Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 21 November 1878 — Page 6
ft fs
I
BONDS.
,Sl-
Senator Blaine to Wendell Philon Interconvertible Bonds,
An 111 limiting: and Valuable Corrffiprunlcncc -Blaine's
Objections to Phil
s.a'
lipa's Pet Bchcine.
The Kennebec. (Me.) Jcifmal, recently published the following Jcarretpon dence
Boston, Oct. 16,1878.
Hon. Jamea G. Blaine:. MY DKAR SIR: Please to remember our talk in the Senate chamber, last Winter, when I urged that the Republican party should meet the wishes of the people, the necessities ot business and the «jonvictions of a large portion of the thoughtful men of the Nation.
If vour^arty had offered a plan for the Government's issuing of all the paper note currency (a doctrine to which the best European thought is hastening, if it has not alleady reached it), the same to he legal tender everywhere and for very purpose, and interconvertible with bonds tor a long term and at a low rate of in terest, the principal and interest of which should be payable in coin, that wouJJ Have saved us from the Bourbon South in S8o. ...
What I hear from Republican bust uess men convinces me that if they could have been countenanced in such a plat(irniby trusted leaders, such leadtrs would have carried the country. I do not sav that such a financial plan would have wholly satisfied me, but it .would have held the country. •,
It is sad to see a party which has led 1 be world in advanced yet conservative opinion, quit its place and fall behind the 7 best financial thought ot Europe, clinging to obsolete if not exploded theories, losing tae helm in defence of ideas that ten years hence men will smile at. One f£feat concern with me is that thus they insure Southern Bourbon rule for the next doeen years.
Wealth here is almost omnipotent and its organization is very perfect, but you'll tie that, once awake, the masses will fcmash rings1, journals and parties, and that neither wealth nor the seaboard rules thi* people. Yours truly,
WENDELL Pmixirs.
Augusta, Me., Oct. 23, 1878.
Wendell Phillips, E*q.". MY DEAR SIR: I remember the conversation in the Senate chamber to which you refer, and I beg to recall to you— possibly more fully than I then stated— the objections to the interconvertible bond as the basis of our currency. I am aware that many wise men besides yourself have approved and advotatcd this theory. The power to hold a bond which may at anv moment be converted into legal-tender notes for its face value, and have legal tender notes which may at any moment be converted into a bond at par, appears at first sight attractive. But no scheme is more deceptive or delusive, and I will briefly state the objections which seem to me insuperable.
OBJECTIONS TO THE SCHEMA First—If the bond be of sufficiently high rate of interest to fio-t the currency even to an approximate equality with Coin—say 4 per cent, or thereabout—the inevitable (endencv will be for the currency to tun into the bond rather than (or the bond to be exctymged for currency and this with such force and vol utne at critical times ai to compel a t'. scarcity of notes, an ever-recurring sti in aency in the money market and a general instability in affairs.
Zi
Second—If you make the bond of a rate so low as to avoid the tendency and ihe danger just stated, you of course abandon all idea of having your currency at par with coin. If your interconvertible bond is worth-but 75 or 80 cents on the dollar in coin, you thereby fix the value of your currency at 20 or 25 pir Cent, below par, and you banish coin from voui circulating medium absolutely And finally So that, if your bond be one that will float a currency at par with coin, it will steadily and irresistibly tend to contract its volume. And if you 6eek to avoid this result by lowering the rate Of interest on the" bond, you render
i# Qf interest on the bond, you render y-F'A! equality with coin impossible. In either event the scheme would work its own destruction—swift and 6ue. &•' Third. No device was ever conceived '*V„S that would give a more complete adv in*,*.I "S Uge to unhealthy speculation of all kinds than the interconvertible bond.
Several times within the last ten years we hove witnessed a lock-up" of greenbacks by Wall street combinations, with ^a view to financial ends, which were at 'f]i
war
ith the public good. So promising and so profitable wtfre these ends that the speculators could Afford to have many
open
the way for this c'ass of financial opera- .. tore to "lock-up" greenbacks and have theG overnment pay them interest on the 'M-tf wholo amount, while they might be conspiring to derange the business of acontiner,:, and depress the value of every farmer's crop in the land. In other words your theory would force the Government to be an accomplice in every gambling scheme devised in Wall street against the peace and prosperity ct the •"K'. countiv
Fourth—Every vear as the sprin0 bus
iness closes an 1 summer comes upon us, there a accumulation of tnoney thus lies idle for three or four months at the financial centres in the vaults of the -J bank -, in the safes of capitalists, in the rll treasuries of the railways, and in the strong boxes of insurance companies.
