HER SCALES
M IL SPENCER
LUST NIGHT BY 49
Was Run Over and Badly Crushed
at Spencer Last Night by Train
on Which he was a Passenger.
Died at Six O'clock this Morn
ing at Hospital.
George Gentle is at Last a Free
Man, Under $2,500 Bond.
Bond was Given by Two Prom
inent Business Men. Will
Likely be End of Case.
Salisbury, N. C., September 7. —Clint
Scoles, ail engineer on the Southern
Railway died this morning at six
o'clock at the Whitehead-Stokes Sani
torium in Salisbury from injuries re
ceived last night at Spencer.
Mr. . Scales went out of Salisbury
last- night On No 40, not as engineer
but as' a passenger.' He intended
spending the night in Salisbury and as
the train was slowing up at that place
he jumped off, not waiting until the
train had stopped. There was a string
ol box cars standing on the parallel
track to the main line and Mr. Scales
struck against this and was thrown
back under the wheels of No. 40.
He was badly mutilated, both legs
and one arm being crushed. He was
taken up as quickly as possible and
brought back to this place and placed
in the hospital and the most careful
surgical attention was given him. But
there was no chance to save his life,
and the end came as stated this morn
ing at C o'clock. Mr. Scales' home was
at Wytheville, S. C., and the body was
taken to that place to-day for burial.
The deceased is a married man and
is survived by a wife and several small
children.
Gerge Gentle who was day before
yesterday acquitted of jail breaking,
in connection with the lynching case,
but was held on other charges, was
to-day admitted to bail in Uie sum of
$2,500. The bond is made by Messrs.
John S. Ludwick and James H. McKen
zie, both prominent business men of
this city. Gentle is now at liberty and I
will remain so. unless more evidence'
is produced ag&inst him at the next
term of the court than was available
at the term just closed, in connection
with the jail breaking case. The jury
returned a verdict here this morning .
in the celebrated Pinkman case. The ,
verdict was not guilty as to Mr. Pink- i
man, not guilty as to Mrs. Pinkman
in the Wallace Case, Mrs. Reed guilty
in the Wallace case. They were charg
ed with obtaining goods under false
pretenses.
MR. BRYAN'S ITINERARY.
His Program While in North Carolina
—Democratic Handbooks Out —Oth-
er News From State Capitol.
Raleigh, Sept. 7.—Nothing has
yet been heard from William Jennings
Bryan as to whether the itinerary ar
ranged for his. North Carolina tour
by Democratic State Chairman Sim
mons is agreeable or not Governor
Glenn suggested to the State Chair
man last night that the tour should be.
BO ordered that Bryan will speak at
Winsten-Salem Monday morning, Sep.
tember 17 at 9:30 o'clock, at Greens-1
boro at noon, then go to Salisbury and
speak at night so that people from >
throughout the western section of the
state can get there to hear him. Tues
day morning, Sept. 18. Mr. Bryan will
come to Raleigh, speaking at Burling
ton and Durham en route, speak in
Raleigh probably at 1 o'clock and then
make a short stop at Sanford for a
speech, the last in the State, going
then to Columbia. |
A large force of clerks began last
night at Democratic headquarters ad
dressing and sending out the cami
t>aign had books which have just been
gotten from the printer. There are.
hundreds of applications for them,
pouring in every day.
Interesting announcements of cam
paign speeches-just given out at Dem- 1
ocratic headquarters are for Governor
Glenn Sept. 15, at Shelby; Congress-'
man W. W. Kitchen Sept. 18, at Le-'
noir, Sept. 19, at Morganton, Sept. 21,
at Newton; Mr. T. W. Bickett of
Louisburg, Oct. 13, at Kenly in John
ston county.
The state superintendent of public
instruction is notified that J. P. Can
ady who was a member of the last leg
istature from Johnston county ha 3
been elected County Superintendent
in that county to succeed Ira P. Tur
lington who become superintendent
of the Smithfield Graded School.
Army worms 'armies" of which
have made their appearance on ssv-!
eral farms near Raleigh, are said to
be spreading rapidly and there is
much aprehension of their becoming
serious pests in a wide scope of coun
try. The State Department of Agri
cluture will take steps probably to aid
in exterminating them.
