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About The Independence west side. (Independence, Or.) 18??-1891 | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1892)
THE WEST SIDE. I A, I. ICU, EDITOR. West Side Publishing Company SUBSCRIPTION RATES. CtAM. IN AtVAMl'. Oii Ymr IMx Miutta Ttirv Mvwitba. l.W All murrlnffo ami 1WI1 noli.- mil mcmxV 1m n IHuw till tm ttim-rimi m. A n v intra will ! -lmrv-,t Hv mM Hf lln. obmmry mkiluikuit will Ik i'liria Kr m lit rt of tlv ivma iM Im. M Ipm lt (ntimnunliNilnftir imHIlpnttim In Twa Wckt tua. il mitlto all rmHinm IwyaAtl u Ui 1I Cvmnlf l'vil.Utuu Own. py. m Roclalonmt M th WaUXIW In 1iIowb FRIDAY, JULY 22, DWi DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For rnwldoiit, tUtOVKR CLF.VKLAND. Of Now York. For Vice PwaMont, A. F. STKVKNSON, 0( lUinoh. Thkkk is sonu'thinjt iu a muiu ' Weaver ami Field areaumpwllve of labor. IuXATIOJ lHNNV:i.l.V tiiui been uoiutuated for governor of Mitme sota by the People party. Tuk oflU'ial minority of Geo. K Chamberlain over Judge Wehtrter for attorney -general of Oregon is I'M TiiR Kansas Probilitiouista have decided to make an out and out fight against the three political parties, TllK OirwH .VAool Journal has been purchased by I. O. Kuotte, ami will be hereafter published at rorthuul. Thk political complexion of the next Oregon state legislature will be as follows: Senate, Kepublicaiui 18, Democrats VI. House, Kepub Ucaua&i, lVnioemts24. Sixty editors were recently in a smash-up on theC. IU & Q. railroad and not one of them was hurt. It is said that each one of them turned and struck ou his cheek. Mr. Gladstone dotes on tea, but wants it made by his wife. Mrs. Gladstone, of course, is a good cook. Did any man whoso wife was a poor cook ever become great! Ji'fHiE a town by the appearance of its newspapers, and you will not miss it far. Look in the adver tising columns and you will sec the bmiiiuts luen represented every time. The difference betweeu a revenue tariff and a protective tariff is thus: A revenue tariff is a tax collected from consumers for the sii'roit r ok the uoveknmext only; a protect ive tariff is a tax collected from the consumer for the support and en richment of private individuals. It is announced that YVhitelaw Ileid will take no part in the cam paign. It is well; he does not ueed to; the workiugnien of this country will attend to the campaign with out Mr. lipid's help; aud we haven't heard of one yet who will vote for him. A workinginan who doe, votes to cut his own throat. Ma. Kicumunu was a prominent man and a member of the state board of agriculture, having but recently been reappointed by Gov ernor Fennoyer. He was a pioneer of Oregon. Mr. Richmond was brother in law of J. II. Whitley, of Salem. He leave an estate valued at from flO.OOO to $10,000. jt was only a lew months ago that Andrew Carnegie was on this coast, explaining to the newspapers the benefita of the protective-tariff system. Especially did he explain how beneficial it wan in keeping up the wages f workingnien. Now he has wade a sweeping reduction in his wage schedule, and hired Piukerton assassins to shoot down his employes striking for compen sation that is sufficient to supply the necessaries of life. I his is surely a tariff object lson. Rei'Uiu.ican papers of the rad ical stripe speak derisively of Dem ocratic and Peoples party papers which "hold the mirror" up to Nature, as'"caIaiiiityjhowlc,rs." J5ut the InUr- Onmn, a Republican pa per of the conservative sort, has the hardihood tostate: "There are 3, 000 people in Chicago on the verge of starvation; men, women, and babies, old age and helpless childhood. They want money, and a scheme that does not offer this necessity is