Newspaper Page Text
dingers of burgling.
ESTERN .1UDMGHT RAID.
A «
Ilonse-brenker nn«t the Story
He Cooled Down a Little.
rFrom the Milwaukee Sim.)
It is the general impression thought among the
I. wno have ever of
1«C a t all, that wh burglars, enter those houses enter- at
citizens O
P It to rob, in the ark, not knowing
nlg dozen revolvers may be pointed at
bat a the bravest men m the world,
, m ar e the most
on the contrary, they are burglar out cow- of
Uv There is not one
Sfo i mired but would desert before he
into a battle, if lie were a sol
Z T and the business of braking a burglar is
half as dangerous as on a
train, working, around a printing
“Z, or holding a position on a Sunday police
The man who goes to a
Fit Hate jjjg with an in his excursion hand, and from is in a more city,
rL ]ife is in entering
er than any burglar who attends a
house at night. The boy
“elevator Torks sewing in a maclime factory, or in the an establisli- gill who
* a and belts
head t where shafting of being run killed over¬
is in more danger
ihau’a burglar is in the practice of his
of long since, heart a disease, citizen, who lying was
troubled with was
awake after midnight, when he heard a
burglar effecting an entrance at a win¬
dow of the sleeping room. Being lone¬
some he kept still and allowed the visitor
to come in. thinking he might be good
company. As the burglar entered the
room, the citizen raised up in bed,
placed a pillow in front of him, pointed
a long bony finger at the intruder, and
told him to hold up his hands. The
burglar did so, and in one hand was a
revolver. The citizen told the burglar
to throw that revolver out of a window
into the street, which was done at once,
and it could be heard to drop into the
road. The burglar trembled like a leaf,
and begged the citizen with heart disease
to spare his life, as he was the sole sup¬
port of an old mother. The citizen told
him he need have no fear, and ordered
him to turn up the gas, which he did,
and the two men looked at each other.
The burglar was a sharp-faced boy of
twenty, a coward if there ever was one.
The citizen told him to bring a pack of
cards off a stand, and sit citizen down shuffled on the
foot of the bed. The
the cards and dealt out a couple of
hands, and told the burglar he would
play him a game of seven up to see
which was the biggest fool, and to allow
the visitor to collect his nerves, which
were badly shattered. At first he trem¬
bled so he could hardly play, but finally
got interested in the game and forgot,
apparently, where he was. The citizen
apologized for not having clothes on
that would be more appropriate, and
otherwise made the burglar feel at home,
and after they had played a couple of
games of seven up, and the third had
been sawed off on the burglar, the citi
ini began to talk to him about his pro¬
fession. Said he:
“Now, I have heard a great deal about
burglars, but I never saw one until you
topped in this evening, and I must
thank you for helping me to pass an
evening that otherwise might have been
lonely. I have always regarded burglars
as men who were brave even to rashness,
but you seem to be about the worst cow¬
ard I ever saw. When you came in,
witliyour revolver, and I pointed my
linger at you, which I assure you was
not loaded, you held up your hands as
high as youcould, considering that the
life was scared out of you. I had no
weapons, and you were armed. Why
didn’t you shoot ? What did you sur¬
render for, and act the coward ? By this
set you have brought reproach upon a
class of men that are supposed to be
brave. What have you got to say for
yourself, anyway ? Take a cigar there,
and lignt it, and tell me all you know
about the burglar business, or I may be
tempted, invalid as I am, to hit you with
a pillow.’’
The burglar looked at the “invalid,”
who was big enough to eat him raw, no¬
ticed that lie had no weapon, seemed
ashamed of himself, then he took a cigar
and lit it, and said:
“Well, boss, this is the rawest deal I
ever got, and I have been in a good
many tight places. You seem to be un¬
armed, loaded and you don’t know but I am
down to the guards with firearms,
and yet you have more gall than any
man I ever met. You seem candid and
bonest, and yet I feel as though if I
made a move you would pull a pair of
navy revolvers from under the bed¬
clothes, the and that, by touching with a spring
on foot-board of the bed your
loot, a battery of artillery would roll
oat and take position. I don’t know
now but you have touched an electric
| button that connects with the police sta
ton, and I feel as though a platoon of
police might march in the room at any
moment. So you see, you have me com¬
pletely “I in your power.
