Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 32, Number 49, Jasper, Dubois County, 22 August 1890 — Page 8

.... . . M t. k

ft - ' CLM el Fvttrtf. I whatever depraw-. or interfere, wun IN r ini9r5 gHII m LAfeoi.iftur furaigu mmiHtercM foroo down the : urire of wr wheal, owr Wf and jpork. Joins Overmyttr, x-CliilrHiHH of From the thing lLutight at (wm to the lM4Un KepwblictiH tftntOHiipoHr why the farmer ef ths Wwt CwmUti, mow tho Mc-Northwest, traaUHtf withseorn hh) eeaKiwluv llill Aflfccls termor, tempt ih dima:oua who would revive .1 1 I ......... ..alll.L ii.l uu.

Will Retaliation Profit FnriHur?

Ur. ;iw Vte .Mtturr?

DM Mfc

la4UMpH ikfrtittat. To tub Kditok Sir ; Ih cenwjHHce of the hlnh-tritr program embodied Ih the MeKieley bill, the Hews of the day abouada IndUpstches from various quarters, headlined Ilk thW: "French ReUlUtion Dti to be lmpod oh Corn Mil Meal;" and lik d; "Europe Will Ketaliute llnlleiid Kvih for Our Prohibition Tariff;" nod l the fob lowinK tenor: "RMriHb Aked -Ah-

triuii mill IIiinvfHriHii .y Brabant Ael on

the MeKiniey UM." In addition to ull these prmoBltory

symptom of iiinuiiinj troulil lo our vxiHirt trade, theru ar nlo indication- - ! t.. 1. .1 Sunlit. .til

li min4rn6 our cniiiiutircfi with that

leroMt coHsuHwr of our agricultural pro attieU.

in the midit of this threatened warfare

oh the foreign commiirce, which fins been left to us by previous hisih laritfr. na conduct of nrotsctionlsts, their or-

KUi, uwpppr, spnnters and other "rood chat He. id such hs would be

tousiii were it not fur the gravity of

the fmpumMiig ilifficuity, ana me serious

-character or tue tnrraieneu ios, c pecially to our agriculture. These nrotectloiiUts and thoir bidnnp

fate, including their newspaper, little

Md big, are iH the habit uf miking sport

of these threatened losses to our iieopie,

which will result from such Ioah of lor

oIkh markets. They atleiH to grow joll

im Mark Tanlcv. otiHCkln over tltu im

Mudinf fthortave in our xpM"t trade

urn! p'xclaiiii : "See whnt a irluriotH situs

4ionl Tim ueotde of the old world do

ei like the McKinlev bill, and that i

the very reason we ought to adopt it."

Again these hijfli-tHnir organs am anettker. ll iuutinjr once more little Brit

ish rttgs, in their imagination, ttend out

Mich items of nonsenso anil tony as mi: "KHKlaud does not like the HcKinloy

bill. This will cause thn present ropubl can cotiirrafig to diss it "

Whatever squibs m-iy hn tlrenl olf, or )Hip3 "invented, or epithets hurled, or

itoHeRBe poureii out, oy imrrow mm n heuuioiid purtisaus, and sycophantic or

gaits, the great fact romaina that our trade with foreign nations will lie very seriously injured by the hhfh tarill' measure of the present coimrea. Do we wish thus to injure or destroy our forigu trade? If we My we do, we can aifurd to pag by without concern the above mentioned course and conduct of high tariff uewsMMri and enoutera. Dut if we wish to

retain and increase our foreign trade, we; commercial

want to say sharply and with decision

to every scribe, quill-driver, orator, or AfHHiter, who, at the dictation of, or under the lead and influenceof the beneflidariee of high tariff may be engaged in chuckling over the impending lose of one foreign commerce: "Sir, you are an niiwif of your country's prosperity, and

Ulylll,- tthM mm HA a m.m Bill Oil W flf f hO

iPHiirT pro vn itn evrentj ue. tro &ta-

culture of the United Statee." To court foreign embargoes, restricUoM and embarrafistnents on our trade with other nations is a policy no lee uuwiee, destructive, and even insane, than it would be for these tme protection advocates, if they could so order, to

bring murrain upon our cattle, hog chol

era upou our ewiue, and nitiiiew, rust and drought upon our crops and Held. The loss of foreign markets would lessen the value of agricultural products, and thus reduce the farmer's resources; while disease among cattle and hogs and blight on our fields and crops would also reduce the farmer's resources, only in a different way. What it this foreign

trade, the lose of which these liiieh tariff

gentry att'ect to regard so lightly ami speak of with ao much ilippancy? Let us eee to wboai it is important :