unjust. Save them from the loan Bhark and the pawn broker." THK "FROTRVTElf SHKBK the word and gifts of charity, and Iu liia latest report Undo Jens- then God and men will blew you miaU liusk has much to nay of mush rooms and toadstools; and be la quite eloquent over the auljeet of making it raiu by shooting off the surplus; but of the number of abeep wo have iu the country, and the price of wool uuder the McKinley bill, his silence la discreet and deep. Aa Uncle Rusk la no more inclined to talk about sheep than McKinley we are obliged to go back to the re porta of his predecessor for infor mation of the deadly effccU of lie publicanism ou sheep iu Ohio and Iowa, liy examining th atntisUca of the Department of Agriculture from the administration of Andrew Joliusou until the year of llarrl son's election, we And that uuder Johnson, iu LStl, Ohio hud 7,1511, K sheep, while iu 188S it had ouly 4,0GWd. lu 18tS7 Iowa bad 2,3!HM-J.n; iu 1SSS 540,700, these t wenty one year of high-tariff taxation on wool and woolens, Ohio lost o;3,6a sheep, aud Iowa lost 1,N?.?H. Uncle Kusk withholds the flguctvs of lossa under the Har rlsou admiulstnttiou and the McKinley bill, but as the price of Ohio wool has been lowered by the increased use of cottou aud ahoddy no one will bo likely to conclude that the nntnber of Ohio aheep Increasing uuder the bill. In 18A9, uuder what the Republican call '"Democratic free trade," medium Amerkau wool sold for 59 oeutu while receutly, under the McKinley bill, Iloctton prices were 2tt oenta for Ohio X, 30 to 31 rents for X X and above. This shows what the aubeti tute of very coarse wools and cotton aud shoddy uuder high taxes does for wool prices. Aa the tariff baa Wh'u made lighter and higher, the number of sheep lu Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, and. other state, has steadily decreased, while the peo ple of these states pay for imitation woolen garments of coarse wools mixed with shoddy, a higher price than they would have to nay for tlie Ut all-wool goods uuder Democratic tariff. Let the voters of Oregon ponder over these facts, consult all statistics for half a ecu tury, and they wilt Hud that wool has always brought a better price under a low tariff. Where should a latmrer'a future lie fairest and bo most speedily en Joyedt IH us nnhwltatlngly au-awer-iu fiwHlont'a laud, America. Jil.AlXK'S j.wo. Ciiaki.eh Fha sew Ada mh, though inclined to be a Republican gener ally, tells in the July Forum why he will vote next fall for Mr. Cleveland. There are men in the country whose opinion might be more valuable, but the reasons he gives are mostly sound and strong ones. Briefly summarized, he will leave the Re publican party because he is alarmed at the extravagance, the protection extended monopolist), and the loot ing of the treasury to pay unworthy and sometimes fraudulent pension claims. He is sick of it all, and he wants an honest man with an hon est policy. The Republican party, iu convcu tiou at Minneapolis, after notntuut tug the strongest man they had for president, committed political sui cide by nominating the weakest man they could fiud tor vice presi dent. YVhitcluw Reid stands to day with a record as a persistent enemy of organised lubor. He is aristocratic and uu-Americau in his ideas. Iu the cauitMtiirn of Illaine vs. Cleveland he pretended to be a warm friend and supporter of lilaine, but he would not do one thing necmsary to liluiuo's election, uamely, to unionize his newspaper, the New York Tribune. Now this enemy of united labor, this false friend, IHaino's logo if not his lirutus, comes before the working men of this country asking for suffrage. No, Mr. Iteid, you may have purchased a committee of'HIg 0" of New York, but