During that period—nearlv one-fourth of the year—there are from one hundred and fifty to two hundred millions of idle dollars in New York and the other great money centres, and those dollars all belong '.o rich men. Your interconvert1 ible bond would provide an admirable mode foi these capitalists to take a large amount of interest from the Government at a season when they cannot get it from any other source. But I question wbeth1 er it would be quite fair to tax the whole 1 during the hot months of summer
in order to insure to the wealthy capitalists of the country a good income on that large sum of money whicn would otherwise be idle while "th^y are enjoying the mountain air and the sea breeze.
Fifth—The interconvertible btmd would lend to po*tponment in ethe payment of finatl bill# and debts in the domestic busiofss of supply in every-day life. In our present system a large sum ot.monev is carried ht all times on deposit without interest. When bills are presented from the "butcher, the baker or candlestick-maker," the man havine money on deposit not drawing interest readily pays them, for there is no profit 10 him in p.ittingoff his creditor. But once teach every man who has a surplus of ready money that he can deposit it with the Government and draw interest thereon, and the inevitable tendency is to place it there and keep it there as long as a creditor can be denied, avoided or evaded. The advantage in all branches of trade and labor of promptly paying small bills, not drawing interest,*is incalculable. The interconvertible bond would stop this at once, and would array the avarice And cupidity of the money class against it. The interest paid by the Government would go into the pockets of the rich and the inteiconvertible bond would again make the Government an accomplice with the capitalist in withholding his honest dues from the working man— the Government meanwhile paying the rich man interest 011 the money that honestly belonged in the poor man's pocket. siX:h—Is it not apparent, from the considerations thus summarized, that no form of currency could be devised which would be so constant and so oppressive as the interconvertible bond, in the taxation it would impose on the people It would make the Government the constant repository for the surplus money of the rich, who would use it as the resting place for fortunes, waiting a more permanent and more profitable investment. In short the whole scheme would end in making the Government answerable for interest on money that tor the time could not be used for any other investment. It would incur the general odium of taxing the many for ihe benefit of the few, of exacting from the poor a contribution to pay interest on the rich man's money, at a tune when the Government did not need it and could not use it.
NO WAY PROVIDED TO SECURE COIN. ju urge that our party should have taken ground in favor of "the Government's issuing of all the paper note currency, the same to be leg 1-tender every where and for every purpose." Your language implie« more than you reallv meant to convey, for your "everywhere" is nece sarilv limited to our own country, and you proceed youiself to limit the "legal tender for every purpose" bv declaring that the principal and interest of your interconvertible bonds shall be "pay* able in com." The moment you "take the ground that the principal and interest of ihe bonds shall bi paid in coin, you separate yourself absolutely and irreconcilably from the advance guard of the Greenback school of financier who refuse to incur any obligations to pay coin. And you will observe that while vour theory proposes to pay both principal and interest on your bonds in coin, but make your paper money legal tender for customs and all other dues You seem to approve the wisdom of Re publican legislation in so far as to make Government bonds payable in coin, but you fail to go with the same legislation in providing an efficient and certain mode of securing the coin. I note this as among the most glaring defects of your interconvertible theory—one among many that render its adoption by the Republican party impossible. Moreover the scheme would have proved lamentably insufficient to appease the demands of the "fiat" money advocates. It would not even have proved a "eop to Cerberus," and to have resorted to it would j»istly have exposed the Republican party first to ridicule and then to disaster.
But so long as you acknowledge the value of coin as a means of steadying your system. of interconvertible bonds, why are you not willing to admit the people to the full advantage of a free use of coin as a means of steadying all values? We arc producing more gold and silver than ail the re»t of the world. We are having a balance of trade in our favor that must bring gold to us from foreign countries in large amounts, and unless we make extraordinary efforts to prevent it, we shall find ourselves on the specie basi*, whether we desire it or not. The increase of the precious metals from our own mines and from beyond the seas will enlarge the volume ot our currency healthfully and* in precise accordance with those "demands ct trade" of which we hear so much from the advocates of irredeemable paper. WHAT "THE BEST EUROPEAN THOUGHT"
REALLY 19.
