Newspaper Page Text
THE DAILY TIMES.
■ • U.C..UIM Ad»• ••• Tr.SI.
nt
("plumbii*. Weorglw.
TUHWDA? JANUA 1 YA U**t
It is so cold tn the West that the
Indiana are freeatng to de»tb. Five
froze to death last week tn the Indian
Territory.
—
Governor McDaniel has appointed
Col. E P. Howell.of tbeOonsiiiuiiou,
to bit the vacancy in the board nt
State Oi pi to 1 Oomtntatiion''rß. caus'd
by the death of Major Orane Col
H iwell will Uli the position Witt
ability.
The Inst Georgia L'-gixiature pass
ed an act placing a tax "upon til
dealers itj pistols, toy pistols. n-vol
vers, pi p tot or revolver cartiidger,
dirks or bowie Bntv« p, the i-um ol one
hundred dollars (or eaon plaut of
business tn each county where the
same are sold.”
The Norwich Connecticut people ,
have bad luck with their banks and
bank officers. The Merchant’s B nn
is snort *130,000, and the Shel ticket
Bank ia snort t&o.OOO. Their ufiluers
bad been speculating In stocks ano
lost. The Banka are strong enough
to go on with business.
—— . s
On Sunday an Insane Asylum «'
Kankakee. Illinois, was burned and
thirteen of the inmates suffered
death. The thermometer, at the Mme
the Are was discovered, was below
■ero. The inmates seemed averse to
leaving the burning building an
those saved were dragged out by
force.
Atlanta wants *IO.OOO more to in
crease tbo efficiency of the police
service. The city council don’t seem
to see the way clear to get the *IO.OOO
Atlanta already pays a huge tax. but
she needs more good policemen, for
it her papers do not exaggerate, stir
has u bard population to keep it
order, both permanent and tran
splant.
Bogus Petitions.
Ooratttatlou.
Washington, Jan. 18 [Spcial.]—
Tbo most outnußiahtic friends of tb>
pension laws are found in the unity
of attorneys tn Washington who milk
their living by managing penslor
claims. They get a good per cent, ol
the many million* anproprluiedevery
year nominally for the benefit of th'
veterans and their familloa. The
countless pension frauds which tiav
robbed the government o millions ol
dollars have been originated and en
ginoeied by shrewd and reckless shy
sters. Their baud is discerned in hi
appeal that is now being
made to O’ngress in boh nil
of the so called Mexican | ouston
bill. Petitions ate coming from .very
State lu.the North and West, numei
ouslv signed, praying tbs passage el
this bill. Over one thousand of t Lea,
pennons, with an aggregate of nearly
50,000 signatures, htivo already been
presented. Au oxami nation reveals
a striking similaiity in the formol
the petitions. Nearly all of tbem are
made out on blames witn « printed
heading, setting f irth the reasons
why the bill ought to puss. The
blanks were evidently printed at tin
same place, and scattered far ana
wide. To obtain signatures in any
locality is the easiest matter Imugln
able. The Washington pension
agents have sent out these blanlte
and perfected the arrangements for
filling them with names. Many of
the signatures are doubtless bogus
These petitions b'ar the marks of
suspicion on their face and will re
ceive little attention.
Tne pending bill would be a mint
to the pension attorneys, as amend
ed by the Senate it ha* a vague pro
vision covering every Feder >1 soldier
of rhe late war who baa been irjured
in any way up to the Present time ot
is in destitute circumstances.' Frauds
are being constantly detected under
the present comparatively stringent
law. This throws the gate wide open
to devices to swindle the Government
and latten the pockets of the sharp
ers who act nty middlimetr for the
beneficiaries. One of the suspicious
points in the petitions is the fact that
they invariably specify that the sigh
er* want the Mexican pension bill
passed, ‘with the Senate amend
meats.