all ol the I). O. Mills millions cannot save you from the thunderbolt of negation which will be hurled at your head by united labor in November next. I'urtland World LABOR AS A COMMODITY. The "labor market" in which the laborer is treated as a mere com modity,Kubject wholly to the laws of supply and demand, should not be tolerated. The man's labor is his life; the price of his labor should not be loss than the cost of his living, as a man should live. To great depths of degradation has the greed of gain reduced the laborer. Specious words are spo ken to hide away hideous crimes against humanity. "Freedom of contract," "freedom of competi tion," may, una otten uo, mean direct slavery for tho lalwrer. There is no freedom of contrat: when the alternatives are to work for a nominal wage or to be hungry aud listen to the cries of famishing children. There is no freedom of contract for the pale-faced irirl of tho "Hong of the Shirt," This is the result of the uncontrolled labor market. The employer, intent on gain, seeks the cheapest offer of labor. He invites competition among laborers mat Uie otter be still ' lower. Foreign labor is brought in to cheapen the home article. Women are substituted for men without regard to health or maidenly modesty. And chil dren are cheaper yet than women, and they are drafted into the dark ness of mines and the fetid air of factoriits when their little forms should be basking in the sunshine or beneath the smiles of a mother's love. Give tho laborer his righto. Let him work; let him receive for his lubor a fair wage. Allow him the opportunity to which as God's creature he iu entitled, to be a man, free and self-supporting. First give him justice, and then when misery comes unprovoked by social conditions, where sorrow falls upon him whether from misfor- I tune or frailty, approach bim with MMOVRAVY IS im AND MX The following was a plank iu the Democratic platform of LSG7, and it ia good Dcmoerutlo doctrine to dayt "We denounce the present tariff levied on nearly 4,000 articles as a masterpiece of Injust ice, inequality, aud false pretense, which yields dwindling and not a yearly rlslug revenue,' has impoverished many Industrie to suhsidUo a few; it pro hibits imports Uiat might purchase the products of American labor; it has degraded American commerce from the first to an Inferior rank upon the high seas; it has cut down the values of American manufac tures at home and abroad; it has depleted the returns of American agriculture, an industry followed by half our people; it costs the people live times wore thau it pro duce to the treasury, obstruct the process of produet lou aud wastes the fruits of labor; it promotes smuggling, enriches dishonest offi cials aud bankrupt houest mer chants. We demand that all cus tomhouse taxation ahall be ouly for revenue," Camji are coming lu at a great rate for "Protection or Free Tradef" Bend in your orders, gentlemen. When the present stock is ex hausted, as it soon will be, we will get plenty more. A two-cent stamp ia a very small price to pay for a book that is reeognited as the only complete work ou the tariff ques tion ever issued. Bend for a copy, aud when you receive a large envelope with the legend: "Public Document. House of Representa tives, U. 8. Part of Cong. Record. Free," on the upper left hand cor ner, and "Tom L, Johnson, M. CI," ou the upper right hand comer, remember that it is the hook the Wkht Sidk Coin puny sent you. Bomkiiouy has suggested that the government should make it its business to (MM-ure good w ages, and at once the Oiyjonmis is up in arms and says, "Whnt about loc!'' Well, If Mr. frkxitt would remember what he writes for almut fifteen minutes he would fiud that he has said (and, strangely enough, told the truth,) time after time that the government is and has been looking after the losses for mure than a hundred years. The last effort to protect manufacturers against loss amounts on an average to sixty per ceut of the value of the article. 