as fast as a horse can cany
you, and then there is no certainty that
they won’t catch you. They are nearly
as swift as a horse, and their endurance
is as great as their viciousness.
A friend of mine encountered a drove
of them in a wild part of Mexico a few
years ago, and his escape was almost
miraculous. He very foolishly shot and
wounded a number of them. Then he
took refuge in a tree.
The peccaries kept him in the tree all
that day and through the night. They
circled round the tree, grunting and
squealing their delight at the prospect
of a feast. He soon exhausted his am
munition and brought down a peccary
at each fire, but this had no terrors for
the beasts.
Toward morning they began to eat
those he bad killed, after which they
formed in line and trotted off. If they
had not had some of their own number
to devour, they would have guarded
that tree until my friend, through sheer
exhaustion, dropped from his perch and
allowed them to make a meal of him.
The wildcats and tigers that infest
the Mexican wilds flee from the pec
caries with instinctive fear, and even
rattlesnakes keep out of their path.
’ A Bit of London Weather.
Oct weather is grown decidedly good
for the last three days—very brisk, clear
and dry. Before that it was as bad as
weather at any time need be. Long con
tinued plunges of wet, then clammy,
glarry days on days of half wet (a kind
of weather peculiar to London, and
fully uglier than whole wet) —a world
of black sunless pluister [a soft mixture,
neither one thing nor another], very
unpleasant to move about in! The in
cessant travel makes everything mud
here, in spite of all that clats (a clat, a
wooden scraper] and besoms can do. A
kind of mud, too, which is as fine as
paint and actually almost sticks like a
kind of paint. I took, at last, into the
country, with old clothes and trousers
folded up. There the mud was natural
mud, and far less of it; indeed little of
it in comparison with other country.
We dry again in a single day of brisk
wind. —Carlyle Cor. in Atlantic.
Not Very Pathetic.
An Ohio woman visiting Boston for
the first time has been doing the sights.
“I had my greatest thrill down at
Copp’s Hill burying ground,” she said.
“Yes, that’s just the place for the
historic emotions,” commented her in
terlocutor. She smiled.
“As soon as my sister-in-law and I
got into the place,” she said, “I found
myself almost stepping upon a grave
with an inscription on a queer little
iron cover sort of tomb. I jumped back,
feeling the way you do when you step
on a grave, and read the inscription,
just three initials, no name or date. ;J j
’lsn’t it pathetic?’ I said to my sister
in-law. ‘Oh, I don’t know, ’ she answer
ed, ‘B. W. W. means Boston Water
Works. ’ ’’—Boston Transcript.
«' —: < ;
Honrs-laaaca la a Landoa Chvrch.
Nearly everybody is aware that at
one time it was the custom in many
churches to regulate the length of the
sermon by an hourglass, which stood
on the pulpit immediately fronting the
preacher. Quite a number of-these curi
ous relics are preserved in various eccle
siastical edifices throughout the land,
but the British and Foreign Sailors*
church, situated in what was formerly
Ratcliff highway, is the qply one pos
sessing four. They are in perfect pres
ervation, and are fixed all together in
a framework of solid brass.—London
Tit-Bits.
—r,,,,, . ,
SPANISH WAR DOGS.
■’ 1... ill
Wow Amm* Mg Wara M«n FmmmC
Than SoMtere by
Aperreado ia a Spanish word which in
the days whan Spain was busy with the
conquest ot the Wert Indies and Central
America struck ookl‘terror to the hearts of
the Indiana. The word means “given to
the dogs,” or, to translate ft yet more dis
tinctly, ft means death by bloodhounds.
In Spain magnificent specimens of this
canine race have always been bred, and
When Columbus set out on his first voyage
a few fine hounds constituted part of bis
fighting equipment. Not knowing with
what enemies he might have to contend,
he took the hounds along to aid hie men,
but Columbus was one of the few invaders
coining from Spain who treated the In
dians humanely, and not until after ho
had gone back to Europe, broken and dis
graced, were the hounds used to torture
the poor savages.
On all the dogs as well as the horses the
Spaniards brought over with them the In
dlians looked with fear and reverence.