Galveston, Txas, Sept. B.—lt was six
years ago today, September 8, that the
disaster occurred which for the time
being wiped the city of Galveston off
the map. In the evening of that day
Women seem to take more interest
in other people's divorces than in
their own.
CASTOR IA
-For Infara and Children.
The Kind Yr Have Always Bought
Signature jf
where the best tobacco grows —in the famous Piedmont .
I CHEW WHAT YOU KNOW ABOUT
Only choice selections of this well
jlPttpftlSße oughly cured tobadcoris dsed 'in' rtiakihg SCHNAPPSL .
J ■ That's why SCHNAPPS and other of tne Reynolds gfa
brands, as shown by the Internal" Revenue
1 for a fiscal year, tnadd tfie wonderful growth .of
and one-quarter million pounds, or a net gain
flip? one-third of the entire increased consumption p§^||l
of chewing and smoking .tobaccos in the
United States. JpNf|
Evidently, chewers cannot resist the
■ flavor and they cheer 'SCHNAPPS be
i cause SCHNAPPS cheers them more ||pi§Pi^
' ■■ than any other chewing tobacco and
every man that chews SCHNAPPS passes the
Iff good thing along—one chewer makes other chew
ers —until the fact is now established that there
Mjß&ig# are many more chewers and pounds of tobacco
chewed, to the population, in those States where
SCHNAPPS tobacco was first sold than there arc in
the States where SCHNAPPS has not yet been offered '
AND KNOW What you are chewing
V 3 m/pk SCHNAPPS is like a cup of fine Java coffee, sweetened
just enough to bring out its natural, stimulating qualities. f:
SCHNAPPS plcssesill classes of chewers: the rich, be- W&Msw
cause they do not find a chew that really pleases them better
I at any price; the poor, because it is more economical than SB
the larger 10c. or 15c. plugs and they get their money's worth Wfegfepg
of the real snappy, stimulating flavor so appreciated by tobacco |^||f
lovers. All imitations contain much more sweetening than i^lnSr
SCHNAPPS. They are made that way to hide poor tobacco im-
For the man who chews tobacco for tobacco's sake, there is no chew
TOgf like SCHNAPPS. ) ?Mgii
Sold at 50c. per pound in sc. cuts. Strictly 10c. and 15c. plugs. -MB
fii*' R * J- REYHOLOS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, N. C, £J
I Polar Exploring "Trust." ;
Brussels, Sept. 7.—Famous seekers
.for the north and south poles andj
other icebarred mysteries of the fro- ;
zen zones gathered in Brussels today •
to form a sort of international arctic ;
and antarctic expedition trust. It is j
proposed to organize a permanent •
polar research commission and a gen->
lerally polar assembly, with a central
[committee. The aims will be to bring (
'about an international agreement on|,
j disputed questions in regard to polar
geography to make a general effort;
'to reach the poles to systematize sci-',
i cntific polar research and to promote |
the study and publication of the re-j
suits of polar expeditions. America is;
represented at the meeting by a dis-j
jtnguished delegation headed by Her-j
ibert L. Bridgman, secretary of the i
i Peary Arctic Club.
ORDER. OF BLACK EAGLE.
Was Conferred By Emperor William
On Cardinal Kopp.
Berlin. Germany, September 7. —Em-
ptror William has decorated Cardinal
Kopp, with the Order of the Black
Eagle, the highest Prussian decora
tion. This is the first time the order,
[was ever preferred on a Catholic Pre-'
I late. It is remarked that the relations
between the German government and
the Vatican have zrown closer since
the church and "state situation in j
France became acute. Cardinal Kopp. j
has steadily used his influence in bet- J
tering the relations between the Poles
and the Prussian authorities.
Farmers Talk Business.
j Starkville, Miss., Sept. 7. —This was
' another busy and profitable day for
those in attendance on the state farm
'ers* institute, which has been in ses
sion here since Wednesday. Among
the topics discusred today were com
mercial fertilizer?, the railroad and
the farm drainage, plant breeding and ,
seed selection, and the possibilities of
trucking in Mississippi The institute
comes to a close this evening with an
address by State Commissioner H. E.
'Blakeslee of Jackson.
