Daily Greencastle Banner and Times, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 October 1896 — Page 4

1

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7'. . V; '7'

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the DAILY BANNER TIMES, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA.

RINK PURE WATER

iucketPwiH) and Water Purifiei

INSTRUCTIONS TO VOTERS.

BEST ON EARTH E^or Wells asid. Cistern*, f.cld Madal World’s Exposition.

/v ill purify a foul well or Cistern in 10 days use or money refunded.

rv.

^(jKcKi^r BdU

8 • /

ti :: r T.i

t -kl ;

II

?i m better. Saves its

alone every year, pure water being a preventative against Cholera, Typhoid and

Malaria Fever.

Draws 10 gallons of water per minute. No j tubing to rust, burst , or wear. Never has \ to ho packed, primed | or thawed. Will not J freeze, as buckets drain themselves. Will not rust, chain and buckets made of Galvanized Steel, Can be set up fn 1.” minutes. No attachment* below the platform. No wooden tubing, I rubber or leather to contaminate the water. Makes bad water good and good water cost in Doctor bills

FOR SALE BY JESSE RICHARDSON GREENCASTLE, IND

vTho can think

Wanted-An idea *"" vi "

_5t your idea's; ther may brlnn y Write JOHN WBDDEKHVKN A CO.. Pa

sa - * ~

Protect

g to patent? on wealth.

V rue vv E,LO>r.,rwii IV.T <v v j aney§, Washington, 1>. c , for their $l.Njn pi ud list of two hundred inventions wante

tent Attor-

. 'Iter

rite (

ed.

«. P. dOSblN llnmlli's the* Hltrhfst Ormlr llr:txll Block

And ihc Bout Pittsburgh and Anthracite. Yard opposite Vandalla fieliflit olBcc.

VII kimls of pot an ! lull'loti plantcut liowers atul lloral iU'>ia;ii- a -pecialtj" 7WRS. AT J. OHKRREE Corner Blooming* n ..nd Anderson -treels

XfciL,r.l’MONK XO. (i

Voters vm Ho; Four. For the accoiiiiiiodation of voters r< - tuniinj; to their homes for the presidential election the It g Four will sell round trip tiekets to all central tratllc association points. Point- more than 200 mile- di-taut Nov. 2; points le-s than 200 miles Nov. 2 and 3, return limit 4th. Half fare. F. P. I Ins 11- A>;t.

Dig Four Kxcursiomi.

To many points in southern -tales

first ami third Tuesday of each month,

about half rate, one way.

To Mexico City, Nov. C and return

limit, Dec. 31, *03.35.

To St. I.oui-, Nov. 12 and 13. return

19th, $0.25.

To all points in C. T uss’n territory, Nov. 2 ami 3, one fare, return limit

Nov. 4.

To Indiadapolis Dot. 30, return limit Oct. 31, $ 1.20. F. P. HtESTIs, Agent

VKiidalm UuicK. To Indianapolis, Get. 30, on all trains ta turning Oct. 31, one fare for the round trip. |g I'o Brazil Oct. 31, good on all trains, good returning on all trains Nov. 1. One fare tor round trip.

THE FREE SILVER FRANKENSTEIN.

liaptbiicsn Ticket.

B 0 b 0 n 0 0 |kkJ □ E3 B E3 □ □ □ El □ eh □ E3 □ E3 E3 B E3 EH B B El

Tor President in I Lleetors-nt-1 aarge. HENRY U. THAYER.

CHARLES F. JONES. District Electors.

FIRST DISTRICT. \V 11.1.1 V M C. M .vsoy.

FFCOVn DISTRICT. ARTHUR M. WARD.

THIRD DIRTIIICT. EDMTNP A. M Ali IN NESS.

FllCRTH DISTRICT. DON ALD Met ALU M.

FIFTH DISTRICT.1 WILLIAM C. HALL.

EUGENE^y'TTlOMPSOX.

SFVFSTII DISTRICT, ADDISON C. HARRIS.

FKillTn DISTRICT, BENJAMIN (i. SHINN

NINTH DISTRICT. JAM!..- It. CHRISTIAN.

TFNTH DISTRICT, DUNCAN Me A. WILLIAMS, FI FVENTH DISTRICT, JEHU /.. POWELL.

TirRI.FTIt DISTRICT, CALDWELL W. Tl TILE.

THIRTEFNTH DISTRICT, SAMUEL W. U0ULD.