111 i Wk are by no means responsible for the views enunciated by our many corresoudeut. They hold many opinions to which we do not subscribe; yet we thoroughly lie lieve In a free press as well as free trade, and all persons have a right to be heard, uuder the usual rc strict Ions of avoiding pcraoilhli ties. TIioWkktSiok has always been, under the present manage ment, free to all parties for the dia cussion of the great questions of the day. Write your sentiments and send them iu. Jl isiK T. A. MclluiDK, the new ly elected circuit judge, is holding an auiournod term of court at Hills- boro. He is teachiug some of the itnesscs a wholesome lesson. One man came to the stand the worse for liquor, whereupon the Judge fined bim ten dollars and ten days In the county jail. lltluboro Demo crat, Judge Mc Bride is badly needed in the Second Judicial district, if onr otiservatlon of drunken attor neys and drunken witnesses are not at fault, and of a recent date. t j Hon Fokd killed Jesse James, and Edward O'Kelley killed Hob Ford, and on the 12th, at Lake City, the late O'Kelley was sentenced for life to the Colorado penitentiary. Kashas has ten votes tor presi dent, and four year ttgo Harrison's majority was almost H'AOtHi. Two year, ago, however, the I'wiples party not only cut this "beastly , Tun Htatk Flow in. -Tim Mule (HHihl of ImriitiilliHii ini't si JtiMul River recently, mid ilui liig tlieiuieilMK Urn Oregon gnqie, Imllitt'inillii in our Valley liin.ln, wi M'lecled fur the dlule flower. Tilers are I wo ihcIih, lliht,-i uvu majority," as it is laceiiousiy w,uifutium sml Mwnmwi, Th termini, down to nothing, but flower l very miihII m) grow In ileime auowed it under by 10,000 or 15,000 votes. And this Uie People party did without help from the Demo crats, tor Uie latter had a full ticket in the field aud polled their usual vote. This year, however, the Re puhlioana have uo earthly show to witt in Kansas, for the Democrat have Indorsed the Peoples ticket, which will lose the state to the Re publicans by from 50,000 to 75,000 vote. 8o you cau count ten vote loss thau you thought for Mr. liar rlsou next Novemler. Arwmxof Mr. Itlulne, a Mrs, Cynthia Smith, has ts-eii summarily and unceremoniously dismissed from one of the departments, al though she filled the position comi tently aud creditably. Theltlaluea are all gone, or going, out6f official life. The Harrisons will go next I"-Ig. IT has bceu pointed out that only two lueu iu American history were nominated three time for the presi dency by Uie Democracy -Andrew Jackson and G rover Cleveland, An drew Jacksou was elected twice, and we believe that will be Uie fate of Urover Cleveland. ' '- ! 'I ,! A LOCAL high-tax organ admitted on Buuday that the tariff does not affect Wheat. Tomorrow it will probably point with prido to the "protection" afforded the farmer by Uie tariff on wheat.' TllK must Haltering criUcism of Cleveland ever primed was that "For four years he saihnl the ship of state on a summer sea." Would to Heaven we were ou that summer sea now. ' ' Ayer's Sarsaparilla SUinlrt nt tho lu ud of all iihh hiihI. h im-. This Hitoii it iHtin4 by its Iniriniiie im ril, upttiliiH If tiie opinion of trading .h)slclitnn, will by the cert ideate of tlimiMinla who liuvtt niccesnfully tmlcd Its remedial worth. No oilier iudldue to effect ii ally CURES ruluU, ML, Uiri'lc. ikvuiimliuH, Unit, una ll iilhrr tiUwU diiMM. " TtHr mh ho no qurttton M la tlx u rt.Hlly ml Ayxfn Mdruiwilll war ill aUwr bloud puilllst. 