DEEDS CF CRAZY MAN.
i
Lunatic Secured Axe and Killed 7 ,
i Inmates. (
j Warsaw, September 7. —An inmate
. of the asylum at Gora Kalwaria secur
' ed an axe and although previously in
(ofensive ran amuck through and killed
, seven fellow lunatics before he was
overpowered. /
Governor Swandon Declines.
Richmond, Va., September 7. —Be-
cause of the pressure of official busi- i
r.ess Gorernor Swandon announces ,
that he was compelled to decline the
; invitation to attend the fair at Rad
ford and preside at the meeting to be
addressed by Bryan September 15th.
Judge Favrot Nominated.
New Orleans, I-a., Sept. 7. —Judge
Geo. K. Favrot was last night nomi- j
natCd for Congress by Democratic
, • primary in the Sixth district, defeat- i
! ing Samuel Robertson, the present :
I incumbent. ji
Fritmismp Baptist Sunday school 1
will give a picnic on Wednesday,
Sept. 12th. All neighboring Sunday
:' schools are invited to be present and
! all parties attending will kindly bring
s' a basket.
Pain from a Burn Promptly Relieved,
I by Chamberlain's Pain* Balm.
I A little child of Michael Strauss, of i
. Vernon, Conn., was recently in great t
pain from a burn on the hand, and as
cold applications only increased the in-1
fiammation, Mr. Strauss came to Mr..
James N. Nichols, a local merchant, |
for something to stop the pain. Mr. j
j Nichols says: "I advised him to use
J Chamberlain's Pain Balm, and the!
first application drew ont the inflam- .•
mation and gave immediate relief. I j
have used this liniment myself and re-!
i commend it very often for cuts, burns, \
, strains and lame back, and have never
known it to disappoint." For sale by
Shuford Drug Co.
To Avoid Taking Cold. |
From the Outlook. [
The best way to overcome chilly j
sensations of the spine and back on j
the least change of temperature is to (
Dut your back up, so to speak; to con- j
tract the muscles of the back. If yon.
are getting chilly about the back of
the neck, stiffen the neck and set the
muscles to work, and you will soon get
over it. If you do not start your mus
cles going, you will soon find them go
ing of their own accord. You will be-j
gin to shiver —an involuntary action,
of the muscles. If you will set your'
muscles at work be fore that shiver-j
ing comes you will be able to prevent |
it. Contract your hands, your legs,
the muscles of your back, raise up
your chest, stiffen your neck, then j
turn it vigorously, slowly, from side
Ito side, or bend it backward and for
ward this will keep you from taking
cold.
CHILDREN DECAPITATED.
Mother Dissevers Heads of Her Two
Children.
Columbus Grove, 0., Sept. 7. —Mrs.
Henry Kippen, wife of a farmer liv
, ing near Cloverdale, decapitated her
two children, the boy aged 3 and
the girl aged one and one-half. Mrs.
Kippen then went to the home of a
neighbor and told what she had
Oone. The boy's head is nearly cut
off. The girl's head is completely
severed and was found near the
body. A carving knife was used.
The woman was recently discharged
from an insane asylum.
DISCARDED HER FORTUNE.
Such was her Devotion for Her Suitor
That She Cast Aside Large Fortune.
New Orleans, La., September 7. —
Announcement made that Miss Flor
ence Elston was married on the tug
boat at sea last Saturday to Eugene
Durabb. The ceremony was performed
in the Gulf of Mexico within the three
league limit from the United States
and during the blow which washed the
tug's decks with spray. In marrying
Durabb, Miss Elston defied the provis
ions of her grand-mother's will cutting
off Miss Elston from inheriting one
of the finest orange groves in Louis
iana. she married Durabb.
Cheatham Exhonerated.
Hot Springs, Ark., September 8. —
The night session of the executive
committee of the Southern Cotton
Association, which considered ' f!he
charge of speculation in futures made
agaist Richard/Cheatham,
Cheatham and instructed th 6 president
of the association to Confer with coun
sel looking into an investigation of
the cotton exchanges of the United
States, especially the New York Cot
ton Exchange.
Incredible Brutality.
