The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, January 20, 1905, Image 2
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An Ordinance
to rai&e
supplies for
1905 1906.
the vear
Be it ordained by the Mayor and Alder
men of Gaffney, in council assembled,
and by authority of the same, that a tax
to cover the expenses of the said town
from the first Tuesday in March, 1905, to
the first Tuesday in March, 1906, be levied
and collected in manner and form follow-
ing:
Section 1. There shall be paid on
each dollar of the assessed value of all real
estate and personal property, the sum of
eight mills for general purposes; and the
sum of two mills for the payment of in
terest on town hall, electric light ami
water works bonds, making a total of ten
mills.
Section 2. That each and every able
bodied male ]>erson between the ages of
18 and 50 years, except such persons as
are exempted by the State law, shall pay
on or before the first Tuesday in March,
1905, the sum of two dollars for road
and street exemption; and any person
liable to the said tax who shall fail to pay
the same within the time specified shall
be required to work the streets of the said
town six day* under the direction of the
street overseer; and any person liablef or
said tax and fails to perform the said la
bor, shall be,l|pon conviction thereof,
fined in a sum not greater than ten dollars
or imprisonment not more than twenty
days.
ITINERANT TRADERS AND AUCT
IONEERS.
Section 3. That not exceeding twenty-
five dollars, within the discretion ot the
Mayor, shall be paid per day by every
itinerant trader or auctioneer offering for
sale within the corporate limits of the
town of Gaffney, at auction or otherwise,
any goods, wares, or merchandise to
others than the trade, to be paid each
day in advance, and every itinerant trad
er or auctioneer liable to said tax who
shall fail to pay the same as herein pro
vided, shall be fined not more than #40.00
or be imprisoned not more than thirty
days for each and every day or fraction
thereof he shall so offend; provided this
section shall not be held to apply to deal
ers in grains, fruits, poultry, earthenware
or manufactures of like character raised
or produced on the vender’s own farm.
SPECIAL TAXES.
•Section 4. No person, firm or corpor
ation shall engage in, prosecute or carry
on any business or profession hereinafter
mentioned without first having paid a
special tax therefor, as follows, to wit:
Agents for or dealers In fertilizers for
sale 100 tons or less I 5 00
Agents for or dealers In fertilizers from
100 to.2U0 tons 10 00
Agents for or dealers In fertilizers for
each additlonol 100 tons or fraction
thereof over 200 tons 2 50
Agents, resident or itinerant, soliciting
mill operatives to leave employers or
go elsewhere • • • 25 00
Agents selling or dealing In patent
rights, whether In store or on the
streets 25 00
Agents or dealers in sewing machines. 25 00
Architect, Surveyor, Civil Engineer, or
either. 10 00
Auctioneer 5 00
Auctioneer replenishing stock from
time to time as the same becomes di
minished 50 00
5 00
admission is
00
5 00
Doelor in wagons, other vehicles, ex
cept manufacturers 10 00
Dentist 10 00
Dyer 0 On
F.xch' nge. bucket shop, firm or indi
vidual carrying on the business of
dealing in options or futures in cot
ton, grain, provlsi jus or other sup
plies, on margins or otherw ise if*' 00
Exhibitions outsldeof oper-* house, per
day, not exceeding 10 0>
Express company for business done
within the State and riot including
t hat done without 11re State, and not
government business .. X» 00
Fairs, concerts or festixals, except for
religious or benevolent purposes,
per day 00
Fresh fish and oyster*.or either, not
sold In connection with market by
regular market licensed men 5 flO
Fruit trees, agents for. per day 1 00
Tire same, per week 5 00
I Ciuii and locksmith repair shop 1 00
; lias Utters, plumbers or electric wir
ing > 5 00
Harness shop, repair only 1 00
Horses, persons selling at auction, per
day 25 00
Hotel 25 00
Ice cream saloon or peddler 2 50
lee dealer, retailer 5 00
Insurance company, fire. life, health or
live stock, and each insurance com
pany of any kind, or any company or
corporation or si ciety having insur
ance features other than charitable,
and every agent or agency for such . 15 00
Individuals ouying from merchants
and selling to the trade on time 10 00
Kerosene Oil Company or agent or
agency for same... 75 00
Land company, selling its own land
exclusively i£* 25 00
Laundry, Steam 15 00
Laundry, agent for 15 00
Lawyer 10 00
Lawyer also lending money for self or
others. In addition 30 00
Loans, saving* and investment com
pany. lending money on real estate or
otherwise, and similar companies,
agent or attorney for same 25 00
Lunch dealer 2 CO
Lime works 35 00
Machine shop, or foundry, or either.