'm,m.m

e.ij,rc

Hi.2I3.SM

3I.1M.1W

WO wo tM afer4. in H. In val. Of)H-M4ter, Of frvM, ... Of mhrU. .... Of immuCm trv of irun wi !,

3S7,tH

Of mtiHftutM of wt, iMtly

Of the three lees of the protection tri

cod. one is the cotton manufacture, one is

the iron and steel manufacture, and the

other is the wool manufacture. Unmove either one of these legs and the stool falls. Bead again the above figures, and see what a paltry amount of our foreign

trade is made up by these three great protected interests, the manufacturers of

cotton, or iron ann ot wool, for wnose

benefit the American people have been

taxed untold millions.

No wonder these protected interests,

their aiders, servants, abetters and accomplices can scorn foreign commerce!

They are "not in it."

Look again at the figures rrpresentinr our vast export of eottou : $237,000,000

in one year, and that amount being

nearly one-third ot our total exports.

Jtemember, too, that after fully supply

install the eottou manufacturers of the

United States, two-thirds of our cotton urop must annually find a market in

foreign lands. Then it will at once ap

pear why the people of the southern HtHtes of our Union are opposed to high

tarills.

The southern states oppose protection

and men larm not uecause tuey are

"Itebela," as shallow but malignant par

isfttis often assert, but because they have

he Intelligence to perceive how great

re their interests in foreign commerce

tid because they know that protection

nnd high tariffs are at war with that for

eign commerce, upon which they oiust

rely for a market for two-thirds of their

great cotton crop, Consider once more the above figures, ahoing our exports of breadstuHs and provilons last year. The amount Is $328,000,000. Thftse products go mainly from the West and Northwest

iet it also not e forgotten that some

worthy purpose, ought to joiu bawle with theootton planter in oppoiiUou to protection and high tariffs.

ThesalVHtiou of both the cotton plaater

and of the farmorof the Won Mid North-

wMt is in foreign commerce that is un

taxed, exeopt Fh so tar a the ooeolMtt

aad of the nation's treasury may re

nt re. For both lb notion plantor ami

iho farmer of the West and Northwest

are dependent upon foreign eommercf

for a market tor a very large snare i

their produce.

The rtRores showing how our exports aru tusdrt up tell thn story of our foreign

rado. Our export are almost wholly

iroducth of agriculture. Matiuf iclures

make hut an itif.oiiHdetable part of mirIi

export. Sii'-h bt'itijr the cae, Is it wn

lieue of oxtraoiuinary impuiifHoe ior

ihckd urotHCiod iiiHiiufHCturers. their

iikhiw, hpokopineu and attorneys, to rush

in. when our lore n iraue is ihjiiik im-

siderud.aud asdumtotakechsrgo of and

o manage the whole Htiaii i Is not their iresuiuDtion in thin matter equal to tho

ii-ovarbial 'check'' of the army mwle?

In tliu business of our export trade

these protected manufacturers are only

stockhoiders to thn extent of about i pet

cent. The farmers and planter own

nearly all thn sto;k in the enterprise.

Yet thtfe manufacturers, without con

sultimr the larmur aHd planter, boldly

dfer.lara their willinirucss to dinreisrd

throw awav. to brink' war upiH, and

Huh to sacrifice our entire export trade

Why do these protect! manufacturers

lo this? Simply lor the sukc ot in

creased stealiugs for IhciiiKelve wrap

nod un in a liinh tariff. In their willing

RDM thus to brinif ruin upou a trad

which la the stinnort of the Isrtncr and

nlantcr. those protected manufacturer

aro verv piitrlotic indeed. Their patrio t

sm on ii a U that of Artemus vv"ii, wu

at one time doclarotl that he wis "ready

and willimr to sacrifice all his wife's re

lations" in our late civil war.