The West Indian savages had not only
never seen animals so large, but the fact
that both dogs and horses performed tasks
and obeyed masters filled the natives with
respectful amazement. Wi
Their interest in these new brutes was
soon, however, turned to dismay when the
horses’ iron shod hoofs struck down wom
en and children and the dogs were em
ployed in battie. So ferocious and effect
ive were these canine warriors as taught
by their Christian masters that in Cuba
one dug was more feared than a hundred
snndd.men.
When Cortes took his famous first ex
pedition Into Mexico, a fine pack of blood
hounds was among his most highly valued
fighters. Pizarro also took hounds
Peru, but on the continent the native war
rlors wore a sort of armor made of padded
cottap doth. Through this the dogs canid
not Set their teeth, but they cotria spring
easily-as high as a warrior’s throat, run
in among the men and by butting vigor
ously cause them to fail, nr, mor* horrible
still, they were encouraged to prowl ever
the battleftrids AdA taaw to pieces any
wretched wounged Indian who showed the
There were many among these brute
fighters who rose by dipt of bard service
high in the Spanish ranks, and the names
and deeds of some of them come down to
us In history. In the island of San Juan
—now Porto Rico—was a remarkable dog,
so large that he wentby the name of Ber
cerrlllo—little calf. Thia renowned man
eater destroyed the lives of so many In
dians that he was promoted to a military
grade, receiving the psy of a sergeant ot
the hone and a proportionate share of
prize money and spoils.
It is told of Beroerrillo that he easily
comprehended all that was said to him
and the value of any object. On one oc
casion when the governor of San Juan
Wished to send a written message he gave
it info the hands of Indian woman to
deliver. Unfortunately her way led past a
church, where a group of Spanish soldiers
were lounging waiting for mass to begin.
Beroerrillo was with thqm and In a spirit
of idle brutality they proposed to set the
dog on the woman.
Beroerrillo needed but small encourage
ment. He rushed at the poor creature,
who fell on her knees, the governor’s mes
sage in her hand, crying: “My lord dog,
thy servant is sent with this to the Chris
tian lords down yonder—see, here it is.
Do me no harm, dog, my lord.”
Sniffing at her, the sagacious creature
let her pass unbanned.—Exchange.
A Little Previous.
One night Chaplain Jones of the Texas
heard volley firing on the Cuban coast,
which was being guarded by the blockad
ing squadron, and was told that marines
were being landed from the Marblehead.
The next morning Captain McCalla came
alongside of the Texas in his launch and
announced that four of his men had been
killed and that there was still fighting.
Chaplain Jones then approached Captain
Philip and said that he would like to go
ashore and look after the wounded and
read ths services for the dead. Captain
Philip gave instant permission, and the
chaplain prepared-to go ashore with a boat
load of marines that waa in charge of a
young lieutenant. As the worthy chaplain
clambered over the side of the Texas the
lieutenant looked up from the boat and
called out:
“Where are you going?”
“Lieutenant,” replied the chaplain, “I
am going to bury the dead.”
“For goodness sake, give us a chance to
get killed first, ” rejoined the officer.
“Lieutenant, I am going to bury the
dead that have already fallen,” responded
the chaplain, whereupon the lieutenant
quickly replied:
"I beg your pardon, chaplain; I was too
hasty. ” —Buffalo Express.
Boys Always ths Same.
The numerous papyri unearthed some
time ago by Messrs. Grenfel and Hunt
from the ancient city of Oxyrhyncus,
Egypt, are being gradually deciphered.
One of them, a letter from a boy, evi
dently a petted darling, to his father
sounds strangely modern, though ft is at
least 1,600 yean old:
“Theon to his father Theon, greeting.
It waa a fine tiling of you not to take me
with yon to the city. If you won’t take
me with you to Alexandria, I won’t write
you a letter or speak to you orsaygoodby
to you, and if you go to Alexandria 1
won’t take your hand nor ever greet you
again. That is what will happen if you
won’t take me. Mother said to Arch elans,
‘lt quite upsets him to be left behind (?).
It was good of you to send me presents * * *
on the 12th, the day you sailed. Send me
a lyre, I Implore you. If you don’t, I won’t
eat, I won’t drink. There, now I”—New
York Tribune.
A British Coast Defense Scheme.
Major General Crease of the British
royal marine artillery has devised a new
scheme for the coast defense of Britain.