75c for each fl,000 capital stock.
Marble yard or agency for same 10 00
Merchants shall pay license according
to tlie following gross sales:
Under fl.000 5 00
Over fl.000 to 82,500 10 00
Over 82.500 to f5,(*X) 15 00
Over $5,000 to $10,000 20 00
For each fl.000 over f10.000 25 00
Mills, grist or flour 5 0(
Mills, saw 5 0*
M jney lender, other than bank or law
yer 30 0*
Newspaper less frequent than daily... 10 00
Oculist or optician, itinerant, per day . 5 00
Opera house, per year 25 00
Fainting, contractor for. (sub-contract
ors shall be liable for a similar license 5 00
Paper hanger or upholsterer 5 00
Photographer 10 00
Photographer, itinerant, per week or
fraction thereof 5 00
Physician 10 00
Pliyslclan, itinerant 10 00
Pianos, organs and other musical in
struments, or either of them, dealer In 25 00
Merchants selling placos, organs or
oti^er musical instruments Instore... 10 00
Same, itinerant. 25 00
Pianos and organs, tuner and repairer
of, or either, itinerant 5 00
Planing mill or machine 5 00
Printing office, or Job alone 5 00
Railroads, for business done within the
State, and not including that done
without the State, or inter state com
merce, and not including.ti.at done
for the government 200 (X)
Restaurant 10 00
Stove repairer 5 op
Sewing machine repairer 5 00
Stoves, itinerant dealer In. 5 00
Street drummer 25 00
Street wagon or dray, 2-horse 10 Ot)
Street wagon or dray, 1-horse. 5 00
Shooting gallery per day, 82.00; per
year 25 00
Skating rink 10 00
Soda fountain or goose neck connected
with other business, oralone
Stables, keeping vehicles and horses
for hire, uut’er one roof
Stables, feed and sale, under one roof..
Stables, feed and sale, under one roof,
keeping horses and vehicles for hire.. 30 00
Tenpin alley 25 00
No person shall let or hire any wagon
or dray or other carriage or vehicle for
transporting passengers or goods within
the limits of the town without first hav
ing obtained a badge from town clerk,
paying therefor fifty cents, under a pen
ally of *
PARCELS POST.
And Other Features of the Proposed
Postal Legislation Discussed.
The proposed revision of the United
States postal laws permitting the;
transmission through the mails of all
parcels not exceeding eleven pounds
in weight was severely scored by T
L. Grigg of the Drygoodsman at the •
annual banquet of the St. Louis Adver
tising Men’s league held recently in
that city.
Forty of the leading local advertis
ing writers, relaxing from the tremen
dous press^*' of the holidy season,
sat comfortably about the board and
gave to Mr. Grigg their undivided at
tention. He is well versed in the mail
order business, ami his views created
general comment.
Summarized, they were to the effect
that postal laws permitting eleven
pound packages to he sent through the
mails at 5 cents for the first pound
would work great injustice to all com
munities wherein the dealers were
competing with New York.
Consumers coul i, he stated, secure
catalogues and land goods in their
homes at rates that would exclude the
local merchants from the field entire
ly, he being forced, buying in quanti-;
ties, to pay heavy freight and express ;
rates.
Have Only Themselves to Blame.
[New York American.]
There are lots of girls who cannot
get lovers, but why? They are nice
enough girls. And all their friends
like them; good looking, too, perhaps,
yet lovers they cannot get. For all
that they desire lovers—every girl
does—and marvel why they should be
left out in the cold. The probability
is that they have themselves to blame.
They may not go the right way about
it. It takes a deal of science to really
attract a man in these times. On the
other hand, their tongues may be re-
sponsible; again, their style of dress
ing may keep the young men away.
Regarding this latter—the dressing—
van may wonder how that can keep a
man from classing a certain girl as
0 sweetheart. Well, I will try to ex-
• lain.