When these protected manufacturers with their crowd of noisy shouters, reck

lens squibbers.atid flatulent orators, thus

invade the consultation aooui our oxpori

trade, and bv their clamor and numsrou

presence seek to exclude me rigntiui members and real owners the admonition to thoni oujjht to be: "Sirs, please

stand aside. Give the Urmers and planters a chance. They own nearly all tli' stuck in this enterprise. Your shares ore so small in amount as to scarcely en

title you uven to lie present.' High larilfr and protection are nothing else than commercial warfare. In all wars the injury falls not upon onecembataut, but upon both.

bo it is even ih a greater degree in

warfare, where the oppor

tunity to make reprisals by downright

robbery is generally atxent. We cannot afford to view without daop i -

concern all expressions ana movement

of hostility on the part of those abroad with whom we trade, or with whom we ought to trade. Such expressions and movements threaten a probable reduction in the value of our products, aud, consequently, a smaller reward for our labor and capital. When we begin movements here hostile to trade, tboe abroad who iiave traded, or who wish to trade with us. regard our action in tbe same

way, aud hence arise movements for re

taliation such ao those above mentioned.

Should these threats of retaliation be put in execution, as they certainly will be at

least to a great extent, upon whom will the iniurv fall ? Need we say it will fall

upon the farmer and planter, when we

have just seen that nearly ail our exports

telong to them i

Nor is this matter of retaliation any

thing Hew iu tbe history aud conduct ofl

nations.

Adam Smith, the father of the science

of political economy, in his groat work

The VY calth of .Nations," has this to say,

among other things, on tue sunjeci;

The case m which it may sometimes te

matter of deliberation how far it is

proper lo continue the free importation

of certain foreign goods is, when some

foreign nation restrains by high duties or

prohibitions the importation of some of

our maiiutaciures into lueir country.

Hevenge in this case naturally dictates

retaliation, aud that we should impose like duties aud prohibitions upon the im

portation of some or all or their manufactures into ours. Nations accordingly

seldom fail to retaliate iu this fjusnor.

The French have been particularly for

ward to favor their own manufactures by restraining tbe importation of such

foreign goods as could come iuto compe

tition with them. In this consisted a great part of the policy of Mr. Colbert,

who, notwithstanding, his great abiiitio,

seems in this case to have been imposed

upon by the sophistry of merchants and

manufacturers who are always demand

ing a monopoly against their country

men. It is at present the opinion of the

most intelligent men In Franco that his

operations of this kind have not boon

beneficial to his country. That miatster, by the tariff of 1M7, imposed very high duties upon a great number of foreign

manufactures, upon his refusing to moderate them in favor of tho Dutch

they, in 1671, prohibited the importation

of the wines, brandies and manufactures

of France. The war of 1872 seems to

have been In part occasioned by this

commercial dispute."

What food for reflection in these calm

words of this great statesman and pbiloeo

oheri l'roteoted manufacturers,

scents, "are always demanding; mono

nolv airainst their countrymen."

Our high tariff system is sometimes

ridiculously ca led "the Aru ericas ays

tern," when the fact is the same tnisg ms always been in vogue wherever avariee

and greed have been able to dictate lows and tho policy of the government to the

detriment or me masses oi ine pecpi

In the above quotation we seo the .ne

evil thing in full operalioti in France,

for itifantn nd Children,

towaotoOiatocfallomtaM 1

t iMmm ni H a Mfrtor Ut my prH I worn,

i S9 IM." M. A. WWB, M. V.,

Ill ft. OoJSM 6fc.wUr. x. T.

CIOTHIKICr

k ami siimmepw m m

Ml ihiim T T srw .

a. -D. oiATEli; KomI KntuUi Agent at IHMSLA.TVI3. - v

m. i-m &

The following Heal Ksfato (or m.

cut tHttO. " kMi . htJ

ANeV

II

mi

1 wJI!(12wow i

Largest ad lest Slock in the Co

Sermersheim 4 Co

14

lllmlrtl'lmr In

rU!vth, Mt Im ilmL. ;iniT "Hub

.nra, to wrWaiJ. flntiv of W

era; half Om at r wiut,' H

4H5 ey Uim for WHse. "

a mim i us m,i.nla m. u .

, aliiriit as f, .rr,. 1

best

BRYANT & STRATT()NBMESClffi

I I,-... lust atlAH m1 the largest and

"""JZ meut of Morchandi, of

all kinds, over brought to Uttbois County, and will sell Roods TA AJSV OTUER M0OOO IK THK COUXTV.