1( tltl i Di Oie rmm, U 4auuU lur It, liula of liKtm.iin jruly, Wtwlil h4 txiw kHi( u, lAo ta ftuuy Uwr bluwt MKHllrim-t I rmiltl titmr." CtiarlMlnam, Uvu, "To J e 1 .- trouklril wall Mil rliMi. Il tru all oi-r mr My, iul hall) lui Uw itxctnn did l- f we im ol m y (OIL Al Lut I timk four lullk , f Afrt'l SuuparllU. ih w:m ruoliilrl)r ruiril, I nil itwrrrlf r'-rt'iiiitwml II u a niktnli4 tilJ-uflllr."-J, S. i-utl, Vpr Knulcli, w lliuiunu k, "Hf lilt'-r iu kStlrlnl IIU ( tenn tdi. ul SCROFULA Oul doctor rtSMimnwixIml Kjrt't SurMullla u Mitf Out Ixwt hlund IUmhI purlflM llhln hl atpvrtoiKMO. V v CM o tirf llilt nmllrliHi, aul runiiliie tun llm rt-.ull." W ia. O, Joukiiu, wm,, Nvb. " WIm-ii ft Ixiy 1 Wit Irmil.lr,! Willi a whkh nuuit(iali4 llwll lu un Ui t- Alfor'l Snniiiu,ll Iwliif rwtmt nvtMlrit, I Uwk number f bolllvt, una u eurwL 1 bat nor Ultra Umt tinw hail ft rtwurrrnr of lb ttmiplalnl." J, C. TtoBiptun, Lowell, Mum. " I M eurwl at rVrofuU by llio ux of Aynrn Srlll. "-Ji.hu C. Iwrry, DolJ, Ma. Ayer's Sarsaparilla rairtiiii r Dr. J. C AYER & CO., Lowell, Mm. Bald by til DniftUu. IMm l; an bouiM,t. CUCCNE. Neil H'Mlon tMitfint on M iuiliiv. Ibrv mill ony oi p'iinnut)er, jsr.', Tuition free. four eon nana; olniwipnl, m-ionliflo. lit ernry, una sliorl r,Uillnii inmrnn, in wlnoli lliere in iki Lntiu, Oreck, Fri'm-li iiordnriimn. Tlio Knlinii Is pre-rmi oeouyaiiiMiDeMifloiini. l or CHliilouin-i or ainar inroruiniion, sihlrttut, J. W. Joiinbos, I'rmiiiliHit. cluiileni, Tim berry, llm tlttl iiKUlvtltl rtuc ft'Htiireof tint plitnt, ii wNxy Klohule stsiut tlm nix suit alnix of A Iwrry,, sud generslly of s dull blue color. The fnllsK, however, Is very lirweeful, swiiinra very tirllUmit imlorn, varying in Inleimily nt ilWt'eiviit H-rl-tsl of the year, iind enti lw iiat'd for tlmtrtlv iur..wn wlili llmwt elfM. Tli liii Itw lf la very low, not more Umu fiv or alx Iim Iii-m In hi'liilit, rnol alsiiK the tlili kiima of u ii onlliiary fi-nH noll, The long, narrow l.'nn-, rom- IxaMMl iif ai-vuml pniln of lirlnlit Kh-i-ll iesllels, with till mid luriiilind limili t, Inliceohito hi ouliliii,of w ti-Miirr tlilck, tollKh. Mini li'itllii-rv, ni Ih'm1 ul. oik their li;v hy iiillneroiift lmi i Inoiia ivriMiwa, HW ii.hhmm iihwI (imri-fullv IU full II kn inuiiiirr, nihI the tM iillly if ilieir form and iln-lr iiliiwitig HrmiiMn. nieut never full lu illicit III" WnriiHl siliiilrsilou. Peculiar la r-wMiKitliHi, fMHrU W"l l'l"MH el ..,M.,iMii"( ii.hi' siMfMin t"'"""" lli lull l utollva- Yuli 'l 'l" iMiii.nillltaW'i'iil", iwullar In alrtihttili i"l .My - II 4ra,.. .tllU I Mi wily i'lklM. ul I whleb cm tily tm .iid, "e "." oih-r tnmiirinra rtin l"!r aotm, mi da In iim1 h gix"! rauli at 1 lluml'a Hramirlll I'puiillar In IU mwtitlnal mull. H'' S.ir.rill ftpwHHtilialiM i-nraa bliliw m Ml kiMiwii, and M ia won lli 0H "I " Tli tb al lilixNl iuMllr r dlaeoieiwl." fwullar Is ll "IH-'J ' M hamJ. tlmre U lii'ite t UV H(t"l " l liwvll, wb- II 1 ''. ' "' " w1'' iiii..,(i mihii.-i. I'w-mur In II' I'Mn-mnntil rrroid f ii, .i.I, mi itll"f -r.srntt l bi aliaaww tm h uiaiiiy la tbort lai " I i'peullur U llavlf. IVculiir Hi llm ormllity mul rlt-ftn Hi-wuf ll txlvxrtlnluiC. IU wirlbula i li,ually bolus "i d by Silll'. ivculur In lli wy a tftil. .-, b"UI '" "" Hood's Sarsaparilla UI fey 4iiil.W. t.Ur. rr.