For Governor, JAMES A. MOUNT.

For Lieutenant-Governor, WILLIAM S. HAGGARD.

For Secretary of State, WILLIAM D. OWEN.

For Auditor of State, AMERICUS 0. DAILY.

For Treasurer of State, FREDERICK J. SCH0LZ.

For Attorncy-Geueral, WILLIAM A. KETCHAM.

For Reporter Supremo Court, CHARLES F. REMY.

For Superintendent Public Instruction, DAVID M. GEETINO.

For State Statistician, SIMEON J. THOMPSON.

For Judge Appellate Court, First District, WOODFIN D. ROBINSON.

Second District, WILLIAM J. HENLEY.

Third District, JAMES B. BLACK.

FofRTn District, DANIEL W. COMSTOCK.

Fifth District, ULUIC Z. WILEY.

They have the silver basis in India, have had it for centurieu, and it has had a fair trial. 11 would ruin this country and bankrupt everybody. Thefountain of business is stability, an with a silver standard you can never have it. In Calcutta 1 can buy this suit of clothes for $40 today, and perhaps $20 tomorrow, and the next day it will be $50. You can never tell from the number of dollars you ow , how much you are worth. Th country is at the mercy of th money changers and speculators. The idea of going to asilver standard from a gold one is too ridiculous for serious consideration. 1 have seen enough j of this in India. Bishop L'lo'ni opinion ullirinrtl ami ciiiloruccl , r M-

ow n mum*.

1. You must got your ballots of the polling olork.s m the electionroom. 2. If you want t i vote a straight ticket, stamp within the large square at the head of the ticket eontiuning the device of the party for whose candidates you wish to vote. If you do not wish to vote a straight ticket you must not stamp the large square containing the device of your party, but yon must stamp the small square to the left of the name of each candidate for whom you desire to vote, on whatever list of candidates it may be. If the large square at the head of the ticket is stamped, and the ballot is stamped at any other place, it is void and cannot be counted, unless there be no candidate for some office in the list printed under such stamped device, in which case he may indicate hi- choice for such office by stamping the square to the left of tlie name of any candidate for such office on any other list. The stamp must be placed within or on the square or the ballot is void ar d cannot

be counted.

3. Do not mutilate your ballot, or murk it either by scratching a name off or writing one on, or in any other way, except by the stamping on the square or squares, as before mentioned. Otherwise the ballot will not be counted. 4. After stamping your ballots, and before leaving the booth, fold them separately, so that the face of them cannot

j-|ave hose Old |3 oe ^ s

(3^ Yours Repaired

-AT-

V SMALL -:- EXPENSE

The Frankenstein monster was planned and constructed by some of the most learned and skillful men of Europe. After being fitted out with every organ, muscle, joint, etc., the artificially made man suddenly became active. Its creators were highly pleased until the brute became unmanageable. It destroyed property and killed men, women and children before it was finally captured and smashed to pieces. Its makers had neglected to supply it with a conscience. Free coinage at 16 to 1 is the silver Frankenstein created by well meaning bimetallists like General Francis A. Walker and Doctor E. Benj. Andrews, who have been preaching about the evils of a single, appreciating standard of value. These bimetallists have lost control of their Frankenstein, and Mr. Walker and others are protesting that they meant only “iuteruationa ’ bimetallism, and that they do not favor the foolhardy attempt of this country to establish free coinage “without the aid or consent of any other nation.’’ The free silver monster has, however, got beyond their control. It has already terrorized capital, closed our mills and produced much poverty and misery. It threatens not only to paralyze all of our industries, but to force men to repudiate one-half of their honest debts. It is also without a conscience. If not destroyed on Nov. 3 it will turn upon the silverites themselves and crush anti kill them.

NEVADA’S TWO EX-GOLDBUGS.

Senator Jones Every Inch t. Gold Man In

ix: i.

