The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 10, 1896, Image 6

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REPUBLICAN PARTY.
Defense of the puatform
; ANO party record.
. .jlv. -
■■ -“ -
ShfaM IM of Upl Tmd«r — ttnm
Flttr a OlfUtto Vm4—Mmr* About
iDomoa tt lutlon — «!*•» DoluloM —
: Ciuplft Soto*.
' f' TmImi Kind* «f U(*l T*nd»r.
>)The Fourth National bank In the city
dtf New York haa Uaued a leaflet, which
^fVe* the following concise and cor
rect statement of the various kinds of |
legal tender under the present laws of
te United States:
Gold coin Is a legal tender in all par
ents, without any limit as to 'amount.
*VThe silver dollar of the acts of 1792,
1£87 and 1878 is a full legal tender to
any amount The trade dollar was a
\ legal tender to the amount of five dol
lars, but had no legal tender quallflca
. tlons now.
All fractional silver coin now minted
la S’ legal tender to the amount of ten
dollars. -
Iflnor coin Is a legal tender to the
amoilnt of twenty-five cents.
Hatted States notes ("greenbacks”)
•rma legal tender In payment of all
delta, public and private, except for
duties on Imports and interest on the
public debt
Gold certificates are*not a TelaTten
d«fe;>ut may be Issued In payment of
Interest on the public debt and are re
ceivable in payment for customs, taxes
aai all public dues. -& ; » •
Silver certificates are not a legal ten- j
der. but are receivablftarcuatoms,
taxes and all public dues. ^ ■ !
Currency certificates ere ;na|; a legal
tender tor any purpose, hut may be
counted as part of the lawful money
reserve of the banks and may be ac
cepted In the settlement of clearing
house balances.
United States treasury notes of 1890
are a legal tender In payment of all
debts, public and private, and are re
cfivnble for customs, taxes and all pub
lic dues. They may be counted as a
part of the lawful reserves of the banks
and are redeemable in gold or silver
coin in the discretion of the secretary1
of the treasury.
National bank notes are.pot a legal.
^ JSfPder except that the.y are receivable;
dor all dues to the united Elites except
defies on Imports and for all debts and
demands owing by the United States,
except Interest on the public debt and
ln.redemptlon of the national currency.
Xjach national bank Is required to re
ceive at par for any debt or liability
to |t, the notes of every other national
hdak.—Albany Argus.
teen mistreated by the. United Staten
Thlnjk of it! Prior tQ the “crime of
88tt" only eight millions of silver dol
lars were coined by the government
and there was free coinage then. But
•lace that “notorious crime” the gov
ernment coined $420,000,000 in silver
Sliars and purchased $160,000,000 In
ver bullion and Issued treasury notes
thereupon. Of course .that was con
tracting the currency.
■ The “crime" seems tq hate been du*
;* . to. the fact that the more silver the
r» United States purchased the less Its
Htmforlt'
i '• ■ ■ ■ t
‘ tRvery Bbre of his being thorough);
f* ■: ' 4 American."
— ■—.-__
&
> vbulllon value. If silver depreciated bo
tepidly la value when It was bought ta
comparatively small quantities, will It
not necessarily follow that when the
United States colas It free at the mints
la enormous quantities it will be jfvm
>'• '• mote overproduced and Its value «on
=££ etantly shrink? The fact is that there
has been such a great production ol
* gllvor. such Competition amqpg tp«
• asUsere themselves.that the supply ex
. needs the demand and sliver ts reallj
|: no longer, unless international agree
'aseat can ho secured for Its eolnage, i
money metal, ft has become a com
,v- merslnl commodity only and Js nos
SW- nteadlly decreasing la value escep
>■" ' wherein speculative demand hag artlfi
sun? increased Its market quotation!
The United States has 'been' exceed
. % t1I*
....
i ingly friendly to silver and tbc time
came when the Increasing of the gov*
eminent's 'stock by the ; purchase of
4,500,000 ounces monthly became a
menace. Silver was falling so rapidly
In value and the wide divergence be
tween It and gold, at the existing ratio,
widened so'constantly that the flooding
of the nation with the depreciated coin
Was dangerous and the difficulty of
maintaining It at a parity with gold
Was so great that congress repealed the
law providing for the purchase of the
bullion. The country was simply In
danger of being swamped by silver.