Now, suppose a youth is earning a
certain salary—perhaps enough to
keep himself and wife in compara
tive comfort, yet not sufflicent to per
mit of any extravagance. What is he
apt to conclude if he observes the
girl he would like to make his wife
everlastingly appearing in new clothes.
If he is sensible he will readily decide
that she is not for him, his salary
could not stand a constant supplying of
new dresses, and very likely he comes
to another conclusion—that the girl,
did she marry him, would be discon
tented with her lot if he did not keep
her in the style to which she had been
accustomed.
Perhaps not one girl In twenty has
ever dreamed that the too frequent
new gowns she is proud of are actu
ally destroying her chances of getting
a husband, and she should know for a
fact that It is so, has been so and will
be so.
THE DISSATISFIED ONES.
L1v**m l*>- a I’i-iiIf lt*«« f.oneinK
l-’or Olli«*r I'I>1(1 n.
Everywhere we find people who are
disvnli.s(i:>d with their lot who think
they x^ould be happy if they could only
get somewhere else, into some other
jccupation. They only the thorns
in their own vocations, the roses in
those of others. The shopgirl would
be an actress; the cook would change
places with her mistress, the butler
t
with his master, rhe lawyer would be
a doctor, the doctor a lawyer. The
farmer bemoans bis hard lot and longs
to exchange ids life of drudgery for
the career of the merchant or the man
ufacturer. The country boy leans on
his plow handle and looks toward the
city with hungry eyes. If he could
only be free from the slavery of the
farm, he thinks, wear good clothes, get
hold of a yardstick and stand behind a
counter! Happiness, opportunity, for
tune—everything, lies yonder; around
him misery, toil, poverty—nothing de
sirable. A city youth behind a counter
or sitting on a high office stool rails at
fate for confining him to the limits of
brick walls and the dreary details of
merchandise, buying and selling, or of
figuring up accounts. Oh, if he could
anly go to sea and travel to distant
jountries. become a captain in the na
ry or skipper or owner of a merchant
ressei! Life would be worth something
then. But now—
How much energy has been lost, how
many lives have been spoiled by this
fruitless longing for other fields, other
opportunities out of reach. What is the
use of sighing or dreaming of what
you would do if you were in somebody
else’s place? What is the use of trying
to reach into your neighbor’s (imture
when you do not know’ what bitterness
may iie at the root of it. bidden from
your sight, when you have never tried
to develop or to call out the sweetness
and juiciness which thrive in your
own?—O. S. Marden in Success.
THE DISCOVERER
Df Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, the
Great Woman’s Remedy for Woman’s Ills*
'//
IT
%
Vi
SALT LAKE WATER.
5 00
5 00
25 00
Baker
Balls, public, when
charged, pjr night
Banks, private. State or savings, $1.00
foreaci’ fi,000capital stock.
Hanks, national, $100 for each $1,000
capital stock.
Barber, 1 chair
Barber, 2d chair 2 50
Barber, for each additional chair 1 00
Bicycles, dealers in or agents for the
sale of 10 00
Bicycles, persons running establish
ment for hiring or renting 5 00
Bill Posters, local or itinerant 10 00
Blacksmith, for one forge 5 (X)
Blacksmith, for each additional forge 1 00
Boarding House, private, except for
students or factory operatives exclu
sively •> d0
Bootor shoe shop, making or repairing 2 50
Brick manufacturer 15 00
Broker, dealing In bonds or stocks
alone 25 00
Broker, dealer in cattle, bon es or other
live stock, not paying a license for
sale stable or stock yard, per day 2 50 _ ^ -
The same per year 25 00 that such vehicle shall run, or five days
Broker, merchandise 10 00: imprisonment for each day so run.
Broker, pawn 50 00 Street railway or dummy line. 35 00
Billiard, pool or bigatelle table, for Tailor, mercliant or manufacturer 10 00
one table 25 00 1 Telegraph company or agency for busi-
For each additional table 15 00 ness done within the State, and not
Building aud Loan Associations, or j including business done without the
agents for the same 15 00 , state, or for tlie government 25 00
Butcher, dealers in meats, fresh or salt Tin or tinker shop 5 00
less than 20 days old 20 00 Telephone exchange 25 00
Boot black 1 00 Telephone office 10 O0
Chiropodist, per day 1 00 Tatmery 2 50
Circus or menagerie, per day In ad- I Undertaker 15 00
vance $50 00 to$150.00 in the dlscre- Veterinary surgeon 5(0
tlon of the mayor Watchmaker and Jeweler, for repairing
ally of five dollars for each and every day
Circus, side show, per day In advance.