Nevada's two senators are now as hot for silver as any two men in the United States. No one would suppose from the way that Senators Jones and Stewart now denounce ‘ ‘goldbugs, ” “Shylocks, ” “Wall street sharks,” “crime of ’73,” etc., that both of these gentlemen not only voted for the “crime of ’73” in the senate in 1873, but that both were then the two most prononuced goldbugs in this country. Millions of copies of pamphlets and cards containing quotations from the speeches of Senator Stewart in 1874 are in circulation, and nearly every sound money newspaper has printed extracts from these speeches. Senator Jones was also one of the con spirators who decapitated silver in 1873. He had not repented in 1874, as is evident from his eulogy of gold in the senate in April, 1874. He then said in p.;rt; Gold is the articulation of commerce. It it tin most potent micnt of civilization. It is Rold that has lifted the nations from hartiarism. It has done more to organize soeiety, tc promote industry and insure its rewards, ti inspire progress, to encourage science and th, arts, than gunpowder, steam and t U-ctricitv. The use of gold had its origin in the nc - - -1tics of mankind. Th h r an heart la - t n^on it. It wiil commend tin proper services oi

1 i-, n i

They will last a lifetime after we have resewed them. Don't neglect tobriiif* vour magazines, portfolios and valuable musie and have them bound.

♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦•■#*

Banner- Times Bindery.

n \nuN n.

IILIC.tN Tit KKT

Fot I-resident.

william McKinley,

Of Ohio.

For Vice President, GAKKKT A. HOBART, Of Ne w Jersey.

The Wage Earners l,amble. Wage earners should not gamble with their wages. Certainly they should not do so when the dice are loaded against them, and it is a case of “heads I win and tails you lose. ” He can win nothing, but may lose much, if he gambles with the silver mine owner and takes tips from the free silver politicians. No silverite claims that free coinage would raise actual wages. The most they say is that the wage earner would not lose much in the purchasing power of his wages and that he would he likely to have steadier work when the “more money" period is reached. Perhaps. But what should most concern those who exchange labi r for dollars is that their dollars should not shrink in value. Looking at the question iu the light of history and of reason, it appears practically certain that the 16 to 1 free coinage dollar would purchase only about half as much as the present dollar. The Mi xican dollar is a free coinage legal ti ndi r dollar which contains more silver than would ours, yet it purchases only half as much as a gold dollar. This is true of all other fret* silver countries. Everywhere the value of the coin is pleasured by the value of the bullion in

Mist El.I.AN EOl'S. For Prosecutor 13th District. HENRY C. LEWIS. For t 'ongress, GEORGE W. FA IMS. For Joint Senator, ENOCH G. HOGATK. For Joint Kepivsentative. JOHN M. KELLER.

Ijoeai 5 ime Cilard.

JIG FOUR.

GOING F \ST.

No. Hi* to i In . V .\ llofiot No.1 ndlitmipoiis tce'in No.tM, Sumlai Inilianapolts ... tt Indianapolis Flyer -* Indianapolis Ace’m IS* Oln.. N. V. A notion

GniNO 'VEST.

No. 3.V St. L NlgPl Limited ...

o* i i.,..,.,.

-.•19 a. in S.12 a. m 11.lii a in 10 Mu in tilt p, m Sail p. m

No. 9* 't. I. Acc'ai No, 11* St. I Day Limited. No M Mat-non Limited. No. 41 Terre I Id ntc A-'c’n

v, .>-1

I No. S). sinidiiv Maltoon Limited

* Daily | Dally Bxoi ot S,

HEPIJH1.ICAN ft UNI V TICKET. For Ec'iresentive. A. H. MOORE. Of Clinton. For Treasurer, JAMES M ATTIIEWS, < )f Greeneastle. For Sheriff, DANIEL W. M At Y, Of Jefferson. For Assessor. ,i. DARNALL, < if MfTtiroe. For Surveyor. FRANK WILLIAMS. Of Warren. For < 'oroner, DR. W. F. SUMMERS, Of Franklin. For Con ini--loner. 2nd District, J. C. RE AT, Of Marion. For Coinmissionor,3rd 1 n-triet, I,Y< URGUS S’l’OX ER, Of Washington.

12:92 a. nc S:49 a.m 12.41 n n 4.47 p. m 4.W p. hi 9,82 p. in

nday.

i No.2,oonm i- hi Indianapolis for < mu i and Mlettigau division. *m>. ; com .vis with I.. !.. A W. and witn trains for 1*. ria

j and Chicago.

No, IS. connects at Hcllefnn-

taine for Toledo and Detroit. No. a

; Bel eloutat >c !'< rSandnskcv.

K 4*. Hi estis. Ar, t.

THE FAVORITE

Mi-

; U

•4

I v m m to"

: T-T-Ysl j

i-rasr

MlkSmlil!