Now the silver bugs would have us
,undo the good work performed by the
repeal in 1890— made necessary by the
growing lack of confidence in the gov
ernment’s ability to continue all monies
at a parity—by coining all the bullion
In the United States, that of France and
Chins' as Well, and all old silver coffee
pots and silver spoons into money
which would be worth less, by reason
of Its excessive tfupply, than fifty-three
cents to the dollar. '
r Thus free silver means giving the
nation a currency depreciated at least
47 per cent and compelling the laboring
man to accept a silver dollar whose
purchasing value could hot be more
than 68 per cent of the dollars now in
circulation In lieu of money worth the
world over one hundred cents to the
dollar. The demand for allver coinage
now la a fraud, a bunco game, and the
Victims selected are the wage-earners,
for they, less than any one else, can af
ford to have the purchasing power of
their money reduced 47 per cent or
more. The laboring man who wants a
good dollar Will vote fpr McKinley.
That Is necessary or he votes to destroy
his ability to llva.aa well as he does
now. Eloquent periods and blasphe
mous metaphorh cannot change the sit
uation. Free silver Is a gigantic fraud.
—Springfield (O:); Union. , a,.
ailvwlt* Dtlailoaa.
v The tomenters of hatred among the
people pretend that the allver agitation
It consists of Impudence and wind.
Before 1873 there had been no allTer
dollar* In circulation In this country
for thirty years. This was because the
silver In the silver dollar would sell for
more money as bullion, to be used in
the.arts, than the gold in the gold dol
lar., The gold dollar being the cheaper
had driven the silver dollar out of cir
culation, so that in 1873 few men under
forty years of age had ever seen one.
For this reason when a law was enacted
in 1873 codifying all previous acts in
relation to coinage so as to simplify
them and adapt them to modern condi
tions, then obsolete silver dollar ^aa‘
dropped from the list of coins provid
ed for in the act. Subseqently to this—
in consequence chiefly of the great re
lative increase In the production of s)U
ver and of the closing of the mints' os
Germany and other countries to Its
free coinage—silver began to decline
rapidly in value. So that in a short
time it became cheaper than gold. Then
ihe owners of silver mines began to
clamor for reopening our mints to die
free coinage of silver dollars. As sil
ver was then cheaper than gold, if this
had been done the cheaper silver would
have driven out the gold. Congress,
therefore, refused to yield to the de
mand of the silver miners; but in 1871
it reopened the mints to the coinage
of all the silver that could be main
tained at par with gold. Since that
time we have coined 430,000,000 dollars
and have authorized the coinage ol
about 150,000,000 more, which is over
seventy times more silver dollars than
had been coined in our mints during
the entire history of the nation before
1873. These silver dollars are a full
legal tender for all debts. Silver had
been practically demonetized by the
coinage act of 1834, which raised the
ratio from 15 to 1 to 16 to 1, with the
result of driving all silver from circu
lation. By the acts of 1878 and. 1890
we have remonetized silver to the enor
mous extent mentioned, and then hav
ing reached the farthest limit where It
was possible to maintain our silver dol
AND LABOR WILL AGREE WITH HIM. <
i, ' : di f -■ ' ■ • i
?. J ,f tji C '-vv j ,• . — •
“I believe It Is a (o«d deal batter to open up the mills of the United
8tatea to the labor of America than to open up the mint* of the Unit
ed States to ths silver of the world.”—Major McKinley to His Old. ,
Comrades. •
Is for the benefit of the many against
the few, for the poor agalnat the rich.
Should the country' descend to the de
predated standard of silver the dupes
t>f this belief would discover, when too
late, that the fatal tendency of tbe
Cheap Money policy would be to
strengthen and Increase the possession
of wealth among the few. While mul
titudes of thrifty and prosperous peo
ple would undoubtedly be ruined by the
desperate experiment, not a dollar of
their wealth would find Its way to the
possession of the many; It would make
the few who control and command
large amounts of money only the richer
in affording them opportunities for
profitably speculating on the general
distress. Such has been the universal
experience’1 In all epoohf of depressed
currency and financial panic:’ So far
from being widened, the circle of the
prosperous and rich would be duly nar
rowed by the reefcleea policy pf the sll
veHtee. The power of the “gold bugs”
end "money sharks,” against whom the
etlvbrlte warfare Is foolitthly waged,
would be greater than evei1, and would
be more unscrupulously exercised than
ever before. The gleam of factitious
prosperity under a system .of debased
and Inflated money would ao*n pass
away, and would be followed by a long
night of industrial and social gloom.
