A THE FAIU1EKS' ALLIANCE, LINCOLN, NEB., THUKSDAY , JULY 30, 1891- CUEEOCT 0? iHGESTIHl PAPER MONEY IS THI SAVIOR Of PEOPLES AND NATIONS, i of the revenues ccUected. In the state of North Ca:-olina U M found that, with revenue amounting- to 100.0X per an iitisi, it wu quit practicable to keep 1100.000 of currency at par with coin. If that currency had alo been I. . I t l Wah AaS A Tr Whether of Metal r nZZLu .u Paper, M .t Do Coined and Ue-ed , - .fa , j. pBpor ma, by ih !Terelg Power ot a XaUou Coaled la a given country to an The Law Make anil Moaey. 1'auiake I bare been asked by a correspond ent in Missouri to write an article for the Journal on lie "paper money" of the Argentine Republic It I aald that the old parties are pointing to a depre ciated currency of that country as a horrid example of the failure of -flat paper money." It U also etatod by my correspondent that thU U the last 'bugbear" of tbo nemie of the peo ple, and. if it can be swept away, they will be without other refuge. j I detire to remark. In the first place, that there If no -paper money" in the Argsntlne B"public. They hare two kind of paper currency, neither of which have any of lb essential attrL butet or qualities of money. One it a bank currency bated la the usual way on alleged coin when there it no coin. It 1 the old. old atory. Com hat failed to meet the requirement of the country, it bat left when most want ed. In tLoir deipe ration the people mutt have money or society must per lah. Ho, in accordance with the teach ing of the dark age, they instituted a paper currency founded on coin. The coin is not there, though it I said to be there, and the people believe it un til somebody want (hem, then the truth coma out. Coin and confidence having failed, of course the paper tails. The country then is in a bud II x. but no worse than when the .paper wa first retorted to. That is the present condition of the bank paper currency of the Argentine Republic. They bare been trying to float four dollars of pa per to one of coin. It worked a while, a usual, and then, as us :al, gradually failed. (If all fofma oi fBOnay now nsad hy civilised nations, gold is the least To llable, because of iu cowardly habit of being abxeat when most needed. Al ways, in the supreme moment of a na tion's monetary need, gold I In biding or flies to other nation. There 1 no exception to this rule. Ioto failed in Venice in the year 1171; in America In 1770; in Fram e in 1710; in Kngiand in 17&7; on the continent of Europo in 1813. And in each case paper money without coin redemption came to the front and saved society from collapso. Paper money saved Venice, the Amer ican colonics and Kngiand; and it can not be denied that paper money, badly crippled as it wa by the money power, saved the Amoriwin Union from dis memberment during the late war.whlle gold was so frightened out of its wits that it stayed in biding years after the war was over. Mr. John lames Ingalls, late Senator of the United States, bat placed him self on record as follows: No people In a great emergency ever found a faithful ally in gold. It is the most cowardly and treacherous of all metal. It makot no treaty it does not break. It has no friend it doot not sooner or later betray. Armlet and navies are not maintained by gold. In times of panic and calamity, shipwreck and disaster, it becomes the ngent and minister of ruin. No nation ever fought a great war by the aid of gold. On the contrary, in the crisis of the greatest peril, it becomes an enemy more potent than the foe in tho field; but when the battle is won and poa" has been secured, gold reappears and claims the fruits of victory. In our own civil war it is doubtful if the gold of New York and London did cot work us greater injury tbun tho powder and lead and iron of the rebel. It wa the most invincible enemy of the public credit, old paid no soldier or sailor, It refuted the national obligations. It was worth moot when our fortunes were tho lowest Every dufeat gave it in-1 created