It would have been incredible brutal
ity if Chas. F., bemberger, of Syracuse,
IN. Y., had not done the best he could
for his suffering son. "My boy," he
says, "cut a fearful gash over his eye,
so I applied Bucklen's Arnica Salve,
| which quickly healed it«and saved his
eye." Good for burns and ulcers too.
Only 25c at C. M. Shuford and E. B.
Menziers drug stores.
If a man could hear his widow tell
ing what a noble husband he was,
be would almost wish he was alive
rnain.
Startling Mortality.
Statistics show starling mortality,
from appendicitis and' peritonitis. To
I prevent and cure these awful disease,
there is just one reliable' Tefhedy, Dr.
I King's New Life Pills. Mr. Flannery,
!of 14 Custom House Place, : Chlcft'go,
! sa ys "They ttave no feqUal for Con
iStipation ahd Biliousness." 25c at C
j.M. Shuford afid E. B. Menziers.
Philadelphia, Sept. 7. —The Pennsyl
! vania Railroad granted an advance to
telegraphers on the East Pittsburg
and Erie, beginning Sept. Ist, in
volving ?70.000 per month.
jl PREY'S
j VERMIFUGE
1» the tame good, old-fashioned
medicine_ that has saved the
. lives of little children for the
past 60 years. It is a medicine
made to cure. It has never
been known to fail. If your'
child is sick get a bottle of
FREY'S VERMIFUGE
OniTONIC FOR CHILDREN
VDo not take a substitute. If
your druggist does not keep
it, send twenty-five cents ia
stands to
B. Cb S. PREY
* Baltimore, Kd.
end a bottle will be mailed you. J
WOMAN MYSTERIOUSLY SHOT.
Mrs. T. B. Clark, Performer in Show
Mysteriously Shot Last Night.
Richmond, Va., September 7. —Mrs.
T. B. Clark, performer with the Cole
Brothers circus was mysteriously shot
atter a performance in Stanton, last
night. The show people say the wo
man's husband shot her accidentally.
Clark disappeared after the shooting.
The police are looking for him. The
bullet entered the woman's abdomen
and wounded her seriously.
BIG SHOOTIN MATCH.
There were 747 Experts at the Con
tests for Honor and Cash Prizes of
S.OOO.
Seagirt, September, 7. —The largest
number of entries ever recorded in an
individual rifle competition was report
ed when the firing in the National
Individual mach started. There were
747 experts at the contest for honor,
and a cash prize of #I,OOO.
Many were probably dropped out, or
be limited so that the match may be
finished in reasonable period.
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Acts on
Nature's Plan.
The most successful ipedicines are
those that aid nature. Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy acts on this plan. Take
it when you have a cold and will ally
the cough, relieve the lungs, aid na
ture in restoring the system to a
healthy condition. Thousands have
testified to its superior excellence. It
counteracts any tendency of A cold to
result in pneumonia. Price, 25 cents.
Large size, 50 cents. Frr sale by
Shuford Drug Co.
Veteran Dead.
Wadesboro, N. C., September 8. —
J. W. Wheelos, a verteran of the war
and belonging to Company I, 43rd N.
C. Infantry, died yesterday at 4:00 p.
m. Mr. Wheelis has been prominent in
politics, a good citizen and one of the
bravest soldiers of the war.
Kansas State Fair.
Topeka, Kas., sept. 8. —Everything
is in readiness for the opening of the
Kansas State Fair. Every depart
ment of the exhibition is well filled
with choice exhibits this year and
the outlook is most promising for a
s-uccessful week. The racing pro
gramme is the best of its kind ever
(ffcred in Kansas.
Storm Warnings.
Washington, September 7. —Storm
warnings have been ordered displayed
ffom Savannah to Norfolk.
As a dressing for sores, bruises and
burns Chamberlain's Salve is all that
can be desired. It is soothing and heal
ing in its effect. It allays the pain of
a burn almost instantly. This salve
is also a certain cure for chapped
hands and : diseases of the skin. Price
25 cents. For sale by Shuford Drug
Co.
