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✓"ORDINARY’S OFFICE,
■ W Spalding County, Ga.
Mr«. Marie Ford, a» administratrix of
the estate oCP. 8 B. Ford, deceased, makes
application for leave to sell the following
real estate, described as follows:
Part of land lot 110 in Uth 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 lota 40 and 41 ofthe Leach prooeny
as per plat of Harry Krouse of April 15,
18 A1so, part of land lot No. 47 in the
14th District of Fulton county, Ga., com
mencing Ms point 180 ft south of North
ava. game being south-west corner of a
certain tract sold by Miss Mary Smith to
W. F. Spalding ana 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 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. Smite 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., 300 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 tot No. 105 as per plat of Auction sale
of 8. W. Goode & Co, of said property
April 19th, 1887. J
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 Orchard Ave.
and tunning 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 Uth Dis
trict of Fulton county, Ga, commencing
at a point on the east side of Violet Ave.,
350 ft north of Haygood street, thence
north along east side of Violet Aye., 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. 11l of S. 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,and the land of Smith on
the north east and R. Pickens on the
west and also Albert Thompson on the
south, said Jot 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.
Brd, 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 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 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,
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. Sold for the purpose of en
croaching on corpus of wards estate for
their maintenance and education. October
3,1898. Mabtha J. Coleman,
Guardian.
QTATE OF GEORGIA,
O 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
Georgia, bounded as follows: On the
north by 0. T. Digby, east by R. W.
Lynch and J. A. J. fad well, 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 tIA 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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Dae, tl,e wonder-wo: iter, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, BOc or 11. Core guaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co.. Chicago New York
NO PLACE LIKE HOME.
domestic life the subject of Oft.
TALMAGE’S SERMON.
Every Member es the Heaseheld
Should Strive to Make It Ha»,.
Start In the Rl*ht Way—Keep God
Alwaya at the Fireside.
(Copyright. 1898, by American Press Asso
ciation.]
Washington, Ont S3.—Dr. Talmage in
this discourse sots forth radical theories,
which, if adopted, would brighten many
domestic circles; text, John xx, 10, “The
dieciplea went away again unto their own ‘
homes."
A church within a church, a republic
within a republic, a world within a world,
is spelled by four lettera—home I If things
go right there, they go right everywhere;
if things go wrong there, they go wrong
everywhere. The doorsill of the dwelling
house is the foundation of church and
state. A man never gets higher than his
own garret or lower than bls own cellar.
Domestic life overarches and undergirdles
all other life. The highest house of con
gress is the domestic circle; the rocking
chair in the nursery is higher than a
throne. George Washington commanded
the forces of the United States, but Mary
Washington commanded George. Chrysos
tom’s mother made his pen for him. If a
man should start out and run 70 years In
a straight line, ho could not get out from
under the shadow of his own mantelpiece.
I therefore talk to you about a matter of
infinite and eternal moment when I speak
of your home.
As individuals we are fragments. God
makes the race in parts, and then he grad
ually puts us together. What I lack, you
make up; what you lack, I make up; our
deficits and surpluses of character being
the cogwheels In the great social mechan
ism. One person has the patience, another
has the courage, another has the placidity,
another has the enthusiasm. That which
Is lacking in one is made up by another
or made up by all. Buffaloes in herds,
grouse in broods, quails In flocks, the
human race in circles. God has most
beautifully arranged thia It Is in this
way that he balances society; this conserva
tive and that radical keeping things even.
Every ship must have, its mast, cutwater,
taffrail, ballast Thank God, then, for
Princeton and Andover, for the opposites.
I have no more right to blame a man
for being different from me than a driv
ing wheel-has a right to blame the iron
shaft that holds it to the center. John
Wesley balances Calvin’s “Institutes." A
cold thinker gives to Scotland the strong
bones of theology. Dr. Guthrie clothes
them with a throbbing heart and warm
flesh. The difficulty Is that we are not
satisfied with just the work that God has
given us to do. The water wheel wants
to come inside the mill and grind the
grist, and the hopper wants to go out and
dabble in tho water. Our usefulness and
the welfare of society depend upon our
staying in just the place that God has put
us, or intended we should occupy.
Marriage Garlands.