Circus street parade, in advance not
more than 850.00. In the discretion of
the mayor
15 00
and selling, or either 10 (X)
Warehouse, storage 10 (XI
W<x>d yard or dealer 10 00
All licenses issued by the clerk, as
Any person or persons who shall ex- herein provided, if to be a firm, shall
hibit or assist iu exhibiting any circus ! contain the name of the firm proposing
or menageries in said town without first to do business under same, and also all
having paid the license tax therefot, the names of individuals composing such
shall each be liable to a fine of $100.00 , firm. If to a corporation it shall contain
or imprisonment not more than 30 days ' the name of tlie corporation and tire
for each day or fraction thereof such names of the officers of same,
show or exhibition continues. ! ^ n y p erson or persons carrying on
Coal dealer 10 (xi business or occupation or running any
Coal and wood dealer 15 oo establishment or business named in this
Commission merchant ,w I or preceding sections, without having
Contractors for contracts less than ^ taken out a license therefor, as herein
$ : -’ rj0 - 00 • " 50 provided, shall be fined, except iu cases
Contractors for contracts less than where special penalties are imposed, tlie
The Girl That Laugh*.
(Exchange.)
Girls spend considerable time try
ing to find out how to be popular. It
is natural that a girl should seek ap
proval and admiration. Her popu
larity means a good time, boxes of
candy, theatres, dances, flowers—ev
erything that the hearts of the young
people delight in.
The girl that is popular is the girl
who laughs. Not the girl that sim
pers and puckers or giggles, but the
girl that laughs and means it. The
girl that laughs can have candy and
flowers and theatres every day ’n the
week.
Men flock about her. They adore
her. She laughs herself straight in
to the hearts of beaux and admirers
and straight into all the good times
that a girl can dream of.
She laughs, but she is careful when
she laughs. She laughs with her
beaux at what they say when they
say it, but never afterward. She
never laughs at any one’s blunders or
misfortunes.
Women forget to worry when they
hear the cheerful girl’s laugh. Old
men are warmed at the sound of it.
young men listen and follow it; pay
court to it, marry it. For i is the
laugh that keeps the heart young,
the laugh that keeps the face bright.
$5(XUH) 5 00
Contractors' for contracts for over
$50(l.(X) and less than 82,5(X>.(X) 10 (X)
Contractors for over $2.5<jo.(Xl 25 00
Sub-contractors shall be liable for a
like license tax
Cotton seed oil mill, 75c for each
ft.COO (X) capital stock
Cotton factory 75c for each $1,000.00
capital stock
Cotton »iln and press
For each additional press
Dons to la; paid for by the person or
persons on whose place the dox is
kept
20.00
5 on
sum of not more than twenty-five dollars
per day or fraction thereof, or be impris
oned in the town prison or county jad,
or l>e sentenced to hard lalxxr on tlie
streets or other public works of tlie town
for a period of not more than five days
for each and every day or fraction there
of such busines*, occupation or profes
sion is carried on without such license.
specified in
II be
(xi:
Except where otherwise s
the foregoing, no license shalf be issued
for a less period than one year from the
date thereof, and shall date from first of
month in which said license is issued.
The police of the Town of Gaffney are For any business, calling, occupation
hereby authorized and empowered to ! or profession not enumerated in the fore-
seize and confine every dog running at : going, a license tax of not more than
large and not having on the town badge twenty-five dollars shall l>e paid to the
for current year; and for every dog so clerk by person, firm or corporation en-
taken by the” police #1.00 additional shall
be paid.
Dealer In building supplies-
gaged or running same. All licenses
issued under this ordinance shall be
posted in a conspicuous place on prem.
ises where business or profession is car
ried on, and subject at any and all times
to inspection by the officers of the town.
Any person or persons failing to post
said license shall be subject to a fine of
not more than five dollars or imprison
ment for not more than ten days.