THE OQ,»ING CONOaEHbMKN.
who are to compose tne House in the
Forty-ninth Congress are slow tn ill
leg their certificates. Their terms
will begin on the fourth of next
Match, after which date they will
begin to draw SS,(MX) each. A great
manv of tbem have not yet sent tneit
certificates to the clerk of the H use,
which they mast do before their
names are put on the pay roll, 1
notice that, the certificates of the
membere-eiect have nor yet been re
ceived tor the following districts;
Alabama, second, fifth and eighth:
Atkansas, second and third; Cali
fornia, none received;Colorado, Con
necticut, first, second and fourth;
Delaware, Florida, eecend; Georgia
second, fourth, eighU) and tenth;
Illinois, second, third, fourth,
fifth, cigiyb, eleventh, sixteenth,
siventh and eighteenth; Indiana,
fire third, seventh, eighth, tenth,
and tfiiiteenUi; Kamas, first, second,
third and sixth; Michigan, second
and fifth; Minnesota, fourth; Musis
•tppl, first, second, third and seventh;
Missouri, second, fifth, seventh,
ninth, twelfth, thirteenth and four
teenth; Nebraska, none received;
New Hampshire, second ; North Ohio'
lina, none received ; Onto none ex
cept fifteenth, sixteenth acd elgn
teentti; Bnode Island, second ; South
Carolina none received except first
and fourth; Tennessee, first, second,
sixth and eighth ; Texas..none receiv
ed except second, fifth and ninth;
Virginia, third, s'x’h acd ninth.
All the States bave different forms
of certificates. The most el-.bora'e
are those from Louisian . and Penn- |
eyivania, w|iich are acc?mpaoi< d b, i
returns from every precinct and«
commission -for each m-tnher. New
Turk bus the si" piest form, t single .
printed sh-et giving the t. .m e of all
the members. Georgia’s p ruhment!
certifies es are the heavl st and!
bulkiest received, and tt e oniv onee !
with a wax seal dependent. lutn is
Missouri and Kentucky b >v<- tne
neatest certificates. They are small,
double sheets bati'lsL'mely engraved.
All the certificates are delivered to
the clerk and preserved in bis i fflee
during the Cmgtee* for which ttiev ,
confer titles to seats. They are then
packed sway in the tile rooms of!
C ngrese or returned to their owners.
Most of the members request their
return and hand them dawn «■> heir
looms to their posterity,
F. H. 11.
SOM* NAMES IN MAINE.
Th. ai(nifl«M4M of Bar Hartor. .Sehoooor
Hoad, and >KK K.telu
Many people have a peculiar idea and
other* have no idea at all of the aignifi
cauce or derivation ol Hie nutnas of locali
ties in Maine fr equented4>y summer tour
ista. Bar Harbor is u familiar na«ie to
very many, but why it is called so Is un
known to not a few. There ia a story to
the ell ecl that a Kentuckian who once
visited the place bad a hard hunt for a
bar room, and expressed to the landlord
his opinion ih.it it was a of a town to
call Bar Harbor, and that it should lie
named VVatcrvilla But the name is ap
propriate enough, and ia derived from the
fact that the harbor is partly formed by a
so: tol sand bie.ik water extending from
the shore off to a small island
Among the many points of interest
around this famous resort is Schooner
head, three and a half miles from the
village '1 his is a rooky headland of per
|.« ndicular face, rising abruptly from the
m i. iu mb ti a depth of waler that a man
ol war might he c.oms alongside with no
danger of grounding. There are no
breakers here. the. »oa meruly rising and
lulling with smooth surface and majestic
motion. The fafcc of the cliff is of a
gra.ish color, and on a background of
this hue sharp lines of white quarto
crop out in sue|i a marmot as lo define the
shape of a two- masted tote-auii after, with
mam and fore sails sot, heading up the
the bay. In the war at loll! a British
cruiser fired several shots at this rock
picture, taking it for Yankee cruft hug
ging the shore. before 'he mistake was
discovered. T’his is why the promontory
U known as Schoouei head
Egg Kock is distant half a mile from
Schooner head, and is named front the
vast quantities of ggll eggs deposited
there. In lormsr years the people of the
vicinity jised to go over to the rock and
break all the eggs they could find, and
when they returned in a few days there
would he countless dozens of fresh eggs
there. Since the lighthouse has been
built the gulls have deserted the island
Tim Spouting Hom is a sort of chftn
ney-like shaft in a cliff near Schooner
head, being open both at bottom and lop,
and, when a heavy sea Is rolling In, the
waters arc thrown high up in the opening
with a peculiar, loud noise.
