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THE CAIRO BULLETIN, MONDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 1907! ooooooooooo ooooooooooo u Q o o o Q a o o o o o o o o o WANT ADS IN TIIK CAIRO BULLETIN ARE READ EVERY MORN ING IN 2 0 00 FAMILIES. The Vant Columns of the Bulletin are consulted by hundreds of people every raornliig In search of real estate bargains, articles for sale, lost or found, sit uations wanted and vacant. RATESx One Insertion, per word 01 - Three Insertions per word .02 f VijK One Week, per word . ... .05 ViJ One Month, per word . . . .15 No advertisement Inserted for less than 23c. OOOOOOOOOOO OOOOOOOOOOO o o o o o o o D o o o o o o o o o Q THE PEOPLE'S COLUMN Rates for ClaaelfUd Netleee. f)s insertion, per word....... .si Three Insertions, eer word..... S62hi One wMk, par word DI One Month, par word .31 Na advertisement Inserted tor leas Mum tvtrsnty-flve tents. FOR RENT. VOm JWNT Funsisaet reom, fcatk. states he!, ill Fosrtar street KOIt KENT Room with board Reference required. Apply 914 Wal nut. KOIt RKNT Furnished front room. 815 Walnut strwt. KOll RENT Room, 604 Walnut el ror't. If FOR RKNT Five room eott.W. Apply to A. J. Ross, pollco magis trate's office. FOR RENT Furnished rooms with f ! wit hout hoard. 300 Twelfth street. FOR SALE. FOR BALR Mod arm I room cot W with basement, on two lot- In quire Bulletin office. FOR SALE School books. New and second. Dellaun's, Twenty-eighth and Poplar. WANTED An elderly lady to keep house in, small family. Address Will ;C. Wise, 732 Thirty-sixth street, !iiro. 111. FOR SALE Household goods at 72fi Center Street. Mary's Park, near Thirty-third street Address X. Y. Z caro Bulletin. ' ; ' l-' '''" :" t I i v v-. i.: ... "j"!"1;.1 I"; i'i u..i"Ci ;" " 1 ' 1 1 i Stocks Bonds Cereals i ACTION OF GOVERNMENT. IN DEP08ITINQ PUBLIC MONEY IN VAR IOUS BANK8 HAD REASSURING EFFECT MONEY. MARKET EAS IER BUT BANKS STILL CONSERVATIVE STOCK MARKET READ JUSTED TO EXTENT OF THREE BILLION DOLLARS AND LIKE READJUSTMENT EXPECTED IN MERCANTILE AND INDUSTRIAL CIRCLES. WANTED. WANTED Clean white Fttilletln office. rags at WANTBD Yon to buy your school books at DeRaun's, Twenty-eiRhth and Poplar. U N T ED Com peten t bookkeeper ; steady employment; good salary. Ad dress P. O. Box 227. WANTED Suite of rooms with board for family of three, up-towu. Address 41, care Bulletin office. MALE HELP WANTED. WANTED Young men for train service. No exigence required. Van Noys News Co. WANTED First class veneer lathe man. Apply to National Lumber ami Wooden waro Company. 'WANTED Young man who under stands bookkeeping for office. Low salary to stait. Address Bookkeeper, caro Bulletin. MISCELLANEOUS. PERE'S BCO GONE Is not a poison but it will kill Roaches and Bed Bugs. Try It. Iee Hanauer, Ageut, 813 Commercial avenue, FOR SALE Eight room house, modern improvements. Inquire E. P. Fitzgerald, 1310 Commercial avenue. b'OH SALE Family phaeton and set of harness. E. P. Fitggoiald, 1310 Commercial avenue. FOR SALE Furniture, valuable books, pictures, good baby carriage belonging to Clarence W. Smith. Ap ply 1C0C Washington avenuo. FOR SALE Two pedigree collies. Southern Film Exchange, Opera block, ' . t ""i'OR -SALE Choice residence slti, filled to grade. 12 feet by 200 feet, tronting Washington avenuo and St. SCREENED BUILDING SAND. Delivered to any part of the city at 75 cents per yard. Cairo Contract ing and Dredging company. Charlej Feuchter, Jr., secretary, room 3, Alex ander, County Bank building. Bell phone W'44. Cairo, 'prone 800. SITUATIONS WANTED. ArtTerttsementa of not exceeding three linea will be accepted free for one week's time from any reader of The Bulletin to be tiled by advertiser In person, on regular form, at the of Dee of T- Bulletin Company. 