There la. In short, no form of econ
omical, social or political development
which the free silver scheme Is not cal
culated to arrest more violently than
If a disastrous war, a famine or an
Egyptian plague should strike fhe land.
Yet the Illusory prospect of treating
weal .a and prosperity oat bt^nothlng
by deeply debfcsfagthe nation's stand
ard of value seems to have s strange
and unaccountable fascination tor mul
titudes of peop\e—something like the
attraction of the lighthouse lamp on the
seacoaat, which lurep Innumerable
flocks of migratory birds to their cer
tain- destruction. But the simile badly
limps. It would, perhaps, not matter
so much If these persons should shatter
their own wings only. If their course
did not threaten so many millions ol
Innocent people^-Phlladelphla Record.
Mn« Aheet DimmUMIu
Nashville Canter, Martin County
Minn., Aug. 2—To the Editor: l notic*
in your column of Note# ana Queriei
in your paper ot July 23, in answer t<
the question whether a person ii
obliged to receive silver dollars in pay
meet ot a debt, you answer that he is
silver dollars being legal tender to an;
i amount. Now, this being so, in wha
or ot what does the demonetisation o
silver consist? \ , George Boler.
' V. < ^ V ,
•*'*•*' r v . r. . , .
larg on a par with gold, we stopped the
further coinage of silver. Just as It had
been stopped In all the great silver us
ing countries of Europe for the saipf
reason.—St Paul Pioneer Priss. -" s
! V: ' / ..." l' , ■. . ‘ ■ , . ( - .
CAMPAIGN NOTES,
The way In which some’free sliver
democrats nowadays refer to the doc
trines of Jefferson Is absurd. Thomas
Jefferson was as strong a sound money
man as Alexander Hamilton. He fa
vored the use of both silver and gold
as mtfney, as do most sound mon'Cy
men now; but only on the basis of a
ratio that would maintain the parity
between them. In other words, he con
tended that the ratio should be the com
mercial ratio existing between the two
metals. That Is heaven wide from the
doctrine of the free silver men. They
nowhere propose to make the silver
dollar equal in commercial value tc
the gold dollar. It la an essential point
In their platform that the silver dollar
must be a cheap dollar.—Burlington
(Vt.) Free Press.
It la impossible to make sale of pig
iron because of the agitation for fret
silver. The use of iron is so general
In nearly all forms of Industrial under
taking that the demand for it, or th<
lack of demand, is a sure indication ol
the condition of the, business pulse
The stoppage of the sales of pig iroi
has led to the stoppage of the produc
tion of ore In the Rockefeller mines at
Bessemer, Mich., throwing 7,000 mei
out of work'.: - The continuance of th<
silver agitation will, no doubt, furthei
aggravate and Intensify the condition!
of doubt and Insecurity which compe
prudent men to a wise Inactivity uriti
the storm shall have blown over.
1 Philadelphia Record.
Advqcates of free silver, argue* tha
the Increased 'demand—which wouli
be a forced and not a real demand
would raise the price of silver bullioi
so that the make-believe ratio of on
to sixteen would become the com
merclal ratio. That Is a guess base
on a fallacy,. The experiment has bee:
tried and found a dismal failure. Unde
the Bland law the government coins
$2,000,000 worth of silver a month; bu
the price of silver bullion kept droj
ping. Under the Sherman bill tb
> government bought 4,600,000 ounces <
i silver a month; but silver kept droi
- ping. The “boy orator’’ pledges hint
, self to do what no nation on earth h«
’ ever been able to do—keep gold an
: silver on a parity at a ratio other tha
f the real or commercial ratio.—Blni
hamton (N. T.) Republican.
HENPfilXS SPEECH.
TALK ON MONEY TO MOROCCO
MANUFACTURERS.
OI»4 Thar A** Hot Ashing it Hitt
Lwlkw B«maa.tli.it. ' — Tails Why
Clam Shall* Wara Damoaatlsad—Cl.il
Isailon u4 Etolatloa Advancing.
The Shoe and Leather Reporter pub
lishes the following speech made by the
Hon. Joseph C. Hendrix at the dinner
of the National Morocco Manufac
turers’ association of the United States
at Manhattan Beach early this month:
Mr. President and Gentlemen—I am
glad to see you, “men of small brains
and large capital.” I am glad always to
faoe successful men in an American
industry. You represent a trade which
fears ago furnished material tor the
money instrument. There was leather
money once and plenty of it You have
never set up any cry because of the de
j monetization of leather, never asked
redress for the “crime” of the abandon
ment of the use of leather as money.