IMJBUr. .j'..

four fclltu u'.i i.r j.m....

mhI IraiM. Uu.. ,A I.... ';,.V." "'"M4 HHIlS

i..:. .V ' A H

tr fr; itrw wity. l4iM-r.t)i wllMM.turtrli,4

t i mr t iWf Ufi 1HH MPr

hu M Ug MaWe. f:i i.Vr Ktr um a 1 4 itc In m tHt tyr at e mVni '

IM rp.a mile Um VH.n. i'urm,B .

tlMbtr.nlrntv ut u.lr .. iu:.I'r"M' '

MRS. fP. SRZsTlT, Agent for

i orK AT OUU LATEST oTl ir. ur h?hh Kwhi timWer. u im i, Mr

ftaf

4

a aawiLsr-?iKM.-4s:MBa

A MO A I1NHASSUUT.MBNT Of HEATING

Ckthinq,

..V . .. I., ell

for Srmso anhsummkk wm- ...

grades, from suit up.

H COOKING STOVEb HANDSOME DRESS GOODS,

0 TINWARE. HARDWARE,

FANCY LAMPS, 31 CAGtS

CUTLERY, TiOTIONS, Ac.

HAotHWAItR, A.IVO GROCKRIEH is rxcT, a ruxt. assortmbnt.

Bargains on Demand !

iti.si; miue i - v

C. EOKEUIV

J. ECKEIIT.

A. ECKEKT.

Eckert Brothers,

JOHN A. SERMERSHEIM & CO. Oct. Mtfc. WO-lf. JASl'fcK. IMI-

WHAT

cc cc ec ce cc co :c co co c

.- r- -..- ig CC CO C' e CO

pmuioN

o? os oc OS

O OS OS o

CURES

coHtuMrn SCROFULA BRONCHITIS COUGHS COLDS

Wonderful FlMh rroduow. Hanj Uvo golaet one pound por day br Ho useBootVe Emuleion is not ft crt roaodv. It oontoiso tba otimuUt1.. ,JUi4ta of tho HTDOphoO-

. . . I lUaT s wvv m .

Fancy and Patent Process Roller Flour! S&Jr4 Tlich or .0 ,..! for hraily ,W. TO THY IT IS TO BE ALAVABLK At

COTT 4 BOWHB. Otiomlott. HTo

frvw Jatr mi l K.1 ,04.. im Vi-.'.A?!

. . . . . j

Kit ' "I

WK TH. k4Mlt IM acrM In rlil...(... a

-rrWr4. finny of wv& WM ill4 l mlte wH of Irekstt, t'tr m rr. ttJ tLifll trw vry y. 1 SK cm. IM cIpsM r,t In cHttlrMton, M u J wkhcONK tlmtr. a rwI t.nrn ln.i.. iifw 1(K M Um. t Srh ix li.).. e,...) rri,..j i.3

weM t Irlf.. I'rke tH.tWO; 1MB), fttr kl

196 text, ht W ete flurKt. stt tttm.

khh1 frmif nw kiTii. gtiuj orctiart), tlM lfHnt little fnn, H wllft frum ()l. ih4

inr,i"itim- (irr rrt . uitiif rany.

47 acrw Wall rlvfr. fi mllta nonh f i

3M trrm In b.rttom. 1Uim-c n bill, acrMltk

l HlMK, t item ih i?m-h Mi.ur m,d l,Ut oak M ciuittKh tlmWr to ui or than t1l y tor dm, i

Mramr hwc, d iru mm pinif ih llvlbf i

i a ,rrr K"i iaim. isw vri mit: ifrmn ,,.

310 acrM.MU arrrt rlcarrd. t'tlinr in UkU .

fw frame htii, rimmJ iirw frnif burnt, tut ,9 l l.SW, a4 Kuru, Bndyounc ufcliMa, pUdIiiIh art at lae Uu4 l-rokir., lalanc roiling., ma of ttia farm a llttU H-nrn,3 inlltt f fcaj

pabllc ffmd. a plrHilld tock aat K r'n ftra. Mai

ttptf aau uon aim ay ttrwn onttairL

HOUSKS AND IflTS. I 0ETKR8VIOI

A contt frame itorlline ami Iot loi. M

hcw, y, crr- of land, ioih1 ftirltiK lrM M trrm. aiMt tmalt fruda of all kiixU; lafuni twB, J'rl f6se;tirir eay; ttry mUmJ

rtj. I.-lltir. ).rn. Mnr W. ami 4UuttfMM

vHW. (cmt rhar. t kmi alsiLnl w, t n

riM hlfiB IW X , HM1 connirrr M MMW(. fatt TrlWlfK $h kwhI iM!. ana on W4 Wu 1 e.la mratserR Indiana ,fr a Ur. iAw !r gantry alt (vrwn.l. k"1 cMrch al mU, ut i lj.W. I'rk 1 J; t0 H Vi nl twrlre month, i fowl ck6c fWf

pl a khI tritin.