value, it was In open alliance with our enemies the world over, and all its energies were evoked for our destruction. Hut as usual, when dan ger has been averted and the victory secured, gold swagger to the front and asserts the supremacy. IngalU' speech in the United State hen a to, February 15, 1878. Next to gold, silver money Is the least reliable. Next to the metal comes paper . money founded on the metals. No paper currency can be a safe reliance for a long series of years, whoa dependent for it value on a sin gle commodity. Land It the most per manent, but it is too cumbersomo, un wieldy nnd changeable in value, as we have already seen, and as in the case of rennsjlvania,must be managed with great care and accuracy. ibis care and accuracy is not needed when we have at hand s better, safer and more reliable system, well proven in the monetary history of the world. There is no use trying to balance a pyramid on lu apex when we can just as well place it on its base. There I no use trying to run a money system on a sin gle commodity when we can much tiMslr and mora conveniently place it on alt commodities with entire safety from all iu complications. A true money, whether of metal or pa pet', inutt bo coined and lssuod by ihe sovereign power of a nation- Itj mut be honored by the Utuing power. ! Tt.at is. It must be receivable by the Issuing government for all dues and tae, Thl is the first or primary re. dmption of money, and without it there can bo no good money of either metal or psper. Then, besides being iiteeh utile In the revenue of the gov. eramunt, all money should be by law Ic.-ul wtidnr by the people for all fiton. clary purposes. A money to treated by a rtttpontlble government I placed on the bal of all oommcdltlo. It ill be satferly mdvmJ by all men who hare commodities to Mland they will actually advwrlU their eagerness (o redeem the money of lhsr country with taio, paying the full amount of li fats. HiU a money I just a g xnl m the fnioiumt no belter, no worn. It IU remain oo4 a long m the foternasaat riia InUu t end pualUuM to ffcltwrt r.ad dwUui-s-i ri ' mumi. It U th law thai max ud uatoaf money, and the munoy U Jt 4 ipmmI lha yovrrnmwit and , la that make it. Or. inwr polat and v wUl have i ao al awrftwt iwon-y. The amount ei tiiuitey iatwei most b In o;na sort (tf rstMoHaOle rlioH to the uw-uuV amouut three or four times the sum of the annual revenues of the government. It is not assumed that a paper money will stand and be good if the govern ment ceases. That would be unrea sonable. It will be just at good as the Issuing government only. It will live and die with the issuing government and hence it will tight for It own life and for the government. That Is one of IU mala glorious feature. Paper ( money is patriotic. " Gold U not Pa per money saved the republic of Venice when coin Lad failed. Paper money saved the American colonies from the tyranny of Great llrltaln, when coin and thoso who held it had hunted their boles or bad joined the enemy. Paper money saved England from the power of Napoleon when the last sixpence bad left the Bank of England. Paper money is the savior of peoples and na tions. Coin is a traitor, a coward and a boaster the world over. Never re liable in any great emergency. I have before me a volume of the re port of the consul of the United State for November and Uecerober, 18X9. Commencing on page 65 J It a full and very Interesting repo.t by Consul liakor on the finance of the Argentine Republic. In this report I And that the republic bat afloat in the form of bank currency, resting on al leged coin for iu redemption, $191, 000,000. Coin It so scarce that thlt currency it practically Irredeemable. It is not receivable in the revenues of the government nor a general legal tender. It Is badly depreciated. Resides this crushing load of bad bank paper, there is another currency, known at -Cedulas," or mortgage-loan currency, amounting to about 400, 000,000 at the date of the report. And it wa still rapidly increasing. This land current cn on! b redHmwl In land by foreclosure, which Is so annoy ing and so slow nnd expontive, for everybody except the banks, that it it little use in keeping the currency at par. Thlt land currency it not re ceivable in the revenue of the country nor a goneral legal tender. It Is issued alto fur in excent of the business needs of the country, making, with the bank currency, the enormous sum of nearly $G0O,ltO0,000 for a population of about 4,000,000 peopio. 