Thunder cave is another cavity in the
cliff near by. It is in the shape of an old
time brick oven, clean as can he. and ac
cessible only at half tide. The place is
fifty feet deep and twanty-flve feet high,
'large enough to iiold a dance in II has
been also known as the Devil's Oven and
Anemone Cave, Its present name was
probably suggested by the fact that tin
sea, washing in al high water, reverberutea
in lite cave like the celestial artillery.
In Maine, as ei.owliere, there are any
number of dills, caves, jieculisrly shaped
rocks, profiles, and niauutains of eccen
tric contour, which, upon discovery, have
promptly lawn named by the unpoetlc na
tives the Devil's this or the Devil’s that,
indicating a su|>erstUion and fearful ba
lief In the evil one. perhaps, or perhaps a
dire and reckless fusulLtarily.
Eighty Tons of I‘opaom.
(Bustos Globed
“Noveltiesin popcorn? Yea, sir,” said
Boston's only munufacturer of this tooth
some commodity. “There's what we caM
'boss corn candy.' It is of assorted flavors,
strawberry, chocolate and vanilla—and
such cake Is put up in white, waxed paper.
Ws sell it in lots to suit, and it retails for
5 eenta per cake. Then we have a heavy
sugared corn in assorted flavors, called
ruml>« of comfort l As a novelty, also,
We get up large guess corn-bulls, of any
.size, for ciutrch and society fairs. Wa
made one some lime ago containing three
bushel* of corn, and one quite leoautljr
containing over a bushel. ”
“Any more novelties?"
“ Yes. we make wfiat we call ‘a return
coriiball, ’ with elastic attached, which re
tads for a penny. And we are putting
oom ot assorted tiavore into luce bag* of
many colors. These retail at S cents per
bag. In the lust four years we have got
ten up no less Ilian eight different styles of
penny popcorn priso- package* For
u-'hi'istmas we get up plain, while and red
and white sugared corn, of mwortad fla
vors. foratriugiug. Theseatrini’s of corn,
as you know, arc largely used for decor
at mg ( h ria; mas trees. We have also
w luu arc caked coarse corn cakes, made
with pure I’orto Rico molasses, and put
up in glass-front cans, and a ground or
flue corn cuke, also made with molasses,
and put up in tin boxes. The latter are
especially for the southern and western
trade, but there is also a large demand for
them in New England. "
“Do you sell many goods in tbo west?”
“Wa bave lieeu iu the habit of sending
?;ooda to the wholesale groeers and eon
ectioners of tst Louis and ( hicago, but,
owing to the high price of corn for the
post year or two, hav« had toaell them
direct to the jobbers or middlemen nearer
home We bought over seventy tons of
com from one seed-house in < hicago last
year, and used altogether perhaps eighty
tons. We employ about ten hands all the
year rouud "
Uow at«»l* Are Served in New Orison*.
[New Orleans Tim re J
Few set tablew YOU are served In the
morning' before you get cut of lied with
a cup ol coffee as good as , can ba found
anywhere in the world, aud some bread or
lililc Vreele pie-crust calu-s.-. JI hers is no
trouble about your meals. There is a
restaurant on every corner or so, or you
can have your meals served bat, and at
the most reasonable sate* As a cencra!
thing, however, they do uot “goinhuavy"
for breakfast hers Your -coffee is sup
poecd to satisfy you until midday, when
you take a alight lunch at some saloon.