Section 6. The tax on real and per
sonal property provided for in this ordi
nance shall be paid on or before the first
Tuesday in March, 1905, and any person
liable for the same who shall fail to pay
the same on or before the said date, shall
be liable to a penalty of 20 per cent, of
such tax, and the tax and the penalty
with tlie costs shall lie collected by exe
cution or other legal process.
Any person, firm or officer of any oc
cupation making any false or fraudulent
returns where a return under oatli is by
this oreinauce required, shall, ut on con
viction. be fined not less than twenty-five
dollars nor more than fifty dollars or be
imprisoned not more than thirty days nor
less than twenty days at the discietion of
the mayor.
Section 7. Any person, firm or cor
poration liable to the license tax herein-
before set forth, whose said tax is regu
lated by the amount of business done or
the amount of stock carried, is required
to make a return under oath to the clerk
of the town council on or before the first
1 uesday in March, 1905, and on failure
so to do such person or the officer or
agent of such firm or corporation shall
lie liable to a fine of not exceeding one
hundred dollars or imprisonment not ex
ceeding thirty days for each and every
day or fraction thereof such person, or
officer, or agent aforesaid shall be in de
limit ot making such return.
Section 8. All licenses issued under
the foregoing section* are NON-TRANS-
FEKABLE AND WILL ONLY PRO
TECT THOSE TO WHOM THEY ARE
ISSUED
Done and ratified in town council
semhled this the 9th January, 1905,
R. M. GAFFNEY, Mayor.
W. H. Ross, Town Clerk.
[Seal.]
Effect of Its Wonderful Buoyancy on
Bodies and Boats.
The buoyancy of the water of the
Great Salt lake is such that it is al
most Impossible for a person to remain
upright in it, his body being lifted as a
strip of wood thrown into the water at
a vertical or oblique direction like a
dart Is returned to the surface in a
horizontal position. In fact, it is be
lieved that the Great Sait lake will
support more xveight to a given volume
of water than even the Dead sea. It
is a very popular resort with bathers
for the reason that it is impossible for
a person to drown unless he should
deliberately place his head under the
surface or tie a weight to his feet The
bather can float upon the water, lying
on his back or chest, and keep his head
entirely above tlie surface with no ef-
1 fort of the arms or legs. The large
quantity of salt in solution is the prin
cipal reason for tlie buoyancy. While
j the buoyancy of the water is so great
that it will support a person without
aid, the boats which are designed to
be used upou tlie lake must be con
structed especially to counteract this
feature. The ordinary wooden vessel
when empty is actually too light to be
navigated with safety upon it. since
such a small portion of it would be
j immersed. Therefore care has to be
I taken, in building sailboats especially,
lest they be top heavy. For this reason
navigation is very dangerous on the
lake wheu the wind is blowing even
moderately unless the vessel is loaded
' so that it sits deep enough in the wa
ter to counteract the buoyant tendency.
The quantity of salt hef^^n solution
is so great that it is dangerous for one
to swallow even a monthful of the
water, as it is liable to cause strangula
tion. Several deaths from this cause
have ensued among persons who have
ventured into the lake.—Chambers’
j Journal. t
I
Very Old Tree*.
An old yew tree stands in the church
yard at Fortlngal, in Perthshire, which
De Candolle nearly a century ago
proved to the satisfaction of botanists
to be twenty-five centuries old, and an
other is still standing at Hedsor, in Bu-
clas. which is 3,240 years old. How De
Candolle arrived at an apparently cor
rect estimate of the enormous age of
these living trees is a simple thing, and
the principle is doubtless well known
today to all. The yew. like most other
trees, adds one line, about the tenth of
an inch, to its circumference each year.
But the oldest living thing in the world
today as far as known is a cypress tree
in Chapultepec. Mexico, that is 0,260
years old.
Fame.
Schumann, the famous musician, is
the principal character of an amusing
story told by a Vienna critic: “The
corajKiser once accompanied bis wife,
who was even then a celebrated pi
anist. to the palace when she went to
play before the king of Holland and
waGratified by the monarch’s com
pliments of her performance. The com
poser was somewhat surprised, how
ever. when the king turned to him and
courteously inquired, ‘Are you also mu
sical?* ’*
No other female medicine in the world has received such widespread and
Unqualified endorsement.