'I bis gives them $150 per capita, without count ing anything for coin or counterfeit. An inflation like that is twice or thrice what it should be under the best pos sible system, and, under a currency which hns no necessary attribute of money, it is outrageously absurd. The annual revenues of the country are about 870,000,000. Now make a money recoivublo In the revenue and legal tender for all dobU.and the coun try can float three or four timet the amount of revenues; that is, about (250.000,000, at par with cola. And it will be tafe and sound as long as the issulngjgoverriment exists and continues to collect and disburse revenue. It is claimed by the coin men that paper currency can be kept at par with coin by sufficiently restricting the issue. That is hardly true In any J'mt sense, Hrs.U has a paper currency of about seven dollars per capita of tho population, nnd some coin. The Bra zilian paper it badly depreciated 11 ko that of Argentine, though not quite so much. We are safe In otsuming.tbcre. fore. that restriction of issue atone will not keep paper at par with coin. It is the law that makes and unmakes money, both metal and paper. The value of tbo material to wbieh the monetary function is attached cuU no figure when it is being used at money. There Is another vlow iu which tho finances of tbo Argentine Republic are interesting. That unhappy country has for years boen the patluro ground of the great British money power. The speculators of Europe found it a land of unbounded natural resources, and they put their wits to work to utilize the situation. They took a band in it legislation nnd its finances. 1 hey have had their own way In almt every thing. Thuy fwiind it a laud of prom ie. They have made it a laud of promise. Today too most prominent fcaturo in tho republic is debt. 1 he speculators of 1'rliain liavo had their own way with the finances to the fullest extent. Tho main bunine of tho re public is borrowing money and paying interest Hand in hand with thU is tho levying and collecting of taxes. Debt aud usury It the orderof the day. It is but a question of time when these things will end. In fact the end now seems to be In sight Tho public debts of tho general aud provincial govern menU are bold by foreigners, and are coin debU. Whoa the coin grows scarce, it 1 hlgh-prleod and paper runs low. When coin run out eutiroly. in terest on the debt cannot bo paid. Then come refunding at enormous disadvantage to the debtors. To show the dutt-rldden condition of the coun- j try I quote the following from the con sular report before mcs -The national government hav sot the example by luuroatlng it Indubf. edness from H2,Ol7,Xt'l In 1HN1 to tSiO.OOO.IMH) In IKH'J, The various provinces caught the contagion, and such of them a could hnv rushed into Ihe Europonn money markets f,r loans, iii of them in excus of tiio'r prosimt abilities to pay." The report glvoj a ubie showing the total fotulga publlo dobu of the coun try to be Hourly lOO.OfW.lNjO. This enormous t un it payable in coin to foreigners. The coin I nl in the country and it cannot b had. The bond have deprecinlrd; the HHtUh money loaner fl the lo Even the great hmixt ot lUring Brother, Urn don, ha Urn shuken. That gret house thought It bad found a good llln In the Argnutlue bond. An4 so II bad. But "It bit ot mon ,han It could t h," and U now somewhat choked. It His ehrwer I thus inm Whed.ehat shall ay of theihewed' Vht people ot Artatlna owe a coin Jubt to furtifuer. ainovntiftf to abotil 81mi p rapt' for every ntu, womaa