701 Ohio street. The Bulletin Company assumes no responsibility for any ad vertisement or statement made there in and will not accept the notice of any person knows to be employed. lnpniriee and replies to advertise ments should be made by mail SITUATION WANTED By middle aged woman to nurse the sick. Ad dress P. O. Box, 197, Mounds, 111. Barilett, Frazier & Carrington M-nilrr of New York Stock Exchange and Chicago Hoard of Trade PRIVATE WIRES TO ALL MARKETS Stocks, Bonds Grain and Provisions 702 Commercial Ave., Cairo, III. I I T K W O m MARKKT bETTKR F:w Perfect Pearls. Tlio reason that pearls bring in such eujrmous pries iu that fine specimens are E-.tr.-o. Hr:it, they must bo per fectly round, t?.'.n t!:ey must match. :C( t one in a thousand is p'rfw'tlT round. Then r'cU!aces are usually made so that th pearls are lnrge In fnmt and taper r.Tf r.'adually at tho back. This aids f.i the difficulty of matching them. To make up a really wiMI matched necklace may take years. ' , Irish Art. Every nation mu;t have Its own art as distinct and separate from that of other countries as its language; and If ver Ireland Is to find her soul and found her own school of art It can only be done for her by her own artlfs. A teacher from England of abroad would be a m'Sflangerous ex periment J. B. Yeats In .; the, Sban-atbie. Woman la Hard Worker. Thre Is one woman in Georgia who should disprove the common be lief that the women of the south may tie fascinating, but certainly are indo lent She Is the manaper of a large farm and in addition to her work on It Is a carrier for the rural delivery cf mall, covering a 40-mile route three times a week. Iloston Herald. The Caddic'a Suffering. Macfoorler (playing an absolutely hopeless game) Here! What are yea lying down for? Are yon tireflr Cad dies "I'm no tired o' carryin', but I'm aair weary o' conntin'!" Punch. Three Ages of Girlheed. Three ages of p.lilhood were illus trated the other day. by a trio of de mure maidens. The first, a girl of about ten. pushed a go-cart in which sat a two-year-old buby. The second, a child of seven, wheeled a doll car riago in which lay a hu.ie doll. The third, a tot of four, proiielled a diminu tive cart from which a bilge Teddy bear smiled blandly. Handsoire Advice. An Atchison expert In flirting sayS that when you ta'ie hold of a girl's hand, and she doesn't say anything, but gets that cold, steel gray look In her eyes, as if she had sick headache, you had better let loose and run. Rut tf the girl grabs her hand away, and sayn: "Now, you stop!" the expert says keep right on; It's" all right Atchison Clobe. Color Analysis P.y subjecting minerals containing various metals to the spark of a high tension induction coil characteristic colors are Imparted to the spark by the different metals. It is not the heat that produces these colors, but centrifugal force, which, like radio active matter, puts the corpuscles of the mok-cule In motion. Naughty Puae. Marjorie was playing with the kit ten and received a severe scratch. She looked at the ugly red line, then she stretched out her hand toward the kitten and aaid sternly: Tittle, dire me dat pta." New York, Sept. 7. Special. Out side Interest In the stock market has shown further improvement thl week. Expectations of n favorabl result nt next Tuesday's sale of $40 000.000 4'i per cent corporate stock and bonds of the City of New York havo been largely responsible for this condition; while a more cheerful feeling in regard to the money situ atlon time money at any rate seems o have modified recent fears of ex cesslvo stringency. It is quite true that Secretary Cortelyou's action in depositing , public funds in the banks of tho country . before conditions be came actively acuto has been a re- assrlng effect; but it is still more thnn