-M.l Uy U I. HOOK CO , Ai Iiik-ww, " Dosor Ono Dollar IOO THE REMEMBER ITE HOUSE Mill From to-day until August 10 we will give everybody a chance to wear "trood clothes" and "fine dresses." to make order stock. I must do tins in room for my fall A genuine Don't delay this time, for you don't get such bargains very often. Kvcry article reduced ri'-ht down. GALE 1 THE WHITE HOUSE ZED KOSKNDORF. Is your Watch Non-magnetic ? fun iiSESTrI m mmm Parllls the BLOOD, Cares CONSTIPATION, INIMfJKSTION, BILIOUSNItSS, LITER COM PLAINTS, NICK HEADACHE, COLDS, PIKI'LES, all SKIN AFFECTIONS, and DISEASES AKISIUfrom a DISORDERED STOMACH. Tht Qtnuin HAMBURG TEA it put up in YELLOW WRAPPERS wUh FaotimxU Siaualurt of EMIL FRESE. MDINOTON OO. SotNTft, San ruAMMoa 4H.D BY Alt, DHIWillTW SUP WfttorKIt. If you want Paper or Picture Frames Furniture, Bedding QO TO W. O. COOK He has the best and most complete stock his side of Portland, and will always treat you right. Wall paper trimmed free of charge. V O'DOKLU I Are hcad-quartcra in Polk County for paB ui m w m, dins, ui wm Barbed lire, Hardware, Stoves, and Tinware. Buckeye Pomps. Bain Vagdns, the Oliver Chilled and Steel Plows, d Km; Ms Kb id Ssfa LOOKING AFTER THE DOLLARS. Il l. all rltfhl lu Un AH I K ti drrtlam. bul If f willjf lr.ir.K of Mlt( Utn. fou will rarrt iM ft liUi lumilil ud lu fuut School Booh, Tablets, Inks, and School Supplies. SEWING MACHINES. ORGANS. 1KB PIANOS, ft..n. W. II. tt'llT. Ii ii-t no .n..lu-i to uU ll.ol If i"-k fU-r li duUan now, Ibrjr til louk n f uw Un you wml U.'ir il. CONFECTIONERY AND TROPICAL FRUITS. W. H. WHEELER, Independence, 0. Ml til Tin' bImiVC liloVl'llii-lltH lirtvc lion limcai-lic I'M-iiJivlm-liI), Itml mmliiill I'AII.LAUn'H J'ATKNT NXM AUNKl'lt' lOMl'ICXSATIDN ItALANCK ami II AIliSi'KIMi, Tlu-v ,tiHd- ull iln tui'iitnuf hlii-l fining watclum, lih tin- AMMTIONAI, AiV AN TAliK r k-inj: tliorounlily NOX-M AUM-;TI! ami M IN-DX YIU.AULR Diam 000 Swings $10 and upwards. PATTER BROS., CALL Independence, Or. Tour attention to our line of clothing, which has been greatly reduced by our IS per cent reduction sale, but we are still able to satisfy our cus tomers in this line, as well as in Suner Dress Goods, White Goods, Ginghams, Parasols, Underwear, Hosiery, etc., etc. The On it iff raa MOITMOUTI-I, OK, i jy "i t Im t mllilafcf BOARD OF REGENTS! lionjitmiii Sclidllflil, Tnii'l(tit; J, I). V. liiillur, .S'oi'i'tiii.v. V.x ollltmi: tlm Ex rnlliiuy (lovtrnor Mylvonter 1 Viiuoyor: linn. I II. IMol'.lroy, Hiiiniitpnil.Mil of fulilic IiiHlriiolioni Hnu. (1, V. Mcliritlu, ncnrt'iiiry or mhio: lion, .lacol) ViMirliciw, Hun. A, Nultmr, ,T. V. Wlnti-, Hon. V, It Holnii's, AKri'd Ln"y, Jloti. 1. W. lUloy, linn. ,T. J. J ,iy. Tlm Nhito Noi-iniil in iv live Mionl. ran- lilly Krnwititf, ninl (iinrimiiilly mliliiiR to it" f.Kiilillim for llm Npoohil Iminiiitf of ii'iiinioii. iih Krmiiinti un. in ilciimml to llll Hooil poHitioiiK. A emu of niijlily ir cnit m iilloiiilaiH'i' wiix miulu iiwt voir An tuirnllniont of WKI lx iintii'iimlc(f for Ihi' iinxl yiuir. Ni'W miMiilx-in lnivobtwn milled to tlm fiionlty, uiul mlilitionnl iiiuniiim Iiiih liti'ii Hnpiuil, The Leading Normal School of the Northwest. A diploma from tho milioul Biitilkw oim to timoh in nny ouiinty in Ibo Btnte witb- oiir, iiimit'r cxnminiiuon. Normul, Normiil Advnncoi), JIiihiiiohm. Miihio. uml Art llnnnrl l,WMl.u. Km.,,!.,! ftilviuitiiL'im ill Vni'ill uml I nut riinirnt ill Mnxiu, A yenr nt ai-liool for Sl iil, '1 iiilion rmliiooil to S?ll -'J Noniml. nml ,"i Hnl.iu.mn.t portiirm of tun wmilm. iloiir.l nt Nurnml Dmitiu Hull, pr wtwk; furniMlicil looms, 1 pur week, Uonnl uml loilmn, privule fmiiilioN, Hf;l,ll) pur win k. llmtu tiful uml lii'iiltliful lociitiou. No tmloimu. I'm Ht Imni oiwim Sni.tnmlini. on i.'... ontiiloKiie Bildiiw P. J,, OAMl'JiKLL, A. 11.. I'rcHiilunt. OrJ. M. l'OWKLL, A.M., Vioo VroMiilout. soni n F. ANSTINE WALL rAPEU PICTURE FRAMES FURNITURE 0001)8 DELIVERED F1UCE8 1U0HT F. ANSTINE I lllive iu Rtook A nktn tinn nf nlmii K.,,1 .... ... i .... ' n uii pioturo fruuio tuouUliugB. (live me a onll.