About 8 in the evening you sit dawn to
the big meal of tb< day. Supper there
is none, unless you drop in at the theatre,
after which you eat something light
Thus, at least, you will find the natives do
ing. and those wh<- have been visiting
New Orleans each winter for years win
tell you that it is the most comfortable
way to live hero and. beet suited to tai-
[New Orleans Cos. Chicago Times.)
A novel idoa has been wall worked- out
!• the space allotted to Colorado, where a
tine display is made, representing the
grand mountain scenery or the groat con
tinental divide. This exhibit is inclosed
on three sides with a framework twenty
five feet in bright, leaving the front open
to view. In, tbo foreground is a pretty
picture of rural life in the -Ceutewigl
state, where real fields of grain, fences,
cottages, end orvlrurdt laden with fruit can.,
le seen. The useful and themrnamental
ara happily combimd, As a praeiioal sys
tem of irrigation is shown in full opera
tiou, all the devie<» used in measuring
and disiributing the water being in actual
use. To the left is a view of the Royal
, gorge and Grand canyon of the Arkansas,
whose walls of solid rock rise jxwpeudi
cuiaHy 3,000 feat on cither side.
The Denver A Rio tfraudemilroadTuns
through this canon, and in the scenic ex
hibit a miniature railroad bas been con
rtructed ami is in operation. The train
emerges from a snow shed at the foot of
a mountain, passes through the fields in
the foreground, halts a moment at .Palm
er's lake. and then enters-the grand can
von. wbire for a moment it is lost to view
In the mouutains t appear again from the
snow-shed. In the <1 staM- background
areaeeu wrine of the noted peaks of the
snowy range. Pikes peas, showiu; the
I i.tied-State* signal station, at an altitude
of 14.2(10 feet shove the .level of the Sea,
the highest point in the world iiibabikd
by human '.eings, also appears in the < ok
orario e.xhibic Cokirade. .of course,
makes a tine mineral display, but her com
hiisConet si einsto- take more pride in the
Choice speeiuaens of grain raised on the
farm of the state agricultural college at
Fort ( ollins. at an altitude of 5.U00 teat.
Included in the exhibit is a tine collection
of Indian relics and aallqutltes.-Audi s
taxidermical display very alaharate
AUracuv*.
DAILY TIMES: COLUMBUS. GEORGIA, TUES DAY, JANUARY 20, 1885.
W1 he *11,000,(XX) appropriated by the ;
House of Representatives to do the
river and harbor improving for the
year looks insignificant to the com
mittee who asked for *35 000 000. But
too much money has been wanted n
such work for the last twenty years,
and it Is well to find a chopping off
plane somewhere, and this year is a .
good one io which to make the rile
covery.
Atlanta has a scientific drees
maker, who only measures the' cue
tome:’a neck to secure a pi tfeet <1
ting drees. If a pi-teon at adietur it*,
aud never seep, wants a dre-es, sin
must, give iu her or >er, the measure
or the peek and water, and stu c
which toe is Icnyext. The leng h < f
ttie to s inilica tw whether theehiul
dets el< pe ur are equate. V tiiy, si 1-
enoe is a great thing. Tuts t'r-.s;
makey learned her bueint’se in C -
lambus, aud her method of cuttiig
was by Profeseore B ttle and Bartie't
of thin city, named Gyu'imetry. Hi e
tea Mrs. Coleman, * widow, wlte
maideu name was Turner—so eaje
the Constitution.