don’t mind telling you, in confi¬
dence, ,
J though I wouldn’t have you give
a jvay, as it would injure me in my
easiness, that I am the worst coward
iat ever lived. I was always that way,
muck so that my folks could never
mince me to learn a trade in wliich there
r Urie ;tS any danger of getting hurt. Every I
seemed full of danger to me, so
J 0 ®* to sneak-thieving, and from that
Nest e ‘* doing business burglar work. It is the
being he-milliner. in the world, except
a It is not once in a
‘iioiisand times that anybody ever hurts
Nd : burglar. Ninety-nine out of a lmn
houses have no revolver, and if
Imereis one it is not loaded, and if it is
I Me<l, the man does not shoot it. A
man had rather shout to burglars to go
wav than to shoot them. Once in a
Nile [boots a reckless, blood-thirsty man
one of us. but such men are
J jarce, °st danger and ought have to be is in arrested. falling over The
we
^ a >rs, screens. or cutting If the 'our people fingers would on these
enre
have re move the chairs from a room
the screens arranged to swing
'Peo, we would have an easy time. All
Y * lave to do is to tell ns to go away,
C? ’ ? •* e mo S 0, at ri tlie you window, had said, ‘Boss, when that yon is
•
.out Te You light out,’ I would
, jNake gone right trouble/ away. We don’t want
j ^ snow. any Yv’e shoot All we unless want some is a
never
person tries to arrest us. But there is
not a burglar anywhere but is afraid of
his shadow.”
The citizen told the burglar he was
glad to hear it, and was pleased with the
interview, lar and after presenting the burg¬
with his card and a couple of cigars,
asked him to withdraw, as ho- was be¬
ginning to get sleepy, and the night
prowler lit another cigar, and took an
extra handful of matches to use in find¬
ing his revolver in the street, and went
out the window. The citizen got up to
put out the gas, and looked out the win¬
dow and saw his burglar feeling around
on the ground for the lost revolver, and
swearing because the citizen wouldn’t
come out'in his night-shirt and help him
find it.
SLAVES OF ABSINTHE.
The Deadly Drn# Derominc n Favorite
Drink—its Kllects on ilie llrain.
[From the Philadelphia Frees,]
It was six o’clock in the morning. The
gray dawn was beginning to break and
from one end of Chestnut street to the
other there resounded the clack, clack
of opening shutters as a thin man braced
up before the marble-topped bar of a
drinking palace, and in a nervous voice
asked for absinthe.
“Eh ?” queried the conoocter of mixed
beverages. “Absinthe,’’
individual, replied the cadaverous
his as he felt mechanically in
breeches pockets for the necessary
change.
“How will yon have it?” asked the
barkeeper in a honeyed voice.
“Washed, please,” was the answer.
So the barkeeper reached up and
drew down from a shelf behind him a
small delicately-shaped goblet, scarcely
larger than a big acorn, mid balanced it
in an ordinary-sized tumbler, into the
small tumbler be poured tbe absinthe.
Over the absinthe he poured some pure
Schuylkill water, allowing it to fall ar¬
tistically drop by drop upon tbe bitter
drag until the larger goblet was half full
of the overrunning beverage. Then he
deftly dumped the contents of the small
goblet into the larger, shook the com¬
bined contents rapidly with his trained
right hand and remarked obsequiously,
as he passed it to the customer, “Here
you are, sir.”
Next came the reporter, who asked
the barkeeper to tell him about tbe ab¬
sinthe drinks, and the barkeeper opened
his mouth and said:
“Well, people have been drinking ab¬
sinthe for now nigh going on to twenty
years in my recollection, I think,
though, that the consumption has in¬
creased of late. The calls now-a-days
are mostly either for washed or frozen
absinthe, or for absinthe in cocktails.
Maybe you don’t know it, but it is a
splendid thing to brace np on after
you’ve been out all night. It steadies
the nerves a deal better than whisky or
brandy, and is a strong favorite with old
topers. ”
“Do you tliiuk the consumption is in¬
creasing !”
“Yes, but chiefly among the dudes.
They call for it, but only sip a little at a
time. As for the general run of cus¬
tomers they don’t take to it any more
than they used to.”
“When is it most drunk ?”
“Why, in the morning and ’ate at
night, (if course. A few old soaks want
it always in their cocktails; but they are
exceptions. ”
“Do you supply it without being re¬
quested “Generally ?” I sprinkle it in the cock¬
tails of the* ‘regulars !’ They like the
flavor.