BI KK OLD
Berlin, . Sept. B.—Advices from
Carlsruhe stete that preparations on
a most elaborate scale have been
made for tomorrow's celebration of
the eightieth anniversary of the
leigning grand duke of Baden, Fred
crick I. The celebration W&Lbe gen
eral throughout the duchy# ffae ad
vices further state that WwGrand
Duke is particularly pleased and
gratified by the visit of a delegation
irom Pittsburg bringing with them
,1 message of congratulation from
the Grand Duke's former subjects
now resident in America.
The Grand Duke of Baden is in a
way one of the most notable figures
among the rulers of Europe. Few
people have played a more important
iole, not only in the constitution of
the German empire,' but also in the
maintenance of its integrity.' It was
he who, as one of the independent
sovereigns of Southern Germany,
conducted all the negotiations tbjit
led to the election ?of King William
of Prussia as German emperor in
1870. And it is is he, too, who since
then has been the principal factor in
smoothing away all those many dif
ferences, spme of them of a very
acute character, : that have arisen be
tween Prussia and the other states
of the confederation.
It is something of a coincidence
that the present week marked the
fftieth year of the reign of the
Grand Duke. Ha owes his throne in
the first place to the insanity of his
elder brother, who died under re
straint after being deposed, and sec-;
ondly to the romance in connection
with the son of the Grand Duchess
Stephanie of Baden, Stephanie, an
adopted daughter of the first Napo
leon, was a devout Roman Catholic
and a French woman by birth. She
bore to her husband five chilldren —
three daughters and two sons. One
cf the sons died in infancy. Con
cerning the other there always has
been a mystery. She herself went
down th • grave family convinced that
her little boy had been stolen by the
adherents of the reigning and Luth
eran branch of the house of Baden.
True, an infant was carried to the j
grave with all the honors due to the
remains of a little prince of the
Hood. But the Grand Duchess al
ways insisted that the little corpse
v;as not that of her child, but was
that of a little boy who, moribund,'
had been substituted by her enemies
lor her own healthy offspring.
Years afterward a young man was
found fainting of hunger at the
gates of Nuremberg, and was taken
to the police station. He was entire
ly unable to communicate with any-.
body,' having no power of speech and '
no acquaintance with either reading
cr writing. He fell into charitable
hands, and gradually was taught and
educated, whereupon he by degrees ,
became able to give some account of j
himself. From this it appeared that i
he had been kept like a wild beast in :'
a dark room. This existence contin-1
ued from the time he could remem- J 1
ber until the day he was placed,'
blindfolded, in a cart and driven to (
the spot at the gates of Nuremberg 1
vrhero he was subsequently found, j 1
The memories which he recalled of J -
liis childhood were of such a charac- • j
ter as to give rise to the belief that J,
he was no other than the missing j
son of the Grand Duchess Stephanie.
A meeting was arranged for them,
the mother being convinced that the
; outh was her missing son. But
within a few hours of the time ap
pointed for the interview he was mor- *
tally stabbed by some unknown indi- !
vidual.
DEATH OF YOUNG MAN. o
r
Mr. George Caldwell Succumbs to "
Lingering Illness at St. Peter's v
Hospital. . 2
Mr. George Mason Caldwell, aged -
2(* years, and son of Mr. B. F. Cald
well, of Rock Hill, died Thursday at
St. Peter's Hospital after an illnes of
foui months. The young man was
stricken the Bth of last May with
Creeping paralysis while asisting his
father in selling and delivering light
ning rods in this State and was taken
shortly afterwards to the hospital,
vhere he remained until his death. •
The remains were shipped to Rock
Hill where the funeral services were
hold yesterday from Bethany Church]
Big Deficit Announced.
New York," Sept. 8. —The statement
of the clearing house banks shows a
deficit in the legal reserve required
of $6,557,920. This is said to be the
; iargest deficit in the legal reserve re
quired since 1893 when it was neces
sary to issue bank certificates.
Good advice to women. If you want
a beautiful complexion, clear skin,
bright eyes, fed lips, good health, take ~■*
Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea.
There is nothing like it. 35 cents, >j
Tea or Tablets. E. B. Menziers.
Rheumatism, gout, backache, acid/'sj
poisbn, are results of kidney trouble. K.
Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea goes r,
directly to the seat of the disease and
cures when all else fails. 35 cents.