The Cbarieeton News and Coutlet
inuuilous the tact that vatlou®
parties of negroes, numbering tev
eral hundred iu all, bave oeeu taken
from Virginia, West Virginia and
Kentucky to fill the place of the
striking miners la the Hocking Vai
ley mines In Onio. Our Ouatleston
contemporary thinks the expeti
went an interesting one, and tba
the Southern public will watch
with some curiosity the reception ac
corded to these Brothers in Black by
their Brothers in White of all de
grees, and note how far the practice
of the latter ie to be found to c .inform
to their pulJlbhed receipts. "It will
now,” save that paper, "be made
more or less apparent whether the
liberal views of Northern Republicans
with regard to negro competition and
equality in general are intended to
apply toall partsoi thecouu'.ry alike,
or to the South alone,”
— »-Ov •
Rivers and Harbors
Washingtin, Jan. 17.—The Houne
cotumlitee on rivers aud harbors to
day completed the consideration oi
the river and hmbor appropriation
bill tor the next, fiscal ye.*r, the bin
appropriates sli,3V9,2uU. The esti
mates, as prepare a by the engineers
in charge of the various improv,
me uta, amounted to |34 507 030. The
bill embiaO'S items pur. harbors as
follow*:
Virginia—N rfolk and approaches
SSO 000.
N rth Carolina—Beaufort, *5 o<K);
E.iemon Buy, #2 000.
Bouth Uaroliui —Charleeti'n Har
bor, *150,000; Georgetown *2 000.
Geutgiu—Brunswick, *lB Otx); Gum
berlutiii Bound, *75.000; Savannah.
*BS 000,
Florida Apalachicola Bay, *10,000;
Tampa. Bay *IO,OOO.
GEOHGIA 3ECUB.mEB.
Corrected by John itiackinar,
tiroket benur il aii otvcku lUUBUUur.
COtte kJ A* iikofc. MA.
' • AUvSkUB.
Did AwMLi
... lUi' i
■, K tMHA* <»*••••* * U J 1
' t>AirpU- ik, 6 t.<
' Georgia i h. li
utaute 1 b
' aiaiuaiH., 6 iU
1 MUamA&i i
aiAUtaiGß —>• >•
i ; uirfUoU b» « 1
LUgU»IA
Jt-IUIUbUB .....I
ijx, jbiuuaiu* ....... J
UA<AA'M*4t< 1M.,.. ...... ......
UoMVU QM ! -
1 ■''•t ! '
I Hernia,
L•> iuaulic a. (.tuh ifc - . ;o i
• Juusrxi ugh utkgt 7b.a». a. .. -OB lb'.
MtUIgAK Ak It *‘-l
' i* or 0 U Ulk bb ‘ 1
1 41)1)11*? & Girard id iutg;: cud bU xi iu
k Bvorn uik .Kia, ahi iibpiv bin . B. 09 <
* A’aaUTM iMabaiux. mi/t und Hb. i*o A-
MUAKrmut i* lac Mt*,
1 Hutfais ouuiutou o pur com.., 76 1
r rt?Urgib 11 peI’CHUI '4<>
' joaib*ußwru io. prut.. -ov lit
- bi <7
ttaoka
a PDeuix, IU
knuuiDua. 93 24
' tIMOVgM * W kb
Inaurauca mioeu.
* wurgia Home Lueuraucu Uu. 12 pr c1..130 Hi*
11 MH kA AUmUA.
1 JiiaiUliuoohe*. Nauuual, Au perct....
MeroUaUM A JAeuUauLoe. AU pci 0t..*.120 12.
.ttiaomlMiieuua.
rtoueer 00-UpMxaUve vv, iu per oi. ... 28 Hx
t<ur
J 20 •hares WtAlekU K. B.> 7 pur oei l
gUAiat tuvO •lucK.
&0 kkuree Central B, B. stock.
1U bHare* Ch kt •Uouubee Loan AsHwclktAoi.
•luck.
t A0 •bare* .Mueoogee Loan Aaiooiauuu block.
> At A illM'-'llill,
lu anar-M tteorgla Home Insurance Co.
1 10 Bbare« ( oiurubuH hacUry Steck.
• • A.UuU Mu bl a* & Lili aid railroad 6 per cent
I Douda,
» - Uu nAjarea Muicogeo Factory wtock.
Jfi abarea Eagle & ILentx tact cry itocl.
Buyer geta tb*> afiui-aunua. a pwr cent, dm
I ueud. due Dioembo*' ov.
Wunted
1 60.U0U Uoaleduraie Bonds. Ur any part.
I , U. 8. Land Warrant*.