Ar il IS, ISot. y

Roller Hills!

o co co 9? co co co co eo T9 :s eg ?g eg

We

.aimiao rvervfcddv to JBv the Best nn it in Iwn

Ike Cheapest. KmX Fluur chiimcii ilocler's bill;

WHEAT WANTED: S MARKET PIttCE IN CASH, BY WAGON o

FOR WHICH

AYS PAY

WE WILL AL !

TJJE HIGHEST I

or CAR LOAD.

cTmk.

mIiiii Ml

a mi WHWIWfa.

JlySli. lSSS-lf.

ECXERT BROTHERS.

ft?HmiriiaWnnrsiaisSa'i TSSEZE mSSitm NfTr auTtnr-1 - - r-A.

fall. 14. i t kf m

JASPER MACHINE SH0 DANIEL F. J. MILlEft, Prsonsts

am mw rfpara4-4.trB unia, rfkV for aM kM af Mailihtwy. xt attrjf l af ST AM KKOlXM.SfOClAtn. I am alto rtprt4 t ftl. .

TMKKSttINO McWlNM, KPAW

KKAIK8 t MOWKIM,!

Jtay hrr tkM 1?t J,?r wm-r at, wktak, with . I"1

MAKE AS GO(D AS NI.

I kn.P BtiMiUy en hinili I'll1 Kit r

am preimr- t - I wilt lio frireii .nvtHMOl

LEATHER and RUlllf Ell dj&w"

KV D8SIRKL1 81ZK.03I SlORf-lW

Shoo at Kuebler's old Sie-42

i or nnwien inaiin !

ndiana.

THE JASPER WAGON AND. PLOW TQ WCir MEN

FELIX LAMPEBT, fJtSSES

Cox, of Sixtli mud Clmy 'Si-,

wmMtfolly retnrns his thtnks to the public for their Ubcrnl ptronnr i hereto for and invites cotitinuance of the same. He ha on hand a tock of lore, '"y'WB v. . r, r;pintiT Ti:i? Al. IV.

PLE2tENT3 suitable to the trade, snd sluo continues to MANUFACTURE 7HK CELEBRATED LAMPBRT WAGON !

THE BEST vVAGOIN ON ApiEELS !

and his extensive sales of which have brought Jasper into aotice as EAIHIWAIITEK5 I'Ott EXTRA GOOD WACMI.

tic warrnlH every one ml' lkcne wjiroiw lir mue year,

M.iiMHt any ftroauagc mitier rcaisonnfljc use, uniiiVfn defective materia, r maiinlaictiire,

- )... . - , r

vosrs our exports of breodAtufla Mid more then one litindretf yosrs before our

provisions have lKp.n much lrier. lle-'thidenendeiiee was declared. IlBt Uic

nemiier Again that last year, well as whole cam is now being consHieren am

in previous ver, th exports of bicsd

sUia AUd provisions would have ln intiflh larxer tlinn they worn If the hesvy band of protection aud hlpth tariff hd not been laid upon our foreign com asorce.

ot ywrtkful mtow. rir Ut BMBbood. afe., I win

airn; cobmuibk sh

BEST

WAGON

'GO TO

ft. Sfl. IMA 1 as 1. tap: t.w. m.ly.

ronlMHiMa 'ieimliip XrM-

tee's llatice. THE oeilersif oed, Trustee of Columbia Tp., Dubois county, Ind., will site ad to Township busiaese at his resideaco on every Saturdsy, and persons

haviRfc township business to trsnsact . JASPEM areroqueeiodtooroseatitoBthatdayof in Street, JAar "TJ

tho woelc. t t I None but THF RKb T

iao lowaensp norary ib acpi v ,u USED, and EVKUX ha"u"

OflieeoitBO Aru8ioe,wfiereiBoseeniuiu T,ATED. Wo beat pouih

Geo. Wagifl

to si:j.t. Tiir.sr ca;o:s ij ktckv TOWX IS iOUTHKKN INDIANA.