tad wuiid in the rouafy. kuiM that, the psuplt are motugo4 to the feot bank and iweotaturt to tin emooiil greater, I he ruutlry It la a deplorable condition. It U roiu. Uf to a .a!ltlo Use lUl ot l-upt, ftta INi tatfiwy.lord wlU tea er. U.a m4 the or laboring eopl will euJer everything. Thlt it a fair tpecimeaof tooney-power legUlation when the speculator and money -loan-er have tbelr own way la full, as in Turkey. England, Ireland. Egypt and some o'.her countries. This discussion of Argentine fioatuet is entirely from official source aad may be relied on as being correct The alliance theory of finance U this: -All money, whether metal or pa per, must be Usued by the sovereign government; it mutt be legal tender for all moneUry purposes and receiva ble In the revenues of the country. " The currency of Argentine hat none of these necessary qualities. It It en tirely in the hands of ban Were aad loan agenU; In fact It teems to be a system created for their especial benefit It it neither a general legal tender nor re ceivable in the revenues of the coun try. It it ln -!y overissued and easily counterfeited. The older bank note were printed in that notoriout den of counterfeiters known at the city of London. It was a propitious harvest time for them, and they doubtless .en ,'oyed the picnic. The American consular report for 184 says: -The original note were printed in London. They were poorly done and easily forged." Those bank-note printer of London forged the continental currency of thlt country during our war of independ ence by the -ship load." They did the same thing with the French money in 17U0. And these forgeriet were com mitted with the sanction and by the authority of the British government The printing of the bank currency of Argk.iline was an uncommon opportu nity. To what extent It was Improved we have no meant of knowing. But it wat evidently too good A chance to pass unnoticed by adepU, when the note -were poorly done and easily forged" and the diet were In their own handt. Every person who desires to under stand this subject can now easily do to. There it no more similarity between the currency of Argentine and the money advocated by the alliance men in thlt country than there it between a crazy wildcat and a good reliable fat ox. Yet there are those who, no doubt, will still stand to It that the money power system of Argentine and the people's treasury-note system of the Unltod States of North America are the same. Both extremes of the money-power system are now being tried In fcouth America. In Argentina they have ex treme inflation; in Brazil they have extreme contraction. In both coun tries the paper currency is badly de preciated, and in both countries it It the only meant the people have to do business with. Coin failed them long ago. There is one further item READ THIS! . ssssssiss mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm1m!''' asaassss I have bought the Maxwell, Sharp & Eoss Company Stock at Eeceivers sale for less than 50 cents on the dol lar, and I am now offering it at about the same to con- sumers. The entire stock will be closed out during the j next 30 days for what I can get for it. If you want HARDWARE, STOVES, TINWARE, DRY GOODS, BOOTS AND SHOES, FURNITURE, - or Crockery this is an opportunity that only offers once in a lifetime. Come and see what I have to offer. 1532 to 1538 OSt., LidcoId, Nebraska. W. H. TRAYEE. all the dollar afloat. When we can make it to the Interest of the great coiinterfeiU to watch the lesser ones we have done a good thing for ail concerned. Person desiring to do their own thinking on this money and currency question of other countries and of our own country should tend to the Secre tary of SUte, at Washington for the I a tost consular reports; to the Treas urer nnd ih Secretary of the Treasury for their latest reports of the Comp troller of the Currency. . It it a rich field of investigation, which is espec ially interesting and valuable at the present time. foils Da vm, M. C. Junction