A DEADLY DRUG.
A physician was next called upon and
his views requested.
“Doctor,” asked the reporter, “does
absinthe exert a specially evil effect upon
the system ?”
“Yon must know that absinthe is the
distilled essence of wormwood. Its ef¬
fects upon the sensibilities are similar
to those produced by eating opium. The
real effect upon the brain is almost iden¬
tical with that of hasheesh. When
taken in excess it producer softening of
the brain. For a time it strengthens
the nerves, but this effect is soon lost,
and the latter, from having been subject
to a series of false stimulations, lapse
into that unstrung state which is sure to
be speedily followed by the strongest
and most fatal attacks of mania-a-potu.
The miserable sufferer becomes attacked
with horrible desires. His brain softens
like putty, and he dies in agony.”
Left the Combination.
The combinations of persons bearing
the name of somebody who died a cen¬
tury ago and who would have l>een very
rich by now if he had lived and retained
all of the property which other people
have made productive are not entitled to
much respect. They are not formed, it
may be said, for the purpose of com¬
manding public respect, but lor tlie pur¬
pose of obtaining money. Unfortu¬
nately, they fail in that also. If anybody
will tell us of anybody not a lawyer who
has been pecuniarily benefited by the
claim of the family to the estate of some
remote ancestor, enforced by meetings
of heirs and the other familiar proceed¬
ings the relation will be an interesting
piece of news. Commodore William
Bradford Whiting, who has just Union resigned
his share in the Bradford Asso¬
ciation, formed for the purpose of get¬
ting hold of $122,000,000 which Gover
° William Bradford might have pos
nor lived till this time has
sesse------ d if he had
like of sense and , , honor.
acted a man association
He resigns from the upon
the ground that its objects did not seem
to him attainable. Even were the chase
of the wild goose to be conducted upon
the most sportsmanlike principles, it
cannot be recommended as a produc¬
tive industry.
Green Corn, Baked. —Remove the
husk and silk from a dozen ears of fresh,
o-reen com, rub each one with butter
and season it with pepper and salt; lay
the ears in a dripping-pan just large
enough to hold them, and place the pan is
in a very hot oven until the com
brown, turning it occasionally to insure
even cooking; serve it on a hot dish with
the butter from the pan poured over it.
The oven should be very hot to cook this
dish properly.
A good word is an easy obligation, but
not to speak ill requires only our silence,
which costs us nothing.
The Western Union.
A. H. Seymour, a telegrapher, gave
the New York State Senate Committee,
a history of the consolidations which he
said had resulted in the establishment
of the present Western Union Telegraph
Company. First the two-wire line be¬
tween Buffalo and Milwaukee, belong¬
ing to the Ezra Cornell Company, was
bought for two millions in Western
Union Stock. It had cost $150,000. In
1857 the Western Union absorbed the
Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and Louisville
Telegraph Company, whose lines cost
about $400,000. Western Union at the
same time increased its capital stock to
$5,000,000, adding $1,000,000, or more
than double the cost of the property ac¬
quired. Next it purchased a line giving
access to the seaboard through Pennsyl¬
vania and the New York, Albany and
Buffalo line, whose shareholders re¬
ceived three shares of the Western
Union stock to one of their own. Next
the Atlantic and Ohio telegraph line was
absorbed, which cost about $200,000 and
was capitalized at $600,000. For this
$800,000 of Western Union stock was
paid. Next the Western Union absorbed
eight small lines in Ohio. In 1863 the
capital stock of the Western Union was
increased to $11,000,000, at which time
the plant had cost $2,250,000, and with¬
out further expenditure for plant the
capital stock was increased to $22,000,
000, by the declaration of a 100 per
cent, scrip dividend. In 1865 the West¬
ern Union absorbed the American and
United States Companies. In 1874 it
purchased the Pacific and Atlantic Com¬
pany, taking a lease of 99 years and
guaranteeing the stockholders of the
Pacific and Atlantic four per cent, inter¬
est on two millions of capital, which was
really about sixteen per cent, interest had on
the actual cost of the lines which
never paid a dividend. The Southern
Atlantic line was leased for 99 years, and
five per cent, interest on $9,500,000 was
guaranteed, while its capital actual stock was
only $333,000. and its cost was
about $250,000. The Western Union in
1877 bought a controlling interest in the
Atlantic and Pacific Company, which
was capitalized at fifteen millions, and
cost about three. To get the control,
the Western Union bought 72,500 shares
of the stock at $25 a share, paid for with
12,500 shares of Western Union stock
and $912,500 in cash. In 1881 the com¬
pany absorbed tbe Atlantic and Pacific
and the American Union, increasing its
capital stock by $38,976,590 to $80,000,
000. It paid (in Western Union American stock)
par for the 100,000 shares of
Union stock and $5,000,000 for the like
amount in bonds. For Atlantic and
Pacific stock it paid 60 per cent., or
$8,400,000 in all. The rest of the new
stock was given to holders of the old
Western Union stock. Finally it ub
-orbed tlie Mutual Union Company.