(o^Lc]!’ svtt” Nrw A: y UkidiGO Rr{9

The direct Line between Eiiayg. Mm .Ciiy. LOUISVILLE-, And alt pointNORTH AND SOUTH.

The only line to the famous health resorts.

ANDY SCHAFFER AND JACOB SCHUCK

everybody nt all times and in all places. Th< necessities which compel its use are as inexorable today as they \vt re r.t the boginnir . although improved systems <■£ exchange hav» diminished the proportional” volume neces-

sary to do the work.

80 exact a measure is it to human effort that when it is exclusively used as mmiey it teacher the very habit «>f honesty. It m ithor deals in nor tolerates false pretonses. It cannot lie. It keeps its promises to rich and poor alike, i While it has seen human institutions perish and human governments crumble and decay, it is itself imperishable. The gold that was in Solomon’s temple possessed the same qualities as the gold dug today from the sands of Af- | rica. The gold of California and the gold of Australia are precisely the sanu-. It defies the corroding hand of time and the friction of ages. It is the common denominator of values. It makes possible the classification of labor and the equitable interchange of commodities. Gold has intervened in the bargains made between men since the dawn of civilization, and it has never failed to faithfully fulfill its part as the universal agent and

servant of mankind.

Of WartiiiRYille, 1ml., Recommend \Yrights

Cel* ry Capsules.

If the price of silver should rise to $1.29 uti ounce in gold, the wage oarnei

would neither lose nor gain by free I ji AH tinsvili.e, Ini>„ May 28. ISDfl. coinage. If, as is certain, the price doe.- -p,, tl „. \\ piwht .Medical Co.,' Uoltinibus, not rise but little or not at all, then the : Ohio,

wage earner has lost half of his wages

U/esi ar}d Freqel? CieK Sprigs, The Unrlsbad of America. Complect I’ullman Equipment. FRANK J. REED, G. V. A., Chicago

TI Nt C CARD SEPT.131 H, 1896.

, , , .. . Gknts—I have purchased a box- of until he can by threats and strikes bi* \ Vr L,| i: ,\ < vh-ry ( apstiles from W. B duco his employer to raise wages. His i' :ir ieton, dmggi-t. and u-ed them fot own and his family’s food, shelter and indigestion, -tomach trouble imd eonclothing are at stake. Ho gambles with ! ,ttpation. I have been greatly benethem when there is nothing to be wen, | titteil, in fact almost cured with one but probable poverty and starvation if ; box. It i- the best medicine without ho loses. Will ho enter into such mi un- exception that 1 have used for my frott-

Nolfl II It U NI).

No. 4.* Uliieago Mail .... No. 0,* *• Expre—. No. 11.t Local Freight. ..

sor i ii imi x i).

No. 3,*-.Southern Mail.. . No. 5, l: - •• Express

.. 1:13 a in ..12:17 pm .. II :40 a m

fair game?

ble-.

A'ours very truly An I>1 Sc-HAFKKIt.

The llnnl Eesson In Kansas.

There have been more foreclosners of mortgages in Kansas than in any other state, and Populism is responsible for

2 :40 a m 2:17 p in

j No. 43,s Local Freight 12:17 p m * Daily. + Dailv except Sunday.

J. A. MU HALL. Agent.

VANDALiA LiNE.

TIic I’roblem For Workingmen. Th(‘ silverites promise that the work

inginuu will get higher wages, hut they | i 8 responsible again, also tell us that all commodities of life j j„ wholesome. The people

be seen and so that the initial letters of will rise in price. Do they guarantee us ( | 0W11 t o the rock

the names of the polling clerks on the 1 that wages will rise in the same proporback thereof can be seen. Then hand . tion: The chances are they will not, beyour ballots to the inspector, the stamp | C . JUS( , employers never, or very seldom,

raise the wages of their employees voluntarily. But, admitted that wages will

M AKTiNsvii.i.K, Ini>, May 18, 1896. I'o the Wright Medical Co., Columbus,-

Ohio.

Gents—l have purchased a box of

it. It is more difficult now to get money W'right’s Celery I :.psule- from \V. I!. Tralnz leave .■revneastn*. Ina.in effeet Mpt

or credit here for any legitimate busi-1 ,| n , Ktf j st ' iin ,i nsel i ti,,,,,, f ( „- 1 ness than it is elsewhere, and Populism , indigestion and constipation. I was \o

is responsible for that,

loans are made for short time and at higher rates of interest, and Populism

But the net effect

Extensions ot | greatlv henelitted by u-ing them and

^ a.2 1 I ..1 T ... , 1

would not he without them.