For more compactness and that we may
be more useful we are gathered in still
smaller circles In the home group. And
there you have the same variety again—
brothers, sisters, husband and wife, all
different in temperametate and tastes. It
is fortunate that it should be so. If the
husband be all ijppulse, the wife must be
all prudence. If one sister be sanguine in
her temperament, the other must be lym
phatic. Mary and Martha are necessities.
There will be no dinner for Christ if there
be no Martha, there will be no audience
for Jesus if there be no Mary. The home
organization is most beautifully construct
ed. Eden has gone, the bowers are all
broken' down, the animals that Adam
stroked with his hand that morning when
they came up to get their names have
since shot forth tusk and sting and growl
ed panther at panther, and midair iron
beaks plunge till with clotted wing and
eyeless sockets the twain come whirling
down from under the sun in blood and
fire. Eden has gone, but there is just one
little fragment left. It floated down on
the river Hiddekel out of paradise. It 18
the marriage institution. It does not, as
at the beginning, take away from man a
rib. Now it is an addition of ribs.
This institution of marriage has been
defam d in our day. Socialism and polyg
amy and the most damnable of all things,
free lovism, have been trying to turn this
earth into a Turkish harem. While the
pulpits have been comparatively silent,
novels, their cheapness only equaled by
their nastiness, are trying to educate, have
taken upon themselves to educate, this
nation in regard to holy marriage, which
makes or breaks for time and eternity.
Oh, this is not a mere question of resi
dence or wardrobe! It is a question
charged with gigantic joy or sorrow, with
heaven or hell. Alas for this new dispen
sation of George Sands! Alas for this
mingling of the nightshade with the mar
riage garlands! Alas for the venom of
adders spit into the tankards! Alas for
the white frosts of eternal death that kill
the orange blossoms I The gospel of Jesus
Christ is to assert what Is right and to as
sail what is wrong. Attempt has been
made to take the marriage institution,
which was Intended for the happiness and
elevation of the race and make it a mere
commercial enterprise, an exchange of
houses and lands and equipage, a businees
partnership of two stuffed up with the
stories of romance and knight errantry
and unfaithfulness and feminine angel
hood. The two after awhile have roused
up to find that instead of the paradise
they dreamed of they have got nothing
but a Van Ambuigh’s menagerie, filled
with tigers and wild cats. Eighty thou
sand divorces in Paris in one year preced
ed the worst revolution that France ever
saw I And I tell you what you know as
well as I do, that wrong notions on the
subject of Christian marriage are the
cause at this day of more moral outrage
before God and man than any other cause.
God In the Home.
There are some things that I want to
bring before you. I know there are those
of you who have had homes set up for a
great many yean, and then there are those
here whOhave'just established their home.
They have only been in that home a few
months or a few yean. Then there are
those who will after awhile set up for
themselves a home, and it Is right that I
should speak out upon these themes.
My first counsel to you is, have God in
your new home, if it be a new home, and
let him who was a guest at Bethany be In
your household, let the divine blessing
drop upon your every hope and plan and
expectation. Those young people who be
gin with God end with heaven. Have dh
your right hand the engagement ring of
the divine affection. If one of you be a
Christian, let that one take the Bible and
read a few verses in the evening time, and
then kneel down and commend yourselves
to him whosetteth the solitary in families.
I want to tell you that the destroying an-
Have watched such cases and haveooma
tQ a conclusion. In the first instance
nothing whined to go pleamnWy, and aft
er awhile there came a devastation, do
mestic disaster, or estrangement. Whys
They started wrong. In the otter case,
although there were hardships and trials
and some things that had to be explain
ed, still things went on pleasantly until
the very last. Whys They started right.
My second advice to you in your home
Is to exercise to the very last possibility at
your nature the law of forbearance. Pray
ers In the household will not make up for
everything. Some of the best people in
the world are the hardest to get along with.
There are people who stand up in prayer
meetings and pray like angels who at
home are uncompromising and cranky.
You may not have everything just as you
want ft. Sometimes it will be the duty
of the husband and sometimes of the wife
to yield, but both stand punctiliously on
your rights, and you will have a Waterloo
with no Blucher oomlng up at nightfall to
decide the conflict.
Acknowledge Wrong.
Never be attained to apologize when
you have done wrong in domestic affairs.