6,000 Oil/ ol Oulumbua bond* 5 per cent,
bond*.
JOHN BLAtMII iH,
BBOKKB AhiD DEaLKL
I in all the above ritocka and Honda. AH aecni
tleeplaced lu my band* *cy «a»* adver* aed .fr-•
nf
■ COMPLETE STOCK
■ KOI 1H!
CLOTHING
, Made to Order!
FOR FALL AND WINTER
1884.
X Beautiful Line of
Plffl GOODS!
A Great Varietv of
Styles and Prices!
DOMESTIC, AMERICAN
and FOREIGN GOODS.
Your Order Solicited NOW.
Goods may be delivered
any time during The next
thirty or sixtv da» s.
S. J.
ulothirig Mkuuiactuier, I
Hi 61 bmi UiUUk• Hia J
IMMENSE STOCK
OF
Hamburg Embroideries
AND
TORCHON LACES
AT
BARGAIN PRICES,
AT
J. ALBERT KIRVEN’S.i
TRADE PALACE
159 ana 161 Bt oaa Strei t, Opposite Harkin House.
A FAIS FIELD--M FAVOjOFFERING PLUMS 1
350 piurs of 10x4 Blankets at 75c per pair.
Our • xperfenco in 'fats city telle us in unmietekable Istigmige that
NOWHERE ia thia bn n i land are courtesy and fair dealing aurer of
eucerss than in C< LUM BUS.
Tne vaet i xumt of uur business—three large establishments at
AUGUSTA, SAVANNAH, COLUMBUS,
Guarantees to our customers the supreme advantage or buyir g tram
fitst hands. We make no wild assertions—OUß FIGURE* BPEAK,
Il <> « I E It V ]
140 DOZEN Ladies and Mieses’ lograin Hose, full regular, marked from
37J0 to 250.
-too DOZEN Ladies’striped Hose, extra heavy, at 50,
UYI DOZEN Genre’ st ripest) Half-Hose, ne..vy, at 5o
•73 DOZEN L .dies' Balbriggan, eolid colors, reduced from 50c to 33Jc.
20 I’te e'W'm.a.x’lcets
MAKKED BELOW LOB . IO LOSE lUEM (JU 11
$5.50 Newmarkets for $3 50 20 Russian Cirou’ars from
9.00 Nuwmarke s for 675 | $7 00 to sl2 00,
Jusf wnat Ifify Oeat t*H Mmutaorurer.
LSATt'JA I.N rs IJST
Towbls, lame Damask, Napkins and Doyles.
Ont B ile oi BLACK GRO (tRAf N HILK still ccctinutet. One more
jneiyrot tha (talciii-iteJ 99j. BILK, equal to any in this market at
*1 50. A full no- ot
CO dTALLDS ENGLISH CRAPES.
GENTS’ SHIRTS, GENTS’ SHIRTS 50c.
LtUNiBIED. UNLAUNDRIED, MAc.
3-plj 1 nil anil Itassom wln
SI.OO. , J , „
80Z.«»»-. >u»o ladies’ taw Vests
f’rixu Wnnl lit Al GOOD V ALL E FOB Me. i
gCO Ch Imild Jli L ;j,> I (l z(n Byack rJensevk!
..A t OO fiivtl e. I *u-t v.aik>«.t dutvt t i *; W n *;.i.o
i ACK CAbllii’ ; SAJib MOOBNING GOODS have pssssed
beu«a. h the p uning kniie-
5" oiecet 1 38 BOOIj <A-H Ji EBE a' 25: have het-v 37Jc.
25 I lee. *3B WOOL CABHMEKES at 35 —ti ive l>..en 50c.
15 pieces 48 in tnu gi :>i. .test tn o t- cut. t> yards to a dress, wet: *1.25, new 95c
C. P. G RAY & CO.
COLUMBUS, SAVANNAH, AUGUSTA.