City, Kan, PRESS PARAGRAPHS. WESTERN :-: M.ANUFACTURING :-: CO. Lincoln, Nebraska, J. H. WALSH, President M D WELCH, Sec'y-Treasurer Special Inside Prices and Liber al Terms to Alliances. WE CAN SAVE A coin- basis paper like that of Argentina will not circulate alongside of cola on equal terms. Everybody prefers the coin and the coin it hoarded, or coin-like, leave the country when most needed. On the other band, a legal-tender pa per, as advocated by the Alliance men, will circulate by the side of coin, on. equal terms with it, as is seen at the present time in the United States and in France. In & country of 1'al-ten-der or Hat" paper, furnished in a fair and reasonable volume, coin accumu lates, as in France and the United Slates. In all cases coin is plentiful wbon least needed, and scarcest where and when most needed. This It the peculiar nature of coin. In a country of bank paper.depcndlng solely on coin for its par value, coin soon disappears and remains absent as in Brazil and Argentina. I am aiiked to say whether there It any escape for Argentina from her dif ficulties. I reply that there it a plain and eaxy way of escape if the country can adopt it Hut Argentina Is so com pietdly in the hand of tho money pow cr of London ti.at he can hardly have any legislation for tho bcnellt of the common people. Everything Is con trolted by Ihu banker, speculators and tbo holders of the bonus or tlie coun try, and other interested agents and friends of tbo Ixmdon money power. Tho very first step in the way of relief for tho iieonle of Argentine wonld lie a law making tho coin bonds of the country payable in tlte sauio kind of money that was borrowed. ery little coin, if any. has boen borrowed. It It not the custom of the money-loaners to loan coin, but to loan the cheapest currency oa exchange that they can lay their hands on. They utually buy up tho cheap currency of the country, lonn It to the people and to the government and then in cue time col' tect the interest and principal in coin That 1 tho way they did and are doing in the United States during the late war and afterward. In that way our own tinted Mates bonus, which were sold for about oO cents on the dollar, are now costing the people more than twice that sum to redeem them, besides the In to rest we have paid. In. that routed we are in the same boat with Argentina. We are both paying coin and even gold, only on paper louns Is the money-power system in both cases. And evory mcnoy-loaner and speculator will swear that it Is rl?ht and that anything short of It repudiation. Hut It is lime for people and nations to pay lust a'.teiilion to what the- iiwvii latort say. They should do what is lint and right for thomselvesand their own children . The people have boen turning their pockets inside out to get the np plauso of speculators, counterfeits and pirate long enough. 1 he Orvt thing for Argentina to do Is to declare all debit and bond payable In the same sort of money and eorroncy that was borrow ed. Hint will shut u!T the great l mand for coin, Whi-nnot uoedod il will lhn ruimaio In sight. The nxl sti will be to receive all money of the country In the revenues of the gjvorn nient und make It U-gal tender for all debit and tate In the provinces and among the penple. Tbeta tUux wlP, raise the value uf paper currency an4 convert it Intomnnay. Ti na, after (hat, more than oiis-hslf of lit presont volume of Ihe numncy should x lowly retired, epv;.Uy burttlnf up all coji.WrMu. ilioss stop will give Argentina a good money. Her paper will be preferred to cola a ours ( aad at the too rrvdtt of Vsnl.e were When tht great creditor are compel ed to lake la same currency la pay meat that way loaned thsy w'.u to tttail the volume t f ih mony wUH 0.u!iiLit Mu, Inihilua of any and very soil toadt to lu tU value of It Mora farm mortgages will be paid off In Kansas thlt fall tban wot ever known in the history of thlt or any state in the union. Kawlint County Democrat. The above item appears in a paper that is