Let t hat be a law of your household. The
best thing I ever heard of my grandfather,
whom I never saw, was this: That onoe,
having unrighteously rebuked one of his
children, he himself having lost his pa
tience and perhaps having been misin
formed of the child’s doings, found out
his mistake, and in the evening of the
same day gathered all his family together
and said: “Now, I have one explanation
to make and one thing to say. Thomas,
this morning I rebuked you very unfairly.
lam very sorry for it. I rebuked you in
the presence of the whole family, and now
I ask your forgiveness in their presence. **
It must have taken some courage to do
that. It was right, was ft not? Never be
ashamed to apologize for domestic inaccu
racy. Find out the points, what are the
weak pointe, if I may call them so, of your
oompanion and then stand aloof from
them. Do not carry the fire of your tem
per too near the gunpowder. If the wife
be easily fretted by disorder in the house
-hold, lot the husband be careful where he
throws his slippers. If the husband come
home from the store with his patience ex
hausted, do not let the wife unnecessarily
cross his temper, but both stand up for
your rights, and I will promise the ever
lasting sound of the warwhoop. Your life
will be spent in making up, and marriage
will be to you an unmitigated curse. Cow
per said:
The kindest and the happiest pair
Will find occasion to forbear
And something, every day they live,
To pity and perhaps forgive.
I advise also that you make your chief
pleasure circle around about that home.
It is unfortunate when it is otherwise. If
the husband spend the most of his nights
away from home, of choice and not of
necessity, he is not the head of the house
hold; he is only the cashier. If the wife
throw the cares of the household into the
servant’s lap and then spend five nights
of the week at the opera or theater, she
may clothe her children with satins and
laces and ribbons that would confound a
French milliner, but they are orphans. It
is sad when a child has no one to say its
prayers to because mother has gone off to
the evening entertainment! In India they
bring children and throw them to the
crocodiles, and it seems very cruel, but
the jaws of social dissipation are swallow
ing down more little children today than
all the monsters that ever crawled upon
the banks of the Ganges!
GoAleas Firesides.
I have seen the sorrow of a godless
mother on the death of a child she had
neglected. It was not so much grief that
she felt from the fact that the child was
dead as the fact that she had neglected it.
She said, "If I had only watched over and
cared for the child, I know God would not
have taken it." The tears came not It
was a dry, blistering tempest—a scorch
ing simoon of the desert. When she wrung
her hands, it seemed as if she would twist
her fingers from their sockets; when she
seized her hair, it seemed as if she had in
wild terror grasped a coiling serpent with
her right hand. No tears! Comrades of
the little one came in and wept over the
coffin, neighbors came in, and the mo
ment they saw the still face of the child
the shower broke. No tears for her. God
gives tears as the summer rain to the
parched soul, but in all the universe the
driest and hottest, the most scorching and
consuming thing is a mother’s heart if she
has neglected' her child, when onoe it is
dead. God may forgive her, but she will
never forgive herself. The memory will
sink the eyes deeper into the sockets and
pinch the faoe.and whiten the hair and
eat up the heart with vultures that will
not be satisfied, forever plunging deeper
their iron beaks. Oh, you wanderers from
your home, go back to your duty I The
brightest flowers in all the earth are those
which grow in the garden of a Christian
household, clambering over the porch of a
Christian home.
I advise you also to cultivate sympathy
of occupation. Sir James Mclntosh, one
of the most eminent and elegant men that
ever lived, while standing at the very
height of his eminence, said to a great
company of scholars, "My wife made me.*’
The wife ought to be the advising partner
in every firm. She ought to be interested
in all - the losses and gains of shop and
store. She ought to have a right—she has
a right—to know everything. If a man
goes into a business transaction that be
dare not toll his wife of, you may depend
that be is on the way either to bankruptcy
or moral ruin. There may be some things
which he does not wish to trouble his wife
with, but if he dare not tell her ho is on
the road to discomfiture. On the other
hand, the husband ought to be sympa
thetic with the wife’s occupation. It is
no easy thing to keep house. Many a wo
man who could have endured martyrdom
as well as Margaret, the Scotch girl, has
actually been worn out by house manage
ment.
Kitelie* Martyrs.
There are 1,000 martyrs of the kitehen.