You do not now ask for its remonetisa
tion.
nr. oiein—«or ior tree tannage.
Mr. Hendrix—No! Therefore, I have
great respect for two people, the North
American Indian and the morocco
manufacturer. Along these sand dunes
from Manhattan to Montauk point, the
antiquarian can point to great heaps
of shells where the old squaws used to
sit and practice the free coinage of
wampum. After a while a smart Yankee
Invented a turning lathe which trans
formed the clam shells into money too
fast This led to the demonetization
of the Long Island clam. (Laughter.)
The poor Indian has passed off to the
plains and we hear no more of the free
coinage of clams.
These are simply evolutionary steps.
You look back to the beginning of your
industry and marvel at the changes.
The world advances. Civilization re
fines. Commerce requires exact terms
and measures. It insists upon certain
ty, fixity in the standard of values. It
must have something upon which it can
depend. It has found out that it must
depend upon some one thing. That is
why it has veered to the single stand
ard. It has quit stepping from one
standard to the other. It makes its
election. It votes, for gold because of
its great value in small compass and
because of the fixity of that value. So
it is thSt1 one great nation after an
other, under tho command of its best
intelligence, - has 1 come to the gold
standard. It is because they have found
it the cheapest, beet and most effective
standard by which to measure all val
ues.
What does a standard mean? What
is its primary significance? It comes
from an old Latin word meaning some
thing to turn to. When you are in
doubt you go to the standard. I don’t
care what line of business you are in or
what course of life you pursue, a stand
ard governs it somehow or other. You
ride on a railway on a standard guage,
you sit at a table of a standard height,
and so on through the list. The stand
ard muBt be the thing it stands for. If
you have a standard of weight, it may
be of diamonds or precious stones, but
it has got to have weight—that is the
first thing. If you have a standard
of length, it must have length. And when
you come to the question of the stand
ard of value, whatever it is made of it
has got to have value.
You can talk about the whole ques
tion of finance in 100 different lights.
But this is. the main point—you must
hkve a standard of value. That stand
ard must have value. We choose for
the standard the metal which fluctuates
the least in value. That is the whole
story of the gold standard. (Cheers.)
Our friends out in Chicago claim
that the gold standard is a British
policy which we are seeking to enforce
in this country. Did you ever hear
anything about British policy in con
nection with the law of gravitation or
a British policy of good health against
bad health—good clothes against shod
dy? There are other countries in the
world besides Great Britain. We do
not have to look to Great Britain to
know what is a good thing. (Great
applause.) We are old enough and big
enough to know a good thing when we
see it. Ours is a country that for 60
years has been under the gold stand
ard. You have never known anything
else. All you have was built upon the
gold standard. The greatness and de
velopment of this country have been
attained under that standard. How is
the world lining up on this question?
China, Japan and Mexico are for free
' silver. Great Britain, Germany, France
and the great empires of Europe are for
gold. Where do we belong? There is
only one answer. Can any one fancy
that our great population, made up ol
70,000,000 of the best examples of the
1 Anglo-Saxon race, mixed with Irish
1 wit, Scotch cunning, German thrift, U
1 going to step from the high plane where
we stand to the lower one beneath!
What strange madness has come lntc
. the American people to make it seen
I possible that they could do a thing ol
. that kind? (Applause.)
We can live on a silver basis aftei
we get there. Our great rivers will
follow their courses to the sea. God’i
sun will kiss the earth. The crops wll
spring forth. Children will be bori
and grow up. Enterprises will go for
ward. But are we going to take thi
leap in the dark and try an experlmen
fraught, with such risk and panic? i
gerei French economist once said tha
when he was 40, he thought he under
stood something about finance. Whei
he was 60, he felt he did not know a
much about it as he did at 40, and a
70 he began to doubt whether he knei
anything about it at all, and scarcel;
v | dared to open his mouth. Mr. Glad
I stone pondered over the question til
i-'
1 ' vV ' .
he raid that It seemed almost to defy
human intellect, but Ben Tillman, trope
South Carolina, knows that the gold
bugs of Wall street and vampires of
Lombard street are “agin the farmer,”
and the way the farmer can get even
Is to cut his dollar In two. (Applause.)