Western Union’s whole plant could be
reproduced for $25,000,000, but it lias
paid an eight per cent, dividend on $80,
000,000. The profits for 1882 were over
seven millions.
“WOODMAN, SPARE THAT TREE.”
I^ess than Seven Years’ Supply ot Pine and
Spruce I^eft#
In the August number of Forestry ap¬
pears an important article, on the de¬
struction of American forests, by Mr.
William Little, of Montreal. The con¬
stant drain made upon American forests
for white pine—a wood that furnishes
three-fourths of the building tim¬
ber in the United States and Can¬
ada—has ;at least, he says, occa¬
sioned a scarcity which compels econo¬
mists to point to a time in the very near
future when its total exhaustion may be
predicted. The entire supply of white
pine now growing in the United States,
does not exceed 80,000,000,000 feet.
The annual production of this lumber is
not far from 10,000,000,000 feet, and the
demand is rapidly increasing. made
Fatal inroads have already been
into the great, pine forests of the North
Atlantic region. Its wealth has been
lavished with an unsparing hand; it has
been wantonly and stupidly cut as if its
resources were endless: what has not
l>een sacrificed to the ax has been
allowed to perish by fire. The pine of
New England and New York, has al¬
ready disappeared. Pennsylvania is
pretty near stripped of her pine, which
only a few years ago appeared inex¬
haustible. Tlie great Northwestern
pine States—Michigan. Wisconsin, and
Minnesota—can show only a few scat¬
tered remnants of the noble forests to
which they owe their greatest prosper¬
ity, and which not even self-interest has
saved from needless destruction. Can¬
ada is almost in the same deplorable
condition as the United States as regards
its stock of valuable pine timber.
Notwithstanding the fences of wire,
the use of irou in building, the terra¬
cotta and straw lumber, the consump¬
tion of wooden lumber increased nearly
50 per cent, in the ten years, from 1870
to 1880, the former being 12,755.543,000,
and the latter 18,091,356,000 feet, and
though it has always lieen claimed that
iron and lumber keep together—cheap
lumber accompanying cheap iron—we
now find iron so low that producers
claim they are at the lowest ring of the
ladder, while lumber has advanced in
America in three years fully 50 per cent,
with every prospect of still further in¬
crease; ana yet we are informed that we
are within seven years of the time when
the supplies of white pine and spruce
(which are, in the North, the great stock
of this indispensable material) must
cease, and this is not the statement of
interested parties, which might be open
to suspicion, but of those specially em¬
ployed by tlie Government of the coun¬
try to ascertain the true condition of the
forests.
__ ___
Settling Matters. —General Grant
being unable to accept the invitation to
attend the reunion of the soldiers who
fought on each side at the battle of Wil¬
son’s Creek, sent a letter, in which he
said: “I hope you will find the occa¬
sion a very enjoyable one, and that the
soldiers who were arrayed against will be each
other twenty-two years ago had been no
less friends than if they en¬
gaged in the same cause, and the only
rivalry that may exist between them
hereafter will be to see who can prove
the best citizen of our common and
great country.”
Humility i a virtnre all preach, none to
practice, and yet everybody is content
hear.
The Old Scrap-Box.
Mr. Peters, a somewhat eccentric old
merchant, of his stuck up a notice in a window
store that there was a ‘ ‘ boy wanted, ’’
and the card remained there a great
while before he got the boy he was after.
John Simmons, and Charley Jones, and
one or two beside, were taken for a few
Mr. days, but none of them stood trial.