Very truly yours,

are getting

Jacob Schick.

No 21 Ne :l No 11

«, I Mill.

SOU THE WEST.

— 12:2i a *r., for St. Ianils. S::i4 a m, for st. I .mils

's 14 a m, for St. Lou-s.

1: !•* |> in. for -t. I .on is.

No it

They are replacing For sale by Albert Allen, Dniuggst i \o i«

speculation and expectation with fru- i i ,>o 20

gality and industry. While they have

to the polling clerk, and leave the room. I 5. If you are physically unable to

stamp your ballots, or cannot read En-, . . . .. . glish. so inform the isilling clerks and rise m proportion to other articles, what tell them how you wish to vote and will the workingman gain by it? <

N OTI C E.

down Jackson

To 1 ure a I'otil in One liny.

Take Laxative Bromo ijiiinine Tablet'. \ll druggists refund the money

if it fails to cure. 25c.

-’O'M D.

d

t

It

rte

louitv’ii iVAMrKetr*

. Fii* in-:ieil tlie Daii.i Hanxi it To.'eh 1 1 In R. W. Mien, inatiagvr of Ar-

nlan’s poultry house.,

11 J

is. M irM. choice SpriiiiTH. mimll . k«. T irkey to nn. T rki*\, old toniH . T • ■ yh, /ountr s pdn.and »)% <•:* choici <•» 1. I. ovi*r I>uckH Ec fresh subject to handiiiiK Hu irood ...

they will stamj) your ballots for you. But the voter and clerks should not per- ! mit any other person to hear or see how the ballots are stamped. 6. If you should accidentally or by mistake deface, mutilate or spoil your ballot, return it to the i>oll clerks and get a new ballot. 7. You must not accept a ballot from any person outside of the electionroom. Any ballot outside is fraudulent, and it is a peuiti utiurv offense to have such a ballot in your possession whether you attempt to vote or not. 8. You must not attempt to hold any conversation in the oh* •tionroom except with members of the election board and the poll clerks. It is a penal offense to declare that you cannot read English or cannot mark your ballot, if, iu fact, you

can.

9. You must not. put any mark of auy kind ou your ballot except with the stamp.

One |

thing is certain, that if, under a silver standard, the workingman will have his wages raised in the same measure in wliielt prices of other articles and commodities of life will be raised, lie will have it after a very hard and desperate struggle. Is it worth while to undertake a struggle for years in order to gain the same which he has now and run a risk of getting less?—Daily Jewish Courier.

F01

-1 10 you know, 1 1 rade is slow oil times mav lia\e killed it), V 11 w ill he * ise ■ •• H*l Ve**t ise ai will sin rebuild

it Legal Blanks. Ha.nxkb Limes ‘•’.ir Stile Bills and Fosters. • Banner Times Fin- all kinds of job printing at pr ees tf

Contimlrum.

The report of the director of the mint j for the year 1894 shows, at page 17, that from 1878 to 1894 the United States paid for 459,946,701 fine ounces of silver $464,210,263. The present price* tif silvir per ounce tine is 65 cents, and the value of that bought is $298,- | 965,356. The loss on tlie transaction, | therefore, amounts at present to $165,244,907. Who got the money paid for the silver? What have they done with l

been paying up and reducing the amount of money which goes out of the state i every year in payments of interest, they

have growled a good deal. The new or- WP, ' t <>m wn .' 1 der of things came hard, but it was ’ so ' I , ‘ 1 ' rm . n 7'"■ ,

, , a, . m. I notice a Doctor s smi on tin* north oml harder at first than it is now. Th*T are . |(]0(>k OWM . (J , |V Mr j ,, , lm . ■,*,„. learning the lesson through and through. ..jj,,, ,. t;l ,r- ihat tin Doctor treats all Instead of lying awake nights thinking and private disease- eontidetithow they shall reform tin* universe, jally. He lias a long experience in the

overturn natural laws and revolutionize treatment of tin*

human nature by act of congress, they

are reforming themselves and feeling ErYE'S 7-\ IS Er^PSRSi rather proud of it. In this way Populism diseases of th e liver contained a disguised bli - mg . adversity Also DIGESTIVE Organs hud in it a little sweet.—-Cor. Chicago Tin* Doctor has iimde a specialty for

Times-Herald. twenty years of

Bally

No 1.1 Daily

Dully

I’aiq i: i.. |> iu, mr -i. i.otne. E.V. sun 5:l« p m, foi Terre Haute Bally 8:06 p m. for St. Louis.