We are living In a grand and awful
time. But the newspapers are printed
every day, and the Americans are not
asleep. The brain of the American
people Is not dull. Their hearts are
not dishonest. These heresies come
and go as the tide flows, and sometlmet
in the thickest of the night we may
not appear to see the stars that are
shining. But you- remember on one
historic occasion, when the sky was all
covered with fog, some one asked, “Oh,;
say, can you see by the dawn’s earl;
light the star spangled banner yet
waving?” And It was there! (E»
thuslasttc cheers.)
i
Vkm in (he BeneflUT
If 50 cent silver dollars should dou
ble the prices of farm products, it is ;
quite as certain that the prices of all
the products which the farmer con-'
sumes would double in the same way.
In that case it Is not easy to see how
the farmer would gain anything by the -
free coinage of silver. Even the wages
of labor, the last to rise in an epoch of
depreciated currency and inflated
prices, would finally, after much dls- |
tress of the workingmen, straggle up
to the common level.
But whether the farmer should re
ceive $100 for 100 bushels of wheat
and pay out $90 tor the necessaries of i
living or should receive $200 for the
same wheat and pay out $180, in both!
cases the balance on hand would have*
just the same purchasing power. But
in accomplishing the degradation of
the monetary standard, which could;
do neither the farmer nor the wage-:
earner any good, an enormous depre-;
elation of values and confiscation of ac-!
cumulated earnings, Involving public I
and private credit in a maelstrom of
destruction, would inevitably ensue.!
Are the farmers and workingmen of the
country willing to invoke such a
catastrophe?—Philadelphia Record.
False Hopes for Labor.
.SMC*.
Tha bane In Pare Silver.
Stop bothering your head about the
figures 16 to 1, leave the gold standard
out of the question, for there Is no 1
direct issue upon it, and consider the
real Issue, sliver.
A lump of silver of a certain size,
371% grains In weight, is to-day worth
63 cents. The Bryan proposition is
that the government shall stamp it a
dollar. That would be flat money mak
ing of the same sort as the govern
ment’s setting its printing presses to
work and turning out without limit
dollars of paper.
It Is flat dishonesty. It is pregnant
with trouble for every man, laborer or
capitalist, who lives by industry, and
it would leave to the United States
the hurt of lasting mistrust in the mind
of every industrial investor and lead
er, American or foreign. Beat it as the
American voters beat the populists
four years ago—by 10 to 1.—Exchange.
Tha PiDiloilBr'i Dollar.
The government pays about $140,000,
000 a year to pensioners. The payments
last year were $141,395,229. Every one
of theBe dollars was worth 100 cents
and equal to a dollar in gold.
If the policy of the Chicago platform
and party Bhould be made effective by
legislation, every dollar thereafter re
ceived by a pensioner would be worth
only 68 cents. It would be called a dol
lar, but in the purchase of a pensioner’s
supplies it would go only so far as 53
cents go now. The buying power of the
pensioner’s monthly allowance, like
that of the depositor's money, still to
be paid out of the savings bank, and
the value of policies to be paid by life
insurance companies, would be reduced
by nearly one-half.—New York TImea 1
DrantMa Not tha Goal
The silver men give away their ease
when they say that free coinage will
"increase prices.” The one universal
human interest is cheapness. The ideal
condition would be one wherein all de
sirable things were produced without
any cost at all. Every advance toward
that condition—that is to say, every
cheapening of the necessities of life—
is a great gain for everybody. On the
other hand, every increase in the price
of the necessities of life is a direct
and grievous hurt to the people.
Fro* Cnlnac* >* a Nutshell.
A fine ounce of gold is worth $20.67.
Sixteen ounces of silver are worth
$11.20.
Congress can legislate until it is
• black in the face without making the
■ ounce of gold worth less or the 16
' ounces of silver worth more. — New
i
i
t
r
l
York Press.
Cheap and trashy money in which
to pay wages, high prices for every
kind of goods which labor buys—these
are the blessings of free silver for the
American workingmen.
Hwkanl a la Italians.
An Italian fashion for cooking fresh
mackerel ia to make a dressing-Irqflpyt
tablespoonfnl of butter, mixed with •
little minced aballota, parsley and the
green tope of young onions. Spread
this on the fish, wrap them well in ■<
strong white paper, saturated with,
olive oil, and boil or bake them in a
quick oven. Garnish them with lemon
and parsley. Sweet peas, seasoned
with shallot and minced parsley, are
also sometimes served with fresh mack
erel. Salt mackerel is very good cooked
after the English fashion, that is, by
immersing it half an hour in water
containing a handful of fennel and
dash of vinegar. Drain and serve with
hot gooseberry sauce.