Peters had a peculiar way of trying
them. There was a huge, long box in
the attic full of old nails and screws, and
miscellaneous bits of rusty hardware,
and when a new boy came, the eld gen¬
tleman presently found occasion to send
him up there to set the box to rights,
and judged the quality of the boy by the
way he managed the work. All puttered
over it more or less, but soon gave it up
in disgust, and reported that there was
nothing there worth saving.
At last Crawford Mills was hired. He
knew none of the other boys, and so did
his errands in blissful ignorance of the
“long box” until the second morning of
his stay, when in a leisure hour he was
sent to put it in order. The morning
passed, dinner-time came, and still Craw¬
ford had not appeared from the attic.
At last Mr. Peters called him. “Got
through ?”
“No, sir; there is ever so much more
to do. ”
“All right; it is dinner-time now; you
may go hack to it after dinner.”
After dinner back he went; all the
short afternoon he was not heard from,
but just as Mr. Peters was deciding to
call him again, he appeared.
“I’ve done my best, sir,” he said,
“and down at the very bottom of the
box I found this.” “This” was a five
dollar gold piece.
“That’s a queer place for gold,” said
Mr. Peters. “It’s good you found it;
well, sir, I suppose you will be on hand
to-morrow morning?” This he said,
putting the gold-piece in his pocket
book.
After Crawford bad said good-niglit
and gone, Mr. Peters took the lantern
and went slowly up the attic stairs.
There was the long deep box in which
the rubbish of twenty-five years had
gathered. Crawford had evidently been
to the bottom of it; he had fitted in
pieces of shingle to make compartments,
and in the different tills he had placed
the articles with bits of shingle laid on
top labelled thus ; “ Good screws.”
“Pretty good nails.” “Picture nails.”
“Small keys somewhat, bent.” “Picture
hooks.” “Pieces of iron, whose use I
don’t know.” So on through the long
box. In perfect order it was at be last, called and
very little that could really
useful was to be found within it. But
Mr. Peters, as he read the labels, laughed
and said, “If we are not both mistaken.
I have found a boy, and he has found a
fortune. ”
Sure enough, the sign disappeared
from the window and was seen no more.
Crawford became the well-known er¬
rand-boy of the firm of Peters & Co.
He had a little room neatly fitted up,
next to the attic, where he spent his
evenings, and at the foot of the bed hung
a motto which Mr. Peters gave him.
“It tells your fortune for yon, don’t for¬
get it,” he said when he handed it to
Crawford; and the boy laughed and read
it curiously. “He that is faithful in that
which is least, is faithful also in much.”
All this happened years ago. Craw¬
ford Mills is an errand boy no more, but
the firm is Peters, Mills & Co.,—ay r oung
man and a rich man.
The Troubles of a Boy.
Poor boy ! Down to his grave he is
self-willed, disobedient, foolish, slow to
learn, hard to manage, born to evil, and
full of corrections as a proof-sheet. He
reaches in the fence-corner for a black¬
berry and picks up a “pisen” vine, and
so he learns too late the mine he bought
was “salted.”
He is spanked in the cradle, flogged
at school, and scourged all the rest of
his life, and still it seems to do him no
good. He lives under an unchangeable
law of pains and penalties. Incessantly
his ears are boxed, to every “Thou shalt
not” is appended a threatening thundering “and if
you do,” and every “Thou
shalt” is seconded by the terrifying “or
you’ll wish you had.” Inexorable is
the master of his school. He can appeal
to no Board of Pardons. No tender¬
hearted Governor, figuring for re-elec¬
tion, overlooks his misdeeds. The ad
minisl ration has no need of him or his
influence. Do not keep such late hours,
and do not eat hot suppers at midnight.
But all the same he does keep late hours
and have good times on the roll-call sly, poor
boy, thinking if he gets in at it
will never bo known. But as he answers
to his name tbe order is entered, “Dock
that man’s life ten years. ” Take care of
your teeth is a regulation of the school.