Nor can I agree with vou—differing with full deference and jespect—that the "best European thought is hastening" to the doctrine that you advocate. In the three most enlightened and powerful nations of Europts England, Germany and France, I question if a single authority can be found that would advocate or even tolerate the idea of the Government issuing paper money and declaring it to be legal tender. France, under the terrible pressure of her war w.th Germany, never issued a single dollar of paper money, and she forced h»jr great bank back to specie payment as promptly as possible after the conte 1'. closed. The "best European thought" so far as I can read its expression, contemplated no paper money except that which is redeemable in coin at the will of the holder. If vou can give me any recognized authority in any of these countries that advocates a different doctrine I shall confess myself obliged to you for valuable information.
You expiess the belief that the policy |of the Republican party "will insure southern Bourbon rule for the nrxt dozen 1 yeari?." TJiat, of course, belongs to the future, and each of us may indulge his hopes and his fears, his apprehensions and his speculations concerning it. But did it ever occur to you that your own financial theories are precisely those which the southern Bourbons are now advocating with zeal and almost with unanimity? The southern Democrats who are resisting the demand for irredeemable money may be counted on our fingers, while'its advocates in their ranks are as the sands on the seashore. Among the many evils to be feared ftom the southern
Bourbons coming into power not the least
THE
xJSKKE
would be the triumrh of these identical hyresies in finance fo which you are lend iiJi» the 'ri*at weight of your respected name.
There are thousands of millions of property in the northern State* dependent fur its value upon the maintenance of public credit and the assurance of a sound currency. This is not the property of the rich merely, but of all classes of every man who has a deposit in a sav ings bank, of every man who owns a state, municipal or railway security ot every man who has a policy of insurance on his home, or his ship, or his life of every widow cr orphan whose bread is derived from tru6t funds of every pen sioner whose fuel and |whose food depend on the monthly stipend paid him for scrvice and suffering in the war. For all these classes and others that I might enumerate, scattered in northern states frcm Maine to California, the Southern Bourbons are not the appointed guardians nor the natural protectors. But it becomes alarming when we see their cf forts aided and abetted by your weighty and eloquent words, by your great and venerated name.
In ali great struggles in the political world, issues become generalized and dktails are left out of sight. So it will be with this financial question. There can be but two sides to it one for "honest money," th^ other, for "wild inflation the one tor maintaining the faith ar.d honor of the sation, the other leading to the verge and possib leaping over the precipice of repudiation the one com posed mainly of those who stood by the Government in the hour of its trial the other deriving its chief strength from those who sought to destroy the union of the states. In the party for honest money there will in the end be many Democrats and I am sorry to admit thai irredeemable paper ha6 found 6ome of its ablest advocates in the ranks of the Republican party. I am with great respect,
rfr
sA Youi 3 very sincerely, J. G. BLAINK.
A&i
j,i jr
The Centaur Liniments are
two kinds. The White is for the hu
man fa'hiily the Yellow is for horses
heep, and other animals. Testimonials
of the effects produced by these remark-
sable Preparations 'are wrapped aroun every bottle, ynd may be procured of any druggist, on by mail from the office of THE CENTAUR COMPANY. S Dey Street. New York City.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
By virtue of two venditioni exponas executions issued from the Vigo circuit court, to mc dirtcted and delivered, one in favor of Henry May and Joseph St^rn, and one in favor of Rogers, Smith & Co. and both against Stephen K. Freeman, 1 am ordered to sell the following described real estate, situated in Vigo county, Indiana, to-wit:
The south half (},£) of lot number nine-ty-four(94) in section sixteen (16) township twelve (12) north, range nine (9) west, also lots number fourteen (14) and fifteen (15 in William M. Preston's subdivision, of lot number six (6) in Nathaniel Preston's subdivision of part of the west half of the northeast quarter (J^) of section twenty-seven (27) township twelve (ia) north, range nine (9) we«t, except thirty-seven and one-half (37%) feet off the south side of said lot number fifteen (15), and on SATURDAY, the 16th day of No\. 1S78, within the legal hours ot said day, at the court house door in Terre Haute, I will offer the rents and profits of the above described real estate, together with all privileges and appurtenances to the same belonging, for "a term not exceeding seven years, to the highest bidder for cash, and upon failure to realize a sum sufficient to satisfy said executions ancf costs, I will then and there offer the fec-sirnple, in and to said real estate, to the highest bidder for cash to satisfy the same. This 24th dav of October, 1878.