FOR THE EAST.

Bally li.Uia ni. for Imiuinapi. is Bally Kx SunS:45a in ** I >ally 12:15 Noon “ “ Daily 1:45 p m. •* •• Bally 3:15 p in, ** •• Dally 5:52 n m ** UKOIUA DIVISION

Tervr Haute.

No 7.1 Ex Sun 7:05 n m. tor I* or.it No 77 ** ** 3:55 put. for Heeatur I <*r complete time earti, trlvn.ir all train* an I stations, and for f’.ll information as to rates, throupn cars, etc., address J.S. Dowling, Agent E. A. For.), lirecncastic, Gen'l Pass. Agt. St. laiuis Mo.

a

No 2

Ecu *

THE I. D. Sc W. RY,

25 MILES THE SHORTEST ROUTE BETWEEN

Simple Fact*. Wages at * higher now than at any time before 1878. Every workingman knows this fact or can easily find it out. Each dollar of wages will now buy much more than any dollar did before

1873.

Every workingman knows this fact or can easily find it out

Indianapolis and Kansas City.

- - - FEMALE WEAKNESSES - - - And all ailmeut- pertaining to 1.1ieii sex He guarantee- all he imder.al,e- l icure Will po.-itivelv not iindert ki > .,<!• un-le-s lie feel- -lire of innki-'g a elite, t barges are b.i\ in all cn-e- ('all on the Itoctoi a-

CONSULTATION IS FREE.

Every workingman is better off today

it? Has any of it been invested or loan- th . m at ' 1UIJ . tiui( . be f (ir e 1873. ed iu the south or west If so, where?’ j Every workingman knows this fact

1 or can easily find it out.

Their Favorite Word. I Why, then, should any workingman Bryan—Certainly, I said once that I vote for a return to “the conditions was not a Democrat, but— I prior to 1873?” Altgeld—Oh, yes, there is a gold ; —

A small elm _e is made I where iiislrmn’ i- are rn|i i nniination. Office hours t*

*t. in. t" 8 o’el rooms up-tail - Ladies uia\ - * manly treiitn

i-k |> in. n block on ree*

o e eases lorcx9 ..'cli ck ' nieot i Hie*l. ctitle-

Thc only line running Reelining Chair t ar- between < incinati and Jacksonville, III., witlinut ebauge via C. II. & 1). and Wabash, passing through Ipdianapolis. Ind.. Dceatnr, Springfield a lid Jacksonville, Ills. Two daily through trains with perfect iieeoininodutions cast and west. Jxo. S. Lazaui s, Gen’l Frt. andTkt. Agent, Indianapolis, Ind TIME TABLE.

WEST

.9;30a. in. 5:11 p. m.

No. 1 No. 5.

No. li.

No. :

LAST

9:30 a. in

3:80 p. m.

No. 3 12:15 it. in. I No. 1 2:lHa.iu

No. It laical.i:.'i<l a. m. I No.12 la

7:.V»

No 15 Daily 12:50p. m.

! LiOcaUhOQ p. m .

1 .in

Attcnt Do

Nos. 3 and 4 run dally. Nos. I, 2, 5 and « run

dally except Sunday.

through tickets sold and baggage checked to all points. For further information, folder elc. apply toS. Kidlcn. Agent. Kunchdale, Ind.

If you wan* to vote a Mir Atonr nrpcbucan Tickkt, stamp within the big si j uar e containing the Eagle at the top of the ticket.

clause in those leases, but— SewaU—It is true I insist on gold in

my contract-, but—

Teller—Yes, I do own a silver mine somewhere in Colorado, but— Sibley—Of course, I own a silver mine too. I have never denied it, but—-

If the government can create value simply by stamping a bit of metal, it ought to have made us all independently wealthy long ago by stamping the entire visible supply of sheet iron into dollars.

I he Va. oc far* his line urn li '•go I

\\ I

nl j

Mini i rii \*M\. n • i i •

r«»l ppm

I he Bannkk Timks telephone news number !).>. Heinember it when you J

h iv«* an item. VVe want the news.

For h

i

rhe Bannkk iimkh For .Statements, Bill Heads,

i.

I

1