His plan is to build 18 floating batteries
of 11,500 tons each, thickly armored from
deck to keel co as to be practically torpedo
proof, but of such light draft that they
can fight tn shallow waters. They are to
be armed each with 16 heavy guns in four
two story turrets and manned by naval
militia. He would have besides nine “bat
tleship exterminators, ” armored destroy
ers of great speed, supplied with a ram,
torpedo tubes and light guns. The cost
would be 1100,000,000. General Crease is
now on the retired list.
Novel Way to Celebrate.
The ruling prince of the Indian state ot
Rampore has rather a novel way of cele
brating the birth of a daughter. A week’s
pay has been deducted from every state
employee. The hope is expressed, and just
ly, too, that to make things equal the
nawab will give the state employees a
bonus of a week’s pay in the event of a
royal funeral.
SAVED BY A POCKETKNIFE.
Barvivar of the VUh As Karrs Tolls at a
By the sinking of La Bourgogne and
the awful torn ot life is recalled ths aooi
dent to the Ville do Havre of tits num
line in 1872, whan the latter named ship
was struck at night and went down at
once, carrying almost all on board. Piti
fully few were those who were saved from
the Havre, but among them was ths
prominent New York lawyer Witthaua,
and the way in which be escaped is so ex
inordinary that it sounds like a well oon
eooted tale instead of the plain fact that
Mt. Witthaua vouches it to bo.
The afternoon preceding the accident to
the Havre Mr. Witthatw, with another
man, waa on deck, and Mr. Wftthaaa was
leaning against the taffrail under the flag
staff in the stern. As the two men stood
there talking the friend put hie hand oi.
the large life buoy that was hanging over
the side and oalijd Mr. Witthaua* atton
tion to it. r
“Look,” he said, “these life buoys arc
simply screaming farces. This one out
here is so stiff and hard with coats of paint
that you couldn’t get it free. except by
cutting it with a knife. ”
Mr. Witthaua attempted to move ft, but
found it glued hard and fAst The friend
took out his knife and began idly sticking
it into the soft pine of the flagstaff and
amused himself so the rest of the time that
they talked before they were interrupted
by the dinner gong. They both went be
low.
Early the next morning while the pas
sengers were still asleep the collision oc
curred, and in the mad panio that at once
followed, Mr. Witthaua did what ha could
to get the women and children into the
lifeboats. From the first he regarded him
self as doomed, for there were not nearly
boats enough for all the passengers, and it
was evident that the ship would float only
a few minutes. Several women whom he
knew on board he found places for at once
only to see the boot overturn as soon as it
was launched and all go down, ono of
them with her two little children in her
arma
Horrified and sickened by the sight, he
went back to the stern of the ship, which
wag higher out of the water than the bow,
to wait until he, too, went down, and
stood leaning again on the taffrail. As ho
did so in a flash he recollected the conversa
tion ot the afternoon before and looked
over the rail. There still hung the life
buoy stiff and immovable, and the in
stinct of self preservation sprang to life
ones more. A knife to free the buoy and
he might be saved, but he had none with
him, and to find one was impossible with
the ship liable to go down at any second.
At the same moment his eye caught the
flagstaff, and there, where his friend had
evidently forgotten it the afternoon before,
stuck the knife. With the haste of life and
death Mr. Witthaua pulled it out and be
gan to saw away at the buoy, and he freed
It and threw himself off the deck into the
sea just in time to get beyond the vortex
that came as the great ship went down,
sucking hundreds of victims with it. Mr.
Wftthaus floated about for some time, and
was at last picked up by a small boat that
was waiting about for chance survivors
and was brought back to New York to tell
of one of tiie most awful catastrophles that
ever happened at sea.—New York Press.
A. New Explosive.
French chemists have for some time
past been experimenting with a new ex
plosive called promethee, invented by T.
Jowler, which, according to the Revue
Technique, possesses some remarkable
properties peculiarly its own. The solid
■ portion is made up of 56 per cent potash,
90 per cent manganese dioxide and 24 per
oent ferric oxide. This is triturated, mixed
in a mill and filled into cartridges, a per
meable cartridge being employed to facili
tate the penetration of the oil, the latter
consisting of 50 per oent of petroleum and
10 per oent oil of bitter almonds.