No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles or such
hosts uf grateful friends as has
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian
Troubles, Inflammation and Ulceration. Falling and Displacement of the
Womb, and consequent Spinal Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the
Change of Life.
It has cured more cases of Backache and Leucorrhoea than any other rem
edy the world has ever known. It is almost infallible in such cases. It
dissolves and expels tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of de
velopment.
Irregular, Suppressed or Painful Menstruation, Weakness of the Stomach,
Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration. Headache. General Debil
ity quickly yield to it. Womb troubles, causing pain, weight and backache, in
stantly relieved and permanently’ cured by its use. Under all circumstances it
invigorates the female system, and is as harmless as water.
It quickly removes that Bearing-down Feeling, extreme lassitude, “don’t
care’’ and “want-to-be-left-alone” feeling, excitability, irritability, nervous
ness, Dizziness, Faintness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy or the “ blues n
end headache. These are sure indications of Female Weakness, or some de
rangement of the Uterus, which this medicine always cures. Kidney Complaints
and Backache, of either sex, the Vegetable Compound always cures.
Those women who refuse to accept anything else are rewarded a hundred
thousand times, for they get what they want—a cure. Sold by Druggists
everywhere. Refuse all substitutes.
SPECIALSI
I will offer, until closed out my entire line of Ladies’ and
Misses Jackets and Ladies’ Coat Suits at greatly reduced
prices. Don’t fail to see them if you are looking for bargains.
Ladies’ Under Skirts from $1.00 to $5.00,
All styles in Rubbers for Men, Ladies and Misses.
A few Men’s Youths’ and Boys’ Overcoats left which will
be closed out at bargain prices.
I can fit all sizes in Clothing, both in quality aud price.
Men’s all Wool Sweaters $1.00.
Blankets 60 cents per pair up.
Quilts from $1.00 to $2.00 each.
Shoes to fit everybody from the wee tot to a 13 size for Men.
Corload Barbed Wire and Nails at away down price.
See me for anything usually kept in a first-class general store
and I will do your pocket book good. Thanking all my friends
and customers for the very liberal patronage bestowed upon me
and wishing all a happy and prosperous New Year.
I am yours for more business,
J. I. SARRATTV.
Tit Gaffney City Uni ao( Impmimint Cl.
Offers for sale Building Lots In this flourishing town, Gaffney; also Farms ne
by and in reach of the Schools of Limestone Springs and of this place, in lots of 80
to 100 acres on liberal time rates; also Agricultural Lands to rent for Farm .purposes
For full particulars apply to
J. V. SARRATT, Agent.
N. B.—All persons are forbidden to enter on. walk or ride through or over the lands of thl*
company, cutting and removing- timber or Ashing, hunting, under penaltv of law.
Dared.
“Tell me what you eat and I will tell
you what you are.”
“Well, I H’pone I eat more Wiener
wurst than anything else. Now, con
found you. go on with your theory if
you’ve got the nerve.”—Chicago Bec-
ord-Herald.
wW-
FERTILIZERS;^
“dokk it
VIKCiKiA'CARr.lHA COMICAL £0*5 i
iAU.5 C rtcu:
1 f*M«|AN,$A. NCMdnift.ttttM Wi
( A"urrA.f*A. at gua*. u.c.
j[ »UMTC0*tWV, AU’* $IG«rCtm,Vd.
ouiucroif. s.c. *c««o**0.va.
n
m.
as-
At the Cotillon.
Elderly Lady (watching the dancers)
—How well Mr. Heavyweight dances!
He la ao light on his feet. Young
Lady (who has had experience)—
Humphi I wish he were the same on
other people’s.- Smart Set.
mi
For Sale
The entire business of the
Acme Furniture Co., including
the stock of W. V. Humphries
ifc Co., will be closed out at the
earliest date possible. Any one
wishing to engage in business
of this kind will find this a
splendid opportunity. How
ever, we will lose no time wait
ing for a purchaser of this kind,
but will begin closing out at
ouce. Now r is your time to
ave money and you may not
have a like opportunity again
soon.
All parties owing bills are
■requested to call and settle
• promptly.
Yours truly,
If your Dottier cannot Supply
You. Write Utt.
Am Furniture Co.