probable that the money situa tion will continue an important ad verse influence in the market for considerable time, extending at least over the turn of the year. We are now on the threshold of the annual movement of fndus to the agricultural sections to finance the crops, a fact emphasized by the firmer tendency of call money. These call funds have been available for shipment for some little time, the banks refusing to com mit them for fixed periods well know ing that the demand must oome as soon as the crops were ready. Call money rates have been almost nom inal . for some time under these eli- cumstances, but aro now showing a firmer tendency, and the withdrawals for shipment to the interior may be, under ordinary circumstances, do ponded upon to force interest rates up to at least the same basis as time money. The natural effect of such h advance wilj be to cause liquidation. especially of securities that banks and other lenders do not favor as col lateral. While call money is in the vicinity of 3 per cent, lenders are not so discriminating in theri scrutiny of collateral as whep rates reach 0 and above. When , the latter range be comes general there is usually a weeding out by lenders of the poorer classes of securities, which causes in turn liquidation of these securities at a time they have a very limited mar ket. The sultuation, therefore, is one requiring caution in buying ami of fers distinct encouragement to confine purchases to the higher grades of se curities whose efficiency as collateral Is never qestloned. Securities of the lower grades If purchased at all at the present time should be purchased outright, as with more active money there is apt to be pressure to sell on a market that will not take them freely. Hanking interests are fully alive to the money outlook and are enforcing conservatism in tliannels where such action is necessary. This means a continued check in busines sof a highly epeculative character, and to a measurable degree is a protection Uigalnst an eventual widespread busi ness embarrassment. On the other hand, the favorable agricultural out look is a decided influence against ex treme depression, and the market for the Immediate future is apt to be 0110 of wide and active fluctuation within comparatively safe limits. Barring possible damage by early frosts to the corn crop, otherwise the record for tho balance of the harvest of 1907 is now nlwwt assured. As already noted In these advices, the prospects cer tainly do not favor bumper crops in any direction, but in all cases they will be well above the average and will be worth in dollars and cents to the farmer fully what actual bumper crops have in the past proven to be worth. News developments of the week have, taken altogether, been rather fa vorable. Active purchases of wheat for export have been a prominent feature, which has naturally operated against sterling exchange, removing the probability of further gold ex liorts for some little time. lrop conditions remain favorable, although the harvest Will not, of course, reach the extreme figures of 1906. There, however, has been a compensating benefit in the much higher prices the farmers are receiving for the small er. product this year than they re ceived for their bumper product of last year. Wheat prices, for instneo, are about 25 cents per bushel higher than nt this date last yeur; while corn is selling about 15 cents per bushl higher figures which when applied to products aggregating hundreds of millions of bushels mean a tremen dous increase, not alone In the wealth of the agricultural sections, but in REVfcROlBlE THEATRE FLOOR, ?uri Music Hall Converted Into Ballroom, Every Night i Bsvsn ' ", - ; ' Minutes. ,; The movable stage which Steals Mackao attempted tu make a feature Of