Toe l.ate to Mood.
There la a point beyond which medication
cannot go. Before it is too late to mend,
penons of a rheumatic tendency. Inherited
or acquired, should use that benignant de
fense against the further progress of the
super-tenacious malady—rheumatism. The
name of this proven rescuer is Hoetstter’s
Stomach Bitters, which, It should also be
recollected, cures dyspepsia, liver com
plaint, fever and ague,dsblllty and nervous
ness.
To Suit Any Weather.
A pretty, yet servicable gown, which
was Imported lately, would suit any
kind of ordinary weather. It was
mad in moss-green canvas, lined with
a bright shade of pink. The tight-fit?
ting basque bodice had long, square
revera of white satin, over which fell
cascades of coffee-colored lace, and the
vest, of white chiffon, was also veiled
with lace. Pink ribbon encircled the
waist and the neck, which was finished
with pointed motifs of lace.
Haifa Catarrh Cara
la a constitutional cure. Price, 7So,
The Baaaon Why.
Party with Demijohn—Why don’t
you lay in a stock of whisky for Sun
day on Saturday night, the same as I
do?
Other Party—Man alive, do you sup
pose I would be able to sleep if I knew
there was whisky in the house? Pd
be walking the floor the whole night
—Truth.
Hagvnaan’aCamphor Ice with Glyeertaa.
The original and only genuine. Cures Chapped Hands
and Face, Cold Sores, &c. C.O. Clark Ctt5r.HaVea/n»
An Bloqnent speech.
A pretty little story is told about
Mrs A. A. Johnson, the dean of Ober
Un college. It is said she never leaves
American soil without carrying with
her a silken American flag. At a din
ner party in Germany on one occasion
the host asked each of the ladies pres
ent what in her country she was most
proud of. Mrs Johnson could not
speak German very fluently, but a hap
py thought striking her she left the
table for a moment and returned with
an American flag, which she. waved
while all applauded
Health
Is impossible without pure, healthy blood. Puri
fied and vitalized blood result from taking
Hood’s,
Sarsaparilla /
The best —in fact the One True Blood Purifier.
Hood’s Pills for the liver and bowels. Me.
Nothing
so Clean,
so Durable,
so Economical,
so Elegant ^
as
‘9
w
BIAS
VELVETEEN
SKIRT BINDINGS.
pou have to pay the same price for the
Just as good/’ Why not insist on
aving what you want—S. H. & M.
If your dealer WILL NOT
supply you we will.
Samples mmlttd fm
“ Home Dressmaking Made Easy.” anew73Mgn
pk by Miss Emma M. Hooper, of the Ladtes Horn*
urnal. tella in plain word* now to make dreaiea at
urn&l, lens in pmin wuiua nuw tv —
>me without previous training; mslled for 25c. ,
S. H. ft M. Co., P.O. Box699. N.V.Ctty. I
BDUOATIONAU
, College Fall Term Sept. t.
Board for threo boar’a work,
latalogiu and ,peclmana frae
SOUTH
WEST
MISSOURI.
The best fruit section In the West. No
Sroutha A failure of crops never known. .
[lid climate. ProducUveaou. Abundance of
good pure water.
For Map, and Circulars giving full descrip
tion of the Blch Mineral, Fruit and Agricultu
ral Lands in South West Missouri, write to
JOHN M. PUMDY, Manager of the Missouri
Land and Live Stock Company, Neosho, New
ton Co., Mlaaourt
1,200 BU.
CRIB,
$9.80.
1. H. BLOOHCH,
Council Bluflh,
Iowa.
STEADY
WORK
WB PAT CASH WEEKLY Ali
sell
want men everywhere to (
STARK TREES
ed, proven
‘'absolutely beet.1”8uperb outfits
-IBOTUIL
new system. STARK 1_
Louisiana, Mo., Rocsroar, lx*.
TANKS
W" at«r TanXg
Wood or Steel, Any ilier.ll
lb.pea, ,t LOWEST rne.1.
Price lt.t ERIE. AddroM
E. KBETCHMKB. Rod OnkfllL
p;
,EN8I0NS. PATENTS, CLAIM8.
tin. In low m id^iudiMti., -i.i— ..."
OPIUM £?8«^K«SS2:
lwl"M»l«aw Da.Sun,(Jolnojr, lUoaO
W. N. U., OMAHA—37—1890
'When writing to advertisers, kindly
_mention this paper.
M 'O 'S '.UR r. FOR
|m«SLWRS
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