GEO. W. CARICO, Sheriff P'rs. fee $8.00
No 10,626. THE STATB OF INDIANA VIGO COUNTY, IN THK VIGO CIRCUIT COURT, WILLIAM S. PIBRSOX vs. FRED«RICK A, ROSS, FANNIK B.
Ross, CLIFFORD W. ROSS, NEWTON BOOTH, HARRIET R. EARLY, HOLMES AMMIDOWX.et al., in Foreclosure. Be it known that on the 30th day of October 1S7S, said plaintiff tiled an af fidavit in due forn, showing that said Newton Booth Harriet K. Gary and Holmes AmmiJ dowen are non-re6idents of the State of Indiana.
Said non-resident defendants are hereby notified of thi pendency of said action against them, and that the same will stand Car trial at the February term of said court in the year 1S79. •'v
Attest:
LI.
Joux K. DURKAN. Clerk.
C. E. HosforJ, Plaintiffs atty.
A TTACHMKNT AN1 GARNISHMENT A. NOTICE. Noah Wellmao, laintlff, per John Wellman, bis agent, vs. Jamei A. l'lnson, defendant. Before ThoniHS J. Ward, a Justice of Fayette township, Vigo county, IniUpa. said ilefcndant is tooreby notificja that on the 1st day of Oct. 1878, an order of attachment was iB«tied by me uffaiust the goods, credits and effects of the said defendant, and it appears, by affldavit of said plaintiff's .agent, that defendant is a non-resident of the state *f Indiana, and that said cause is set for trldlon tho 86th day of October, 1878, at 10 O\lok A. M. hoMAS J. WARD,
Justice of the Peace.
Chicago & Paducah Railway Tim* Table. Leave tor South 9 00 am It 65 in 12 Bi m. 1 27 3 40 3 38 4 SO pin 4 43 ni olOpm.. asp 5 63 6 60 8 36
Arrive from South
.Chicago 3 35 ..Streator.. ISpn .Pontiac tl 50 a ..Fairtrary -U 16 a ...Gibson 10 10 a ..Mansiield 11 a
Monticeilo 8 28 ...Kcoaetit 8 07 a ..Hammond... 7 40 a in ..LoYington... 7 21 a ...Sullivan 6 67 a ..Windsor...... 6 SO a ..Altainont.ii. 4 80 a Addrea?, LEWIS. G. T. Agt. Chicago
B.F
HaUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.
CATARRH
THE EYE, EAR and THROAT
euoooMftillr Treated with
SANFORD'S RADICAL CURE.
CCCCESS Is the test of mertt, and •oeeco ia tho 0 treatment of Catarrhal Alfccttoos. after *0
-jj. possess Bach
properties Tho cvldonce. tn tho shapo of unsolicited testimonials from tho most respectablo peopto In all stations of llTo,mnat bo conclnolvo on this point. Norcr,vro heUevo,la tbohistoryofpupalor mcdielncs has inch valaaM 1 testimony ootn otfared, freely offered, in fsvor of any remedy than thai in tho possession of the proprietors of BAXroW* IUsroAi. Ccko. And valuable
aa it 1% It does
sot represent a thousandth pnrt of the recommendations which are to-dar ofitered by Mends to friends In its faror. People or wealth and roflnrmont In all parts ot tlio country dally admit Its superiority over any method of cure known to the r^trnlnr medical profession, but shun the publicity Incidental to a published statement. Bonce tho testimonials In oar possession represent but a small part of those withheld for the reason mentioned. The foHnwlnc unsolicited testimonial ftom RnraT WKi.is, KM)., of Wolls, Fsrjro A Co.* £xpre««. Is en on spoken indorseaeat of •which are Justly proud.
INVALUABLE.