theatrical construction many years ago Is outdone by the reversible audi- lorli'm floor introduced in a new Ap ollo music hull on the Rue de Clichy, Paris. This device makes it possible to change the parquet into a dancing floor la seven mlnutos. Tbe floor It reversible. On one side It is fit tod with 600 chairs of the usual folding variety. On the other mdc It is planked with hard wood, waxtd ana polished. During the performance each night It is pitched at, an angle of about IS degrees like the flour f any other theatre. When the show is over and the dauctng begins it is aosolutely level. All who patronize the house will see the transformation every night, When the curtain falls the Beat hold' era will be bustled back into the or chestra circle and the foyers. Then the mechanism will work. . Tho floor, or rather the two floors, are built on each side of a frame work of steel girders. This is hung the additional credit that such wealth provides; and which in turn must on pivots, and when the machinery necessarily be reflected In the In la set In motion it simply turns the creased purchasing power of luxuries other side up. The huge seesaw; and the more staple products of in-1 it measures about 45 by 60 feet dtistry. The Increase in the Chicago, stops at the appropriate sugle when uurnngton & Quincy dividend from It is to be an auditorium ana is so- a 7 to an 8 per cent basis and th.' cured there by strong supports. additional 6 per cent distribution Hal When it reaches the level position a stimulating effect on Thursday on to serve as a ballroom equally strong Great Northern preferred and the supports hold it there and provide for Northern Pacific, which jointly con- the safety of the dancers. When it trOl the road, and through them on steps in either positien lt Is in lm the general market. On the other hand I mediate communication with the oth the decision to dissolve the Union Pa ciflc convertible bond syndicate with out having disposed of the bonds su gests a disposition on the part of keen bond experts to look for slight, if er parts of the house, as all the nec essary steps are attached tu it either to reach the orchestra circle when it is level or the stage when It is in clined at an angle. Stage and floor any, improvement in the bond sltuu I are continuous when used tor dnuc- 'HOME VISITORS" VIA EXCURSION BIG FOUR TO OHIO, INDIANA and KENTUCKY Tuesday September 10, 1907 LOW RATES From CAIRO to Indianapolis and Return $6.00 Cincinnati and Return $7.00 Louisville and Return..... $7.00 Dayton and Return $7.00 Springfield and Return $7.50 Sandusky and Return $7.50 Columbus, O. and Return $7.50 Corresponding ratea to intermediate points. Tickets good going on regular traina. RETURN LIMIT 30 DAYS Tickets must be deposited with ticket agent at destination immediate ly upon arrival, and will be validated for return passage on any day within 30 days from date of sale, and will be good for continuous passage only, in each direction, the return journey to commence on date cf validation. For tickets and full Information call on ELMER SMITH, Ticket Agent, Cairo, III. tion in the near future. The decline lu the official price of copper to 17a cents was of slight iniMrt.auce. It dl not. attract new buying of the metal on any large scale, for it merely re neeieu an oniciai recognition or a price that had been actually current for some weeks, and no increased la ducemnt existed to purchase the sup plies at an official than at an un official price. Thre are excellent In (llcations that the Industries In which opper figures prominently are st'.'.l !