This prepared liquid, which is not ap
plied to the cartridges until just before
use, is stored in metal flasks holding about
one-tenth of a gallon; 2.2 pounds of the
explosive contains 1.65 pounds of cartridge
contents and .55 pounds of the oil, this
quantity being sufficient to Impregnate
the cartridge. Before being steeped in the
oil the cartridges are noninflammable and
nonexplosive, even by shock from steel
plates, are unaffected by frost, moisture or
sudden changes in the surrounding me
dium and do not undergo any change dur
ing storage. The oil is not readily inflam
mable.
It is claimed that the disruptive foroe
exerted is at least as great as that of dyna
mite; also that it is directed in the line of
greatest resistance and acts with equal ef
ficiency in dense rock, light fissured rock
and in water.
Bulletin Board Fan.
The boy who gets up the war bulletins
was working with a speed which showed
that he realized an eager public was wait
ing on his efforts. The characters went
upon the paper with swiftness under his
practiced hands, and now and then he
drew back and contemplated his work
with the pride of an artist. Presently the
man of oarping tendencies passed. A sneer
came upon his countenance, and tho boy
anticipated with the inquiry:
“Wen, what’s the matter with it?”
“Look at the spelling!”
“It’s according to eopy.”
“But the word‘Spain!* See how you
have divided itl ‘Spa’ at the end of one
line and then on the next ‘in.* ”
The boy gazed at his work for a moment
or two and then proceeded with his stamp
ing.
“Aren’t you going to change iti"
“No, I’m not.”
“But it’s palpably wrong.”
“Not these days. The way tilings are
going now you’re liable to find pieces of
Spain scattered around anywhere.”—
Washington Star.
flpaalßh Each ot “GampUon.**
Closely akin to the Spaniard’s mediaeval
and aristocratic attitude toward life, says
Irving Babbitt in The Atlantic, is his
curious lack of practical sense and me
chanical skill. “The good qualities of the
Spaniards,” writes Mr. Butler, “alike
with their defects, have an old world flavor
that renders their possessors unlit to excel
in an Inartistic, commercial, democratic
and skeptical ago.” Juan Valera admits
this practical awkwardness and ineffi
ciency of the Spaniard, but exotaiins,
“Sublime iDMpacfty!” and sees in it a
proof of his “mystic, ecstatic and trans
cendental nature.” The Spaniard, then,
finds- ft hard to light a kerosene lamp
without breaking the chimney, in much
the same way as Emerson made his friends
uneasy when he began to handle a gun.
Unfortunately nature knows how to re
venge hanelf cruelly on those who affect
to treat her with seraphic disdain or on
those who, like the Spaniards, see in a
tack of prudence and economy a paoof of
aristoertato detachment.
■' MBBB .<■
H ■ A i i i *■ o
I VMO I Mil IM I
The Kind You Have Always Boaffht, Mid been
In use for over 80 years, hai bortae the idgns&re of
. and has been made undssr his
® ooal supervision since its infancy.
zrflfCtlfK Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and Bubstttates are but
pertinents that trifle with and the health of
Infhats and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORiA
Oastoria is a substitute for Castor Oil* Paregoric, Drops
and Soothing Syrups. It is HsrmleM and Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age Is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Dlarrhcea and Wind
Colle. 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.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
The Kind You Hare Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
▼WC CMFNTAUR OMBPMW* W tflVlktaAff BTWMT, MSWVOMt
GET YOUB —
JOB PRINTING
DONE
The Morning Call Office.
We have just supplied our Job Office with a complete line ol Stahoam
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything Wanted in the way oi
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STATEMENTS, IROULARB,
ENVELOPES, NOTES,
MORTGAGES, PROGRAMS
CARDS, POSTERS
DODGERS, kW MTL
We t*!vy toe best lue of FNVEIjOFES tm : this trad*.
Au ailrac.ive POSTER cf aay size can be issued on short notica
Our prices tot work ot all kinds will compare fbvorably with thcee obtained roe
any office in the state. When you want fob printing of tn> <«t<ri]tkn in»
call Batisfoction guaranteed.
ALL WOHK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.
' 1 - 1 •• ' ywa - . ~4 . y..< .
Out of town orders will receive
prompt attention.
J. B. Sawteli.