E. B. Menziers. .
Bulefield, W. Va., September B>—An '
explosion at the Dupont Powder Works ■ j
at Nimours, Va., eight miles west of j]
here, killed C. D. Clark and fatallv
injured four others. The cause is not i
known. , , '!
i CHILDREN CRY FO
FLETCHER'S CASTOR
_ 4
The trouble with people who know
r lot is they insist on telling every- f
body about it.
1%
Bern the flaw Ajyays Bought
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
and has been made under his per
(J* , sonal supervision since its infancy.
> {^ Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment*
What is CASTOR IA
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotie
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishncss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and' Bowels, giving -healthy and natural sleep*
The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend*
GENUINE GASTORIA ALWAYS
The Kind M Bare Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
L—; :
* -
Letter to J. A. Bowles.
Hickory, A. C.
Dear Sir: Now, may be, you can't
get tlje goods; if you can, your fortune
is made.
j Cotton clath —they call it muslin in
some parts—at about the usual pried
per yard, but wider, twice as wide as
some, and better, wears better, keeps
white and whole a surprising time
in all sorts of wear.
You could sell that cloth for hun
dreds of miles; there'd be no limit.
| A yard goes further; one buys less
yauls. Wears longer; one buys less
often. It always looks right till well
worn-out. No one customer buys so
much of it, but think of the number
of customers!
! May be you can't get it in cloth;
but you can in paint: Devoe. Devoe
is as it were wider; a gallon goe3 fur
ther; you buy less gallons; you pay
for less gallons; you pay for painting
less gallons—as if one paid less for
making a garment of that wide cloth
—and keeps its fresh look and sheds
water until you have forgotten how
old it is.
It isn't true in cloth, but it is in
paint; the less you pay, the better it is;
for the goodness of paint is reckoned
by gallons: less gallons, more good
ness. Goodness in paint is strength.
The stronger a paint the less gallons
it takes for a job and the longer it
wears. Yours truly
3 F W DEVOE & CO
New York.
P. S. F. B. Ingold sells our paint.
Shaking hands may signify friend
ship, and then again it may indicate
a lookout.
Are you lacking in strength and vig
or? Are you weak? Are you in pain?
Do you feel all run down? The bless
ing of health and strength come to all
who use Hollister's Rocky Mountain
Tea. 35 cents. E. B. Menziers.
jpf Red Rock Fruit
4 Quarts Red Rock
:;■ • WML "• Pint Maraschino Cherries
IB | ffl i j.i || Crush Oranges and Lemons, chop
H j',7. | ID Pineapple fine, cover with Sugar, allow
i i I|| . H to stand three hours, press out the
flfflS | oUllnll | Hsjjj| juice and add to this juice the pint of
■ iEßgp ■ Cherries and plenty of cracked ice. Just
J H before serving add the four quarts of
i am ° unt will serve twenty " flve
Hckcry Bo,tlllgß Worl(
Bottlers 01
||| I High Grade Soda Water in all Stan-
WERE THE WRONG MEN.
Men in Custody Were Not the Right
Ones.
Durham, Sept. 8. —It was the opin
. ion of the officials at South Boston,
i Va„ that they had captured James
i Brown, the desperate attempted
essassin of Constable J. F. Pleasants
who was seriously shot last Monday.
Officers from Durham hurried to
the place where they found two one
eyed negroes in custody. This was
;t description of Brown but neither
was the man they were looking for.
A woman's idea of economy is to
buy something she has no earthly
use for because it is cheap.
KILLTHE COUCH;!
AMP CURE THE LUNOSJ
~ vviTl, or E lCing% J
Hew &Sif£@vsry
|_ MRI /CONSUMPTION PRISE
IFOR I OUGHS and 50c &$ 1.00.1
| Frco'Trial.
§ Surest and Quickest - Cure for all
I THROAT and I/UNG TROUB
||LES, or
ELECTRIC LIGHT
/
The office of the company is und r
Martin's Drug Store. Please keep your
lamps clean. Rub tbem with soft art
paper.' When lamps are wanted in placfc
of old ones the latter must be returned
to the office.
For any trouble notify the office so
repairs may be made in due time. New
wiring of stores and residences will be
dona ai. cr«»t of material and labor.