(-3ng a aod, steady business, - the period of extreme activity has, how over, evidently pased, which is merely a repetition of conditions existing In otner important Industrial depart nrntits. There is, however, little change, in a broad Bense, in financial conditions, j ne biock mat-set nas undergone a fidjuestment represented by some thing like :i,000,oo0,000 and It is onv aturaiy that a corresponding read ustment, perhaps not so spectacular. shall follow in mercantile and Indus trial circles. Tbe fundamental trouble in both the financial and commercial markets is that capital has been in vested more or less permanently ha lost its liquid form ami Is not avail able either for stock market purposes for tbe regular channels of trade ills tribution, or for the working capitil of the industrial world. Under such circumstances the necessity for an enforced caution in undertaking new ventures is at hand and cannot well be ignored in stock market considera tions. Tho records of the mercantile agencies are illuminating in this con nection, showing for August, for In stance, an Increse In commercial em parrassments compared with the cor responding month of last year, and It is significant that the Increases are almost exclusively In Industrial cir cles, thus giving practical demonstra tion of the widespread scarcity of cap Ital for legitimate busluess enter prises. The liabilities for August fall ures, for Instance, aggregated more than $15,000,000, as compared with about $,000,0OO in August, 190G. In departments other than industrial there was a sharp decrease In liabili ties, those of brokerage, insurance and real estate concerns, for Instance, footing up less than those of August 190(1, while banks and trust compan ies failing during the month of Au gust bad liabilities of about $2,f.OO,OO0 or $3,000,000 less than in August, 190G. A rather good evidence Jf the construction of the demand for lux uries is contained In the monthly ro port of the Appraiser of the Port of New York. The imports of precious stones, for lustance, during the month of August amounted In value to $2,- 98.1,802, comparing with $.'),:182.29G in August, 190G. Since January 1 the number of automobiles imported has been 804, comparing with 935 during the corresponding period of last year, and the value of such autos, as offi cially declared at the Custom House, was $2,81G,5S9. as against $1,108,143 There are signs that a ihtIikI of con traction to a sound and sane basis of living Is at least beginning; the mi certainties of the political campaign, though necessarily of an off year, H a factor that is calling for recognition in tbe financial situation, while the knowledge that the presidential ele tion year of 1908 is approaching and that the contest is undoubtedly to be remarkably strenuous is still another feature suggesting the desirability of taking frequent reasonable profits when obtainable to admit of buying bark on the reactions, we are now In for a more active trading market with wide fluctuations. HENRY CLEWS. ing the electric footlights being at tached to a disappearing irameork, while a section of solid flooring takes their pluce. The entire contrivance cost 70,000 francs, or 14,00l, of which $9,000 was spent on the floor and its mechanism and the rest on the 27 foot deep biicli lined well through which the floor re- TOlves. WHY TAN SHOES WEAR WELL. Dressing Used for Them Does Not Contain Acid Blacking Doss. It seems, pretty certain tnat for some reason or other tan leather keeps softer than black leather. One ex planation of this may be tnat in thti greater number of cases ttio blacken ing , used for polishing black boots has Btrongly acid properties, whereas the pastes used for polishing brown boots are never acid and cunaut of a varnish made of oils and wsseu, lu aiauy of the formulas given foi making blacking a very large propor tion of oil of vitrol, or strong sul phuric acid, is directed to be used The chief Ingredients of bout black