It is very annoying after the vexations of
the day around the stove or the register or
the table, or in the nursery or parlor to
have the husband aay: "You know noth
ing about trouble. You ought to be in
the store half an hour.” Sympathy of
occupation! If the husband’s work oarer
him with the soot of the furnace, or the
odors of leather, or soap factories, let not
the wife be easily disgusted at the be
grimed hands or unsavory aroma. Your
gains are one, your interests are one, your
losses are one. Lay hold of the work of
life with both hands. Four hands to fight
the battles; four eyes to watch for the
danger, four shoulders on which to carry
the trials. It is a very sad thing when the
painter has a wife who does not like pic
tures. It is a very sad thing for a pianist
when she baa a husband who does not Uke
is called a ‘‘gratae! bwdnvss.” So tar at I
understand a “gratae! business,” ft to
something to which a man goes at t«
o'clock in the morntag and from which
to «mbm home at tort o’clock fotteaft
mora and gets a huge amouat Gt money
for doing nothing. That is, I believe, a
“genteel business,” and there has been
many a wife who has made the mistake of
not being satisfied nntil tho husband has
gi up the tanning of the hides, or tho
turning of the banisters, or the building
of the walls and put himself in circles
where he has nothing to do but smoke
cigars and drink wine and got himself in
to habits that upset hlfn, going down la
the maelstrom, taking Ms wife and chil
dren with him. There are a good many
trains running from earth to destruction.
They start all hours of the day and all
hours of the night. Theta are the freight
trains; they go very slowly and very heav
ily, and there arc the accommodation
trains going on toward destruction, and
they stop very often and let a man get out
when he Wants to But gontool IdlcnoM
is an express train. Satan to the stoker,
and death to the engineer, and, though
one may come out in front of it and gplng
the red flag of ‘‘danger” or the lantern of
God’s word, it makes just one shot into
perdition, coming down the embankment
with a shout and a wail and a shriek
crash! crash! There are two classes of
people sure of destruction—first, those
who have nothing to do; secondly, those
who have something to do, but who are
too lazy or too proud to do it.
How to Have * Happy Homo.
I have one more word of advice to give
to those who would have a happy home,
and that is, let love preside in it. When
your behavior in the domestic circle be
comes a mere matter of calculation, when
the caress you give to merely the result of
deliberate study of the position you oc
cupy, happiness lies stark dead on the
hearthstone. When the husband’s posi
tion as head of the household to maintain
ed by loudness of voice, by strength of
arm, by fire of temper, the republic of do
mestic bliss has become a despotism that
neither God nor man will abide. Oh, ye
who' promised to love each other at the
altar, how dare you commit perjury? Let
no shadow of suspicion come on your af
fection. It to easier to kill that flower
than it is to make it live again. The blast
from hell that puts out that light leaves
you in the blackness of darkness forever.
Here are a man and wife. They agree
in nothing etoe, but they agree they will
have a home. They will have a splendid
house, and they think that if they have a
house they will have a home. Architects
make the plan, and the mechanics execute
ft, the house to cost 1100,000. It is done.
The carpets are spread, lights are hoisted,
curtains are hung, cards of invitation rent
out. The horses in gold plated harness
prance at the gate, guests come in and
take their places, the flute sounds, the
dancers go up and down, and with one
grand whirl the wealth and the fashion and
the mirth of the great town wheel amid
the pictured walls. Ha, this is happiness.
Float it on the smoking viands, sound it
in the music, whirl it in the dance, oast it
in the snow of sculpture, sound it up the
brilliant stairway, flash it in chandeliers.
Happiness Indeed!
Something Lacking.
Let us build on the center of the parlor
floor a throne to happiness; let all the
guests, when come ta, bring their flowers
and pearls and diamonds, and throw them
on this pyramid, and let ft be a throne,
and then let happiness, the queen, mount
the throne, and we will stand around,
and, all chalices lifted, we will say,
“Drink, O queen; live forever!” But the
Seats depart, the flutes are breathless, the
t clash of the impatient hoofs ta heard
In the distance, and the twain of the house
hold come back to see the queen of happi
ness on the throne amid the parlor floor.
But, alas, as they oome back, the flowers
have faded, the sweet odors have become
the smell of a charnel house, and instead
of tho qneen of happiness there sits there
the gaunt form of anguish, with bitten
Up and sunken eye and ashes in her hair.