Venn. Wxxxs A PorrnLlfholesals Draggbta, Boston. Mass.: OaiUlcmeI hayo forsome months
bare tried nil tho remedies tliatIcou\d find, without material or permanent benefit. Last the disease had arrived at that state thstln haro relief or dlo. Tho entire membranous syst
as onee benefited by it The changes of ellmato. chronic dlsesso ofthellrer.and my ftfjo—oycrw —may prevent my entire restoration, but tho bene* flt I acrtve from Its dally use is to me intaUtablt, and I am hoping to be completely cared, and at last arrive at a respectable old ate.
If this statement ofmycasecanbeof any serrlee to those afflicted as I bare been, and enablo you to brliv th Is remedy Into more .general nso, especially on the Pacific coast (where it Is much needod), my object In writing this note will be obtained.
Venr truly yours, HEXKY WELLS, ArsoaA«K.T.,Jono.lSTB. of Wells, Fargo (i Co. Bach package contains Dr. 8anford's Improved Inhaling Tube, and fall directions for use in ail cases. Price $1.00. For sale by all Wholesato and RetailDrui
BDCouiiS' VOLTAIC PLASTER
ALWAYS CURES.
Enlarged Spleen. This tn certify that I have been oslng yonr COLLI US1 YOLTAIO PLASTXBS for Enlargement of the Spleen and Depression In the Stomach, and thoy
baTe
given mo more relief than any other
roraody 1 haro over nsed. I wonld btehty recommond them to all goffering from the effects of pain and inflammation.
T. MCELKRKMH. H. C. GILBERT.
PhoBnix Foundry —AM—
1
Machine Works,
TERRE HAUTE. IND.
Manufacture all kindo 0} htationary en gin^c, flour mill, saw mill, and coal sliafmachinery. Special attention given to mill work. We are agents for the best quality ot milling machinery of all kinds, French burr mill stones, batting doth, scales, steam pumps, leather and rubber belting, head blocks, circular saws, goyrnor6, Steam Guages, Wire Rope, etc.
Our facilities for manufacturing and ihipping are equal to those of any estate lishiner.t in the west, and we will stand behind everything we do. We have always on hand a variety of second-hand engines and boilers, which we will guarantee? to be what wc represent them. Call and examine our price-list and f*ods before purchasing elsewhere.
McELFRESH?* & OIL BERT
The New French Cembantloii
Microscope and Floroscope£
For examining Animal Life in water Flowers, Minerals. Seeds, Ac Is also a perfe tlin&n glass, and counterfeit detector. Agents wanted everywhere, exoluhive territory free. flOto-flS A day ean b.« made by good agents.
Sample and instructions ent by mail on receipt of 91 (K, or by &xptcas, C. O. D. This lathe simplest microscope ever lavented, and will accomplish anything obtained by a 125 Microscope, .and is fiee Zrom inclined lenses or glasses Ail tress
C. *UOC I'OEK CO., 679 Broad ay, Kew Yor^.
Privates^
Slight or Becont enreable within day*, for |10. tdavbsml Speed! Mcaiored wlthou medicine. Write or call at the Old Estabis he Western TOcdical Institute 868 Vine St., CiKClXnati, OHIO. Advice
Diseases
CanH-loMtiii
RS HA.XKUUPTCV.
in tho District Court of the JUnit&T States for the District of Indiana. tn the matter of George
(J.
Robinton. Bank*
rnpt. In Bankruptcy. A.t icrre I(ant., November], 1878. The undersigned hereby gives notice of his ippointment a? ns-s",£uce of George C. IiobInson, of the county of Vigo «ni State of Indiana, within said district, wbo has been adjudged a bankrupt npoo hi* own petition, tfvtbe District Court of said district.
ALFRKD IS. HUSTOV, AsslRnee, Southeast corner of Third and Ohio.
re-
if seof ,and now
D.
TUlll
No. 10,604. STATE OF INDll I O O N IN I E CIRCUIT COURT, BAl
BRUMFIEL, HANEY CO VS. JONATHAN Y. CATHERINE READ, AMB B. CARLTON,JOHN E LAB foreclosure. Be it known that on the 13th November, 1878, said plaintiff# fil affidavit in due form, showing th
Fa.
sue,— will and of life nilla-
Arm-
V. Read and Catherine
Osborne Self Binder, Hughes'Sulky Plow, Canton Sulky Plow,
fal
mast
Tho entire membranous system
had bocome so Inflamed, and the stomach so disordered, that It was doubtfnl matter whether I
{onld
KO to the
Paelfle coast, or If I di&ro whether
should llvt to coma back or not. I saw anody er
iTugbes, Gilpin, Weir, NATHAN
J. W. SELLS.
PicKBsnro, Mo., Jane 38,1857.