ing according to the I.onuon paper, appear to be ivory black, treacle and oil of vitriol. Sometimes hydrochlor ic acid Is used. The object of the acid apparently Is to dissolve out tbe mineral matter chiefly phosphate of lime ot tbe Ivory black and so to reduce it to a very fine spongy state. The result is that the blacking is very acid,1 not with sulphuric avid, certainly with phos phoric acid. As a matter of tact ws have found sufficient free sulphuric acid in blacking which we have ex amined to char paper when dried up on it. Where Jewellers Get Gold, Reflneriea, old Jewelry and banks are the sources from which the Jew elers draw their gold supply. From the refiner the gold comes to the fac tory In the form of buttons or grant ules. The refineries take the wast ot the Jewelry shops and tbe sweepings, and by burning off the material por tions and proper treatment of tbo residue recover the gold that other wise would have been lost. That this saving of even the Infinitesimal par ticles of gold dust Is wort a tbe tmis and labor Is attested by tbe number of refineries here, says the Attleboro Sun. The output from the refineries alone amounts to figures In a year that would enable an ordinary man to retire from active work with a for tune. The Government, however, provides the greater part of tbe raw gold tor the use of the manufacturer.- r'or a long term of years there was a steady drain on the gold coin In circulation. caused by tbe using of the cola uy jewelers as raw material. The imiMriHhable nature of gold, th its steady standard of value, is tiempllSed In tbe disposal of stoles Jewelry by tnieves to teners, as the receivers of tht proceeds of aur- glariea and robberiea are styled. A few hours in a rrurible after tht atones have been wrrnchid .'ivm rtiig ot brooch finds the golden circlet or elaborately deslgsed brsiplo mc:d Into a shapeless, unrecognisable soas that ia easily disposed of tbroi.gh say one Of many different waya. . The School of life. ; j For the hoy who knows how) to ask questions, every man becomes a teach r, (.lie Is spread out before him like th pages of a book, ' No iirltlslj museum or library In Purls ever held such nianusr-rlpts as these sagos' written by the Angel of Events. And! huppy tbe youth who matriculates; In the life schoolhouse. Enormous Cost of ths British Navy. ' It Is estimated that the total first cost of England's present ravy was $(170,000,000. and about $390,000,00(1 have been spent In tbe last ten years. : . . 8hort Lived Coffee Blossoms. Coffee plantations In bloom art snow white, and exhale a delicious, odor, bv the blossoms dio J" a day.: - LOW ONE-WAY COLONIST RATES to the PACIFIC COAST : via " n-'' ' IILINOISCENTRAI Cairo to San Francisco ft Q 4 n f Los Angles . . j San Diego . . VU liLU Seattle , . . . flOO HC Portland.. , . VUUiLU Tickets sold daily Septem ber 1st to October 31st. J. H. JONES, Ticket Agent, Cairo, III, 8. G. HATCH, G. P. A. Chicago, III. , - JTdl'r? OliR beer c-iTir;.r,,ifT No npH Is sparaa la the brawlof of Ibis r for w prld oortaivaa oa ttvtif T a for that caaaot b vqasllsd tor It aitJIsw at nS tbr"fib varUr. dAlRbijWicU SMITH BROTHERS TUB BIG STORE IBOM WASHINGTON AVENU3 Dsslsrs In tvarythlnf that to ss1 M Eat, Uss and Wear. Ixelustvs AgaMa ft BLANKI't Cslsbrats Caffwa, Industry Causes Blindness. Most persons employed in the Vene tian glass Industry begin to lose their sight when they are between 40 and 60 years of age. and often In a short time become blind. This blindness is caused by tho excessive heat and glare from the furnaces. Id all French naval arsenals wbert submarine are stationed rmtrkab!e precautions are tVa for ttrir sifety a the result of tbe ac; .it ,o tot AJgerien, which was nearly snn through being moored by a ratie S larger vse. which