The romp of the dancers who have left
seems rumbling yet, like jarring thunders
that quake the floor and rattle the glasses
of tho feast rim to rim. The spilled wine
on the floor turns into blood. The wreaths
of plush have become wriggling reptiles.
Terrors catch tangled in the canopy that
overhangs the couch. A strong gust of
wind comes through the hall and tho
drawing room and the bedchamber, in
which all the lights go out. And from the
Ifps of the wine beakers come the words,
“Happiness is not in us!” And the arches
respond, "It ta not in us!” And the si
lenced Instruments of music, thrummed
on by invisible fingers, answer, “Happi
ness is not in us!” And the frozen Ups of
anguish break open, and, seated on the
throne of wilted flowers, she strikes her
bony hands together and groans, “It ta
not in me!”
That very night a clerk with a salary of
11,000 a year—only |l,ooo—goes to his
home, set up three months ago, just after
the marriage day. Love meets him at the
door, love site with him at the table, love
talks over the work of tho day, love takes
down the Bible and reads of him who
came our souls to save, and they kneel,
and while they are kneeling, right in that
plain room on the plain carpet, the angels
of God build a throne not out of flowers
that perish and fade away, but out of gar
lands of heaven, wreath on top of wreath,,
amaranth on amaranth, until the throne
is done. Then the harps of God sounded,
and suddenly there appeared one who
mounted the throne with eye so bright
and brow so fair that the twain knew it
was Christian love. And they knelt at
the foot of the throne, and, putting one
hand on each head, she blessed them and
said, "Happiness is with me!” And that
throne of celestial bloom withered not
with the passing years, and the queen left
not the throne till one day the married
pair felt stricken in years—felt themselves
called away and knew not which way to
go, and the queen bounded from the
throne and sMd, “Fellow ms, and I will
show you the way up to the realm of ever
lasting love.” And so they went upto
sing songs at love and walk on pavements
-of wve, and to Uve together in manstone
of love, and to rejoice forever in the truth
that God to love.
A* Improved Clnematovrapb.
A decided improvement in the cinemato
graph has been made by MM. Paul Mor
tier and CbeU-Boesean, at any rate from
the scientific point of view. It permits of
the synthesis of movements much more
perfectly than cinematographs in use, ow
ing to the greater number of images Whitt
it passes before the eye in a short time.
Twenty-five images are generally given in
a second, but the alethorama, as the MW
instrument to called, gives as many as
8,000. In ft the film moves continuously,
and the light is reflected through It from
a series of inclined mirrors.—London
Globe.
CASTOR IA |
___ . . .
The Kind You Have Alwaya Bought, and which bun been E
In use for over 30 years, haa borne the signature off
-—MI haa been made under bla per. |
auperviafcmalnee itainlhncy.
ve-TZA , Allow HO one to deeetve you tn thia.
AH Counterfeita, Imltathma and Bubetttotoa are but Kx
perlmenta that trifle with and endanger the health off
Infimta and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Caatoria is a substitute for Castor OH, Paregoric, Drops
. and Soothing Syrapa. It is Harmless and fEeasant.. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor ottfer Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea-The Mother's Friend.
CSNUINS CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
The Kind You Have Ahfays Bscghf.
In Use For Over 30 Years.
——————— .. ■ . —"as •' 'rri-wmg.-.T.. . ,
' ' ■■■■ to. —mA
-
—GET YOUR —
JOB PRINTING
• - ■
DONE
The Morning Call Office.
• • "
We have just supplied oar Job Office with s complete line of Btationcrr
kinds and can get up, on short notice, anything wanted in the way 01
/
statements; iroulars,
// , ■
ENVELOPES, NOTES,
/Mortgages, programs
Z/
JARDB, POSTERS
DODGERS, m
We c*rvy tee bast Ine of FNVEIZIFES vw >Trsd ; thiatrada.
Aa atlracdvc POSTER cf any rise can be issued on short notes
Our prices tor work of all kinds will compare favorably with those obtained ton
any office In the state. When yon want fob printing of any dfK-ripticn pve
call Satisfaction guaranteeu.
I• ■ ,
ALL WORK DONE
With Neatness and Dispatch.
. h • -a. ' < ' - ’■ * - > '■ •< a- ««*•••',< ■
! 1 . I.. 1 -
Out of town orders will receive
prompt attention.
a ■
7 J.P.&S B. SawteU.