Severe Pain. Having occasion to use a remedy for a very ottere pain In my side 1 tried one of your COLLUS' VOLTAIO PLASTXKS, and In tirenty-foar hoars tbc pain was entirely removed. J. B. SAMMI8,
Ass't Cashier First Nat. Bank.
VTTXOXA,Mnrcr., Jane 1», 1377. Weaknesses. Collins' Voltaic Plasters %ivo the best satisfaction lisro of anything that has been, tried for Lameness and Weakness of the Back. Please send more right away. JAMES LEWIS.
BRTAST,ILU,Jane 16,18T7. ,~i-••
Prloc, as Cents.
Be carcful to obtain CoMurs' VOLTAIC PIAETan. a combination of Eractrle and Voltaic Plates, with a highly Medicated Plaster, as seen in the akove ent. Sold by all Wholesale and Retail Draggists thronghont the United States and Can ad as, and by WXEKS ft POTTER' y^prictors, Boston, Mass.
10
DIA
I N S O I O
ONE DOLLAR
ROGERS., limn CO.
Would call the attention of farmers to their complete stock ot
Double Shovels, |Buckeye Giain Drill, Corn Planters and Mowers,
We, the nndersigned committee, appointed bv the 'respective manufacturers agents, to decide upon the merits of Sulky Plows, at a public trial on the farm of VIcCagy Collins, 1% miles west of Midkletown, Ind., in which the "Hughes, manufactured by Long, Alstatter & Co., the "Gilpin manufactured bv John Deere & Co., and the "Weirj" manufactured bv Weir Plow Co., were represented, de cidcd unanimously that the Weir is the best Sulkv Plow on the grounds. The points taken in consideration, being, Simplicity, Best Hitch, Lightest jPrjif^, Ease of management, and construction and quality of work performed.
Width of FurrowB, Depth of Furrows, Average Draft 16 inches. inches. 500
«9 5 400 PADDOCK, EDMUND WATSON. RKI/BKX CLARK' PETKR MCHUOIIKS, JSAMCEL DAVIS,
\g6ftt for Weir Sulky Plow, north Fourth'St., Terre Haute* Ind.
Companies Represented.
Insurance Omnany of Vorth A-mrrici. assets PoennFire Insuraocr Company, asset* Snctti«hC«nimRrcial Insurance Company, assetB... Connecticut Fire Insurance Company, assets..' Other Companies Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, as*etsi, Connecticut Fire Insurance Company I London Assuranco
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BV WHICH TIL KIR SUBFACGS ABB COVKUKD WITH A COATIXO OF PP** PUWWIM,
MLB 00L9 UCUUTWGS, COOTAIHDTS TSZ ¥0001*01 LZTZTXI SUMOin, wunsttd ^wrtiaaUtr.SL Wat tm7
ON RECEIPT OF ONE DOUAR mZSS?, I^jnk
on
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bill, they arc H0R®IS. T. rt. rntlrn ••rtafhrrrtfn The WmnUrfuI Ij-fevre Ditmiad R(a(.
Tie Terre Bantu
3
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Rogers, Wheal & Co.,
Third Street, between Main and Ohio, Terre Haute, Ind.
ANOTHER yiCTORT FOR THE WEIR!
450
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tn*nr«nW nnilCoHcollejr Ageit
Broker and ,, Notary Public,
I'""".
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THE OLDEST AND
Located^on the corner of eventh and Main, has long maintainffLu leading rank among the best hotels of the state. The
RECENT IMPROVEMENTS
Under the proprietorship of -B. TT73E2UU
Will make It eiill more attractive. ...
That Husband
OF MINE BUYS HIS
O
JNO. S. JORDON
421 Main street, Bet. Fourth and Filtl).
The Place to get Good Ones at Low Prices-
.....I 7.000.0M 9,000 000 ... 17.000.00S 8,000,09s ..... 4,000 .. .. 18/00,000 .. 3,000,000 16.MMM0
N OS
MOUNTING •.
OWE DOLLAR
nl"
e»Ure M(l
THE BEST