shifted Its 2iuor Ings during ths alhL Let Glory Follow Virtue. In great actions our only care oagfct to be to prrform well onr'part, and let glory roilow Dcnlgne DossueL Any item that ta of later est to tosj virtue. Jacaoe, toUrert to rMt rnai. TJs ao put Hn ta Us BailtOa, CAISOffi Ht' PsCOLUMlUI V OSTTdOllsT Jf HOB !tS rm u., . . SJ HVH OtUAMA (bfjaxaiosftsuf TME Or TRAINS AT awthkMnt No. 1 Rxprsss, daily, It ..,1:11 No. I Havaaa Ltd.. dally. It S:tl am No. I Ixsrass, tally, IT....1LII s.sa Nsrthbound No. I Express, daily, It 116 p.m. so. 4 limited, dally. If ......1.11 a.m. N. I attar, tarty. It. . . If s,m Corrected to Sept 1, 1907. H. V.Tavlou, Jno. M. BtALl, M HI U.K. A1.A. Sr. ULi i. MO Cairo Moannsst Co., 6. E. OREQORY, nrl 11! j T7b. Ayo., Cdr J,Ilf. Alexander County National Bank Commercial Avsnus and Eighth Street CAIRO, ILLINOIS. Capital .100,000 Curplus...... . 100,000 OFFICER! E. A. Tluder.... ..President Chas. Feuchter, itr ... .Vice President 3. H. Qalllaan Cashier F. Spencer ,, .Assistant Cashier 4ceonnts of corporations and Individ uals especially solicited, fcehante 'urnlshsd to any part of the world. Illinois Central Corrected to Sept. 1st, 1907. rM FAST MAIU !(OUT baftast aa4 Uataaa Beat St. Louis & Chicagc 13 a. at Dmiif ob(oc VaMibal UairUa rrtln l ObkfO t ll:SS. m , eaanwUai with afUnooa Wins lor all solaU east mui sorts. a i'2.1 a, am. DaJlr ft. tala Wlcfct Ltaalbw rrtflBf ! Si. LnalaalTita a. Mia, m uai lltlft a. m. (hirers MM-dar iMtu; arrtvlaf la Oblcaff, t.M. n. a to a p. m, imur nc isiaait!, a to BUtttOB H all bold Si itm. SiMyUM tn ora ai s-.w f. as. or Saadcy, bUm all atop baMa Uair id Cbltar, arfiTlnc la Chloao at t M p, f lOO . .. at. tvmt Mora Ida KiirM saeapt Eaads, airlTtaf la Su LvaltM '- 11 US e. bb. at. loan rul atau nH lag la BkUsust 4: IS . av, 11 rlatl tiblcsf, s.J 86p. as, lIlr at. l8t.Uat a4S:Sa. S:HS B. (a. AftarnacB KtomM turn (Ml BBatbaa. MilMS, Tomms, Ptur'ii Cb Biio n.ak TbbM 1 ilS B. a. ( btc-Mo a4 tum St mm ariivtai la Cbun wl . i4ikb. apoika,T: ( larinaatl, l:m B. a, Mkaaw.Sit a ai Tark lias a, at. S.aarKaa an Pattennar '"s m mm. B Illtanll (.-BlitrBI la bBs . a BM7 bBB, 0i MI II a. i t b Biainaa la arw.iars aii.a a wmaiw outhern orvtsiun tmm ovLt oibsxy trws To bTattrHn AaHviLxa. rsin iwqoha, at LAWTA. CI SON TILLR. SA TANNAH. VICSBBtse a4 iacxaoaviixa Vit4 aTas. "TU t'il rira BBaabi MT!Ua imI JaebaB1iia, SilS B-B. aaaBbia bbb VnOrl Lten at via Hnarbia. rrliiit I Smiii at a: a. SB. b4 Maw (mm I )l p. a. S iKl a. aa., T aaS TMtrtH'a. 1 14 I a. Safi. M .. a4 OMaaal raaSMati arrtvta ta btaaJa at t)M a. avaaS w Orlaaaa a4 :iS a. at. 1 4 1 a. av. aailr. KaMTtUa, aviaaa. 4 :" 9 am. Palta. Aaananawlaataa. SrMl t a. HaBNli aa4 CMaaBB taaaBj arrla ta Maaayfcla aA tlaSS . ak, Sr Oraaa M M a. aw :SAb-as.Paaab aaa i aaWBTQa. avret tkrvar Biraaaa awaaiBf aar asaaa. Bo4ttaa aa4 rartbat rj.a j i a. linaata Oaaarai r r" isra, i.i. I. K. fawsa, Tlesret Afi . A. MATCH, a P. A. A H. HANSON, Pass. Trams Mgr. Alexander County Savings Bank , -i STRICTLY A SAVINGS IANK. CAIRO, ILLINOIS. Pa.lta.l slftMle Surplus 60,00. OFFICERS B. A. Barter .... President C. O. Patier .Vice-President I. H. Oalligaa Caskler P. Bpeaeer AsstBtsjal CaaaieS x DIRECTORS R. A. Barter J. H. QaHiXaa Thos. Boyd C. a PaUar Wm. ICIufs C. V. Neff Chas. reochter, Jr, H. B. Thistleirood D. 8. Lansdea George Paraoaa Intsrest Falsi mi Time Dssoalta, River Transportation t Lee Lice Steacers For Memphis and Way Landings Steamers Departure Stacker Lee....Weentsday, pjn. Ferd Harold ..Saturday, pjn. For St. Louis and Way Landings Stacker Lee Saturday, p.m. Ferd Harold Tuesday, sum. For Fre'ght end Paeeage apply st Halliday aV Phillipe Wharf beat, Cairo. ROBERT E. LEE, General Manager General Office. 4 Sout First St, Memphla, Tenn.