nearly full of sheriff 't tale ad vertisements. One page contains thirty-three. Of course the mortgages will be paid off, and the sheriff will give the deeds instead, and Sbylock will start in with a clear title. "Schsm!" What't a Schtm? The "schgrnt' which are constantly being discovered la the Farmers' Alli ance by those opposed to that organiza tion, do not tmm to ret&ra tne tpreaa of the Alliance much. Perhaps they exist only in the minds of their discoverers. If the Kansas Alliance sprang into be ing at a tirue when the ttate raised the biggest crop in its entire history, it is abourd to talk about iu going into a decline now that we are having such magnificent crops. It is not a question of crops with the Alliance, but oi pluto cracy. -Champion. The people will soon find out who the true patriot are in this country. The people are all to be tried at wa the case in 1)1, and those found wanting by wordi, acts or deeds, wilt ve cast aside with the black abeep. History of 11 will be repeated. Ihe people will be the Judge. Madison neporter. Judas betrayed the Savior with a kiss Please remember this when a late con vert asks vou to support him because be is your dear friend, "joa know." Bead thlt "Shave Peffer't whiskers off, and put sock on Jerry Simpson and the vitality of the Alliance move meat in Kansas will have been greatly crippled." w mr Aud then reat1 mis "air. v an iiou ton. the republican nominee for lieu tenant governor in low is iony years of age, a farmer, a soldier and a mem ber oi the rarmers' Alliance; oeing ai piesent time a district organizer of that order. He will "get there." Doth are clippings from the came page of the SUte Journal. Alma Reporter. Candidate tor office are now getting their pedigreet in shape. If any there be who have never lived upon a farm, or whose parents, grandparents, sinters, cousins, aunts, or wife't relativet have not lived oa a farm, they are nopeiensiy lost Ro far at ottice it concerned. The Leader. Plutocracy in thlt conntry 1 far in advance of plutocracy la old Europe. London hat U00 millionaire!, Paris 600, Berlin SOU, Vienna 100, while New York bat over 1,000. fcx. The Alliance people at Minden are making preparation for a 14,000 eleva tor. Welcome Mr. Tanner, not the hungry Dr. Tanner, but J. W. Tanner, editor of the Fullerton Pott, a democrat of tb Jeflersouian ttripe. This leaves Nance county without a deaio lljjd papvr. The bisii of representation of the democrat for delegate to the ttate con vention U on their candidate for secre tary of state, while th bail for the republican cmwi it ou the vote for at torney guert. VYny not bate it on the bead of the ticket. It it polule thatbola are aviamed ot thsir candi dates for that oill.s Utl (all. If there I nothing elta f r Fullerton to be thankful for hy uot r. jolie that that hit ha uo bat ball club. Fuller ton Pott On sensible bit. At tht train with Van Aiu'iurgh' ctr YOU MONEY TO BUY FROM US. Irov i j. " a-" ' - "' ' a,". "k a a jr. J7-7 " THE CAPITAL MOWER. 0 000l00000000 I I I I I I I No better Mower or Hay Rake in use than the above. Both are warranted to be well made of good material, and capable of doing as good work as any other Mower or rake la the world. Writ u for particulars. u J u u it l a OOUOOOOO Ptv 1 cr-D TV THE UNION RAKE. WESTERN MANUFACTURING COMPANY, LINCOLN, NEB. IMPOKTEHOF SHIRE AND HACKNEY HORSES THE LARGEST IMPORTER IN THE WEST. Stock Companies can Purchase Horses Absolutely on tneir own time. Ever horse imported registered, and guaranteed a sure foal getter. I buy the best and do not handle culls. Nor do I have a partner to sit in the corner and grin and take half the pretits. I give my customers the benefit of small profits and first clas stock. THE BEST CLASS BUYERS BUY FROM MY ESTABLISHMENT. No horses peddled. Dont run a lottery, nor drop a nickel in the slot and see what you get business. Horses of fine style, action, bone and pedigree for sale. Can uu see me, vutuois welcome. 