But, while nobody is looking, the fool¬
ish boy lets his teeth take care of them¬
selves. So he is sentenced to lose naif
his teeth and fined $150, to be paid over
to the nearest dentist having jurisdic¬
tion. “Do not bite on that broken
tooth,” comes the command from the
head of the table. But the boy tries it
just to see what the master will do about
it, and instantly he gets such a box on
the jaw that makes him think he has
bit on a thnnderbolt. It is not a bail¬
able offence, and execution of sentence
cannot be postponed until next term of
court. “Do not run through the wet
grass in your slippers,” is shouted to
h im from the up-stairs window. The in¬
stant the window is closed he skips
across the lawn, knowing no one can see
him, and for this he is collared and led
into the house, doubled up with rheuma¬
tism for ten years, or perhaps tortured
all the rest of his life. He plays lawn
tennis until he streams from every pore.
Then he hastens to refresh himself with
a glass of clear, cold ice-water. “If you
drink that ice-water,” says his watchful
roaster, “I will kill you.” He believes
that no one could be so cruel as that, and
drinks the ice-water. Often the condi¬
tions are ripe for the judgment, and the
sentence is carried into execution,
Sometimes the execution of this sentence
is preceded by hours or days of fearful
agony, to teach him that these lawy ..re
not to be trifled with.—B urdette.
A colored farmer in Marion county
whipped a ligntning-rod man, cleaned
out a book agent, and se.-t to grass a
patent chum man, all within a single
week. We entirely favor the proposed capital
reform of spelling “Negro” with a
“N.”
ESTE!’ Qfififlflg STYLE c2819
—-THE MOST POPULAl{—-—- 1“
iPaflEffil®m ®mfifim
~HW mm: W®i§$§lo~
G- M- Jones £ Company
Corner Commerce and Warehouse Sts. CONYEBS. GA m
-HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL KINDS OF
General Merchandise at Bottom PriceS.
SSfWe sell the NEW HOME Sewing Machine. JKST’We keep allkimds of
jftg-SEWING MACHINE NEEDLES.“"©0
Headquarters For all School Books adopted by tbe Board
of School Commissioners of this county.
■
BY
•I w LiAlfCUFOHD o r
Garriages Wagons, Bugies, MY
own make.
Repairing of Carriages, Wagons and Bugget-, Paiiu.ng and Trimming
of all grades done on short notice.
ALL KINDS OF FURNITURE REPAIRED AS GOOD AS NEW
jSSTl have now on hand the largest and best, stock of waggons, of my own
make, bugies homemade ana of western build that I have ever carried. I
you want bargains you had better call. All who owe me for work are ear¬
nestly request to come forward and settle promptly. I need the money and
must have it. These who do not pay promptly* will be given but short,
time. So you will please settle promptly.
It should be rememberd that My establishment is
HEADQUARTERS UNDERTAKERS 60DDS
COFFINS and CASKETS of all grades and sizes, and COFFIN HARDW ARE
in fact everything tha is kept in a first class Undertaker.
^“COFFINS 'DELIVERED ANYWHERE IN CITY OR COf/N TY
Most Reapectfullv, LANGFORD.
J. W.
Iifl¥
1
■flllf ifcl,' V;i ~ /FBae
■A
m
(*1(1
— ~......
a
1
pgglg J
Wholseale Southern Depot for ESTEY ORGANR, Stem way
Weber, Decker Brothers and Gate City PIANOB.
—DEPOT OF—
-IMPORTERS DIRECT VROM ETUOPB OK-
Violins, Guitars, Harmonicas Etc
STRINGS, fl€8“Nobody AND underbuy ALL KINDS'OF Nobody MUSICAL Undersell MERCHANDISE,
oil us. can us.
Estey Organ Company Atlanta Ga
W,1I. LEE, Age nt.
JOHN NEAL AND COMPANY,
-WHOLESALE & RETAIL DEALERS IN
w u HP
NOS. 7 and 9 SOUTH BROAD STREET ATLANTA, CA.
:o:
Special inducements offered to DEALERS and others in all grades ©f Fnrv
niture. A share of the patronage of Rockdale and adjoining counties*ernestly
solicited. Besnre and give us a trial before making your purchases,
THE OLD RELIBLE FIRAM OF
j
-DEALERS IN-
■
»
1
RAILROAD BLOCK
j | rAMVCDC [\| J GEORGIA
Having been established for'18 years, and carrying one of the largest
smallest and most complete stocks in the eoutry, we cau sell goo>H aa low a
any, and we guarantee satisfaction. When you want
RDY GOODS, NOTIONS, CLOTHING
Call on
J.H.ALMAND&SO &
The Largést Organ Factory in
Slififlmfigwfl AMEN“