A.GENTS WANTED

CALL ON OR ADDRESS

3L.A.MI?EXrr, Jasper, laid. December a2d, 1882.

1

dlscused by the American rwioplr, and we need not fear the ftnsl result. As Jr.fTcrsott ssld, "Error mny bn ssfely lt inted when truth i left free to combst

;lt." John Ovrajtvr. Not th Vetnon, tetl , up 0.

CswtH. and Tfxf-Mtfki oHUmwl, atalkUrsAMS oxtam omulaeuri tor Mol-ratc rMU Oat OOIc ! OppMiS! V. 8. l'Mtoat Or . Wa hate no mb-ftcfc, all blffio ttnet, aeon sm traanct Mitmt bMirxwi i lecs Um sM at kM thm these nMk frm wwhiogtAn. tlon, We rltl it MUintaK! or hk, fir oUnre. Oaf fee net dot Oil Mtcut 1 tocsrod. A "How f ) OWaSu (aU-nm." viti . mc M MtMl ettenbi lit year State, emarty, c S4WS, MM feve. Affirm. C.A.SKOW&:CG.

OffiiHo rstwitt 0SH, Wtata4S, li. C.

J. M. PARKER'S

coa obtain books.

KELSON HARRIS,

Trustee Columbia Tp. June 27th. m ly.

awaiauwrielgeTvwnfthip TrwM-

tee'n iiaiicc.

jnpnE uadersigned, Trustee of Bain-

will attend to Townsliip DtisiBees on

Saturdays of every week, at his residence

on North Main atreet, between seventh and Eighth, in Jasper.

The Library or Haul Townaiiip is Kept

at the bookstore of Mr. Jacob GosmamiJ

where persons wanting books can obtain I

(hem at snv time.

JOSEPH ECKSTEIN, Trustee. April 90, 1888-ly.

TJ aTF.jj SI

cine, or any other foreign wsfe1

rablllty. . . , jb

fried our wayon.

Nov 25tb, 18S7-iy.

taMMKL

aatfa. TWfcwlHWa1J,""BB

IW BBlBVBaV

Saddle

SHOP

last tth. B , Xaia k Xaokiom &H.

flIlE attention of farmers is called

t tho fact that I now have in stock

Saddles, Ihrncs, Collars, Hames, Chains,

Whips, aad every thin( in that line, which will be sold as cheap as ffrst-clsse

tfocu-1 . he. A'"0, KeivatriHe prompt'

!v snd proircriv done. A portion of the

aaasTiitVmwwn

BavBBBmf atvaMH

aaeW "Jll

aVaOBOBVOUaOBWMfa

"aataawaaaWan A

aM mum Maw okai aaa

ttwfc teioj4f v WofTioft4o4 sVoeivya

irn 00 in aaattaf cm. it a I' aad hmi uh.

h work! tad ctttt f

I aM. Ma riaa m aasaxaaOa SaUa JUaaaaJaai iaaVat Wlala 99 Wl aTWaTWJ VIT1

aavVBBaflaA aaaakBaWaa aaSaW aaaaa tAaaftA aw aVaspvjTa i"ir"wi"j . i ma arv raww awl a)aklHMMnMaMlMM

M9a AlSaO)awa) VfMK

I rea te hmm mm aw-rwt

I SaOaOBbOjM - A SOaiaaM aVaaaMai tfll mn Hat avAaaMUM fa I pavaTBaaaarT1l aHSW IRnW BMWWl JU aWai aTTWWJTO aWew aHf ttOg Wakssl RojAo" ffof esVooj etto ufcMOil

M MM SMHh aart af 0 Wk JiM-lfceB

FRFF as 1fa.ll.TO 1.27. 'SS-J .dv. Stn- H.H.J

THK F. M. B. A.

M4 taOsa oaf) ejfe) oejoa)ssia We Mty svM IMreMt froiflHU e4t A rVef f aj. af yw wM fftte t f work (fee m en

iilimtrj., Kk ai , rrUam4, Ma

The Progressive Ffc JOHNr.STELLKKJlt

Mt.Vkrnok, -

hiatroie solicited

Eaiu Kf-i Su.Tht farm rt the J faff. PAfJlfFE

(erosl'ii? of Iho !i,ilro&a3d TtdQl' rxvcrj t . . ;

yood (at w Vtiid. Arlr st Ci-ulrsr UV -1. llti-tr.

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