J. A. CALHOUN, F. B BROOKS,
1-1 ¥ cure wit li 115 Year, with
L. KOOfNkUY. COLUMBUS IKON WOKKt
o
CALHOUN & BROOKS
JOT-IZKI-rY- X'LIS XIQ
Furniture, Shades, &c.
142 Broad Street, Next Door to Central Hotel.
THE BEST SELECTED STOCK
IN IHE fTTY. AND THE
PRICES LOWER
Than Anybody.
GIVE US A T3IAL AND WE WILL SATISFY YOU
tils Old at: I K ilabta Georgia Oompatry o uiUuU'M to taka Fira risks ot all kluih
1 Charter perpetual. DIVIDEND No. 26 FOB 1884. 33M per tent
The PHCENIX, of Hartford, Conn.,
ROCHESTER-GERMAN, of NewiYork,
All solid Cpuipaciea, represented tn tbis'i Agency. Betas low. Losses piomptlj
adjusted,
R. B. MURDOCK,
Asthma.
Dr. 0. w. Temple’* Aetlma Bpe isle- Ti >
•ent remedy fv«r crupcuudtd for ihe cure <
bat malady Fnee f i and f-'P»
vottle. Aek\eiir urnPt ißi for it. sei d 2-e»i
Itrmp for treat tee to
t>r V«*<hc ne 4'o. t ♦
KKS H . > 11.10*, O
g bt J it <J »
I tksr -j«sa-5 I
LAW PARTNERSHIP.
W- have tut. day ten: -a u pai tnen-Ul;
ior ria pi *etiee ur law under tur
ntins o:
PEABODY, BBANNON & BATTLE
M-Colieot’ops and all other business
p. -eed io cur hande wtll b. pioisptly au
csi< fully attended to.
John PXvfo DX
WM. a. i MteMMOn.
OCU-U Mtato.xw> &. LtelUA
ilTl ?l for * o^kin ‘ , peapl®. bend 10 oeata
Wk I Mpoetagv, and we will mail you fret .a
IIL LI »‘’yw* Wuebleeampie bos of goods
that win put you in the way of ir-ekicg more
nwcey iuihw days than you ever thought p a
rattle at ary bnsiueae. Capital not required.
1 u can live at boms and wort in spare time
05 ly, or all the time 411 Os both ssim, of all
grandly euovwful, 60 oenta to S6tMti>
earned every eye Ing. That all who wax t work
may test the buslneaa. we make tills unparalle ed
offer: To ail who are nvt well aatisfiec we uhl
■end $1 to jay for the iron We ox writ;h> ua
Fuji particulars, directions. »tc.. ran: free,
luaneuet* pay absolutely -nre for al! who start at
cnee. Don’t delay. address k Co..
’ Pnr»l<n«l
Jordan’s doyous duiep
I Will qjnatuu worst ..vect
! A d nervous headacne in a tew alnutee;
' ;o.:!i aud«e.r>w»;ieto two mLnutee. Noth*
i fUR liKe it tot paiu. it acts like
'if you eufler aiw your arußgiet tor
JOi.DAN’bJUYOLB JULitf, ibeheuriKl i
i rU vure. J?rkie Ju oemu»—tot e&le by
I dc'kMuisks. J
TIMES
JO’OTTKE
Can. Supply Business Men With
Cards! Cards! Cards!
CARDS!
CARDS I
CARDS I
BILL HEADS!
BiM Heads!
Bill Heads!
Bill Heads!
NOTE HEADS!
Note Heads!
Note Heads!
Letter Heads !
Letter Heads !
* Letter Heads!
STATEMENTS OF ACCOUNT I
STATEMENTS OF ACCOUNT I
STATEMENTS OF ACCOUNT 1
PROG RAMMES 1
PROGRAMMES 1
PROGRAMMES 1
POSTERS !
POSTERS!
POSTERS!
POSTERS and
HANDBILLS! HANDBILLS! HANDBILLS!
WORK XEATLY AND PROMTLY"DONE'
AND AT
I-OATV PRICKS
—ja.a?—
T imes Office Job Rooms