4.'tl v. v. nwato, importer, Lancoin, jieorasKa. A Model School. A representative of Trie Far mm' Atxi akcs called to visit Katbburns Butlnesi Col lege last week and through tbe courtesy of tbe proprietors wa tbo a through the en tire Intiltute. Tbe theory department when thtttudent first entei. preptret them for the practical drill wbicb the? receive In tblt college. Tb ttudentt are m mucb InterettPd In banklcf . Inturanoe, wholesaling and re talllDg at though thrjr were In butloett for tbemtelve. Sludtntt attending lh't Insti tute are certain to be well prepared to enter tbe su.lnctt wor'.d. abort band writing It taught In Ih Kott practical manner, gee their adrerUarraent la tblt ittue. It An Old Soldier Bida Farewell to 8oup And Hath. Mr. r. P, McMIUon, of Frontier county, aa o!4 soldier whoa a getila vary tain and poor la cocsnieetice of bit levib. It t bad teea unsUi to tat anything but tpooa victu als ai.d httb for several year, After ei ktiiltio lbs dental ttlll of lb it k cants attSet la Dr. Ilurrut sod fttt a llu st f leetk that hee,uld est lik.iad wtM home 8U)ert ouBgr. ttf Appointmtnr of 8tt Lecture. ltro.u. Hull, "lot lecturer sends But of Ik tolioeln appoiatiawNtk U lrs of i iVUOlg tUttutm arv utiw w ,rsy air cus ot botrd wa C0vlu( into tiordon, isouaty itwMiag W eorrvtpoad itk Usm Nb OB Suu'lajr Ut. (ior 8 Nw., . All weiaiwr akea4 a. M4UtrJ lo& ou of Ui brkeiuu, hl hi bal-tbpfM,ot am from Ih lup of Hi r and fM nuchw Cc4ir it't tea lb lrit rtrtaav lb pn mwiiix gr votda t d rr r,' ru 'if jut gurus AuguM I . " , " t. t it. W ami ailled hm -ivota ;. j Hrt AllitaM Ko. UI9 U B itutd looklB AKBtiuaa hs lutl4 a etw.iTiam Ibrt hors cUlvaU.hr horse! iatrMis will aoMr m a e 4 e ataa pi taorowtof Cora all kieuia ll im4 la t ui .Bt, ThcWwnohtvtSiNiBitWolitty ejUl O. IU'U-r.a90d. sb, i.V I fits '" 11 1 " o a Br... .sv .v lMk iwwtV g3j g m $u For Sal. Improved farm of 160 ncret ml let eatt of Trumbull, being 8. W. Sec. t, T. 8, B. 8, Clay Co. Titlt good, no enoumberaocet. For partloalars apply tn or addrrtt. 4-4 ui Fred It. IUndaix, Trumbull, Neb. Strictly in it. At Daker's clothing houte IliS O Street, tiea't, joutnt' and boyt' suit will in told re gardlea of eott for the next tea dayt. Mr. Baker It the authority for tbe ttatement tha, t bey can't "oor hlra with tbelr CIS tuitt; nor, with their 1 10 blllt." Call aud look over bit Immense stock. Low prloet aad square dealing It bit motto. DAIRY FARM for tale or rent. My well Improved farm ad Joining KuthvlUe: and In connection with It ntlikand Ice butt net, alon worth II i a eor. Will U cheap and oaea terms. For partioiltr aidres W. J. Lhvitt. HI llutbvlUe, Neb. Sheriff Sat. Niitlrn It bnrshv ivn, that b vlrtuof an nuloroi allMu4 by tbsClsr of is fii. I rut enuriof thnstcoed Ji iliriti iHsttkt t-f hslirsskt, wllhin and tor l.aneiirr touiitr. In an ' t nn wherein A, H. WrlrkC im.siir IspiSiuuSand llllitt.Tiirnr, t. L llraou su l'orn K. fUgciow ipsitrrr at llrsis a lllylo, far T. Vsiu'o. Ml I. Trailer, liilsu, J. ink"f. Jnha (ntkS'B, lislrq llroihrrs. T. t. TlmiU'HU. C. N. In. ta and Joks Furbergor r iUIiiJiiu, a 1. 1 t n k p. mi , f Iks ! dar "I rp.tui A. t. 11, tke kaat il.r ot lbs ar H.ui intiisi tl) f Unel. Umwlt,' tnuiur. H.,a affsr lr u,.t si puliiie timlm Ik fo.iaatu varl" rsai ', In-mii U MiiwWsn In tUw i,kfvi lo Mt4l . al'tais s(i.mlnlsril) ( l,ioi. i,nia.f ' r ) 'k. , m usiff lay !, KMin.r" ' Jty, A it t. III M..,A'L4 beriff. Hnn.T. J. iHt I 'd to hv refused , thr fiumloailoa fur eotinty eleik. Itch4 will U cheap thU fall a ( K crop m iwpty tuttiiva, Tbe Stenger Benevolent association of Columbus, which was presented with (10, iXK) iu notes four ynars ago by Martin 5tnger, for the relief of indigent farmers, iias commenced suit against Caroline Btenger for $1,200 Interest due and not 11 DEALERS IN Dry Goods. Carpets, lotte, Shoes, Croceries, Etc. DEPARTMENT STORE ;Larget Stock tn the City. Country Produe (buttrr and );) taken Iu etchanK for luirvuaud. Our store is liej.l.iiarir for 'u Urmortof l.4uuitr County. Jjvf Cmr loth and f Strvett, V. i