IS ISSUED EVERT MONDAY
MORNING
i . H. UPTOM^ PuMlaher.
Terms —On« year, $3 00;
100; three month*, $1 00.
aix month*.
TXftXS FOR CLUBS:
Fire eopiea, one year, $13 7 5 ; Ten copies
•a* year, $25 00, add for any greater numbet
at $2 50 per annum.
Smbteription m*»t be pa id vtrietly in advance.
Ne w
G o o c ls — O lie a p
W O R D »» T H A T B U R N .
A True Prophet.
G O OD S.
O d a certain occasion Daniel W e b
ster, the great apostle o f the Constitn*
j .
I
H.
L E W
tion and the
I S
S prepared to exhibit an excellent and
carefully selected stock of
Dry Good*.
Groceries,
Hardware,
Cntlery
Clothing,
Nails,
BOOTS If SHOES,
And in fact everything in the line of
S T A F L B and F A N C Y
GOODS
usually kept in a retail Store will be found on
bands and for sale as CHEAP as the CHEAP*
EST.
3tf
N E W 0 0 0 1 ) 9 ! N E W GO O D S 1
have just received and now opened a new
and fresh stook o f Spring and Summer
GOODS all
I
G rades,
Kinds,
Styles,
aud Varieties.
Well adapted to this trade both as to price
and quality. To those desiring to purchase a
Spring supply, I will invite your attention, as
1 am determined to adapt the prices to suit the
pres, t H ard T ime *, aud I ask you before
purchasing to call at the
OLD B R IC K C O R K E R
And examine for yourselves.
P R IN TS at 1 24 cents per yard.
____
cio«<d quality lour-fourthsBK0W X CAB0TT
A SHEETING 16 cents-
COFFEE bi the sack 23 cents per pound,
retail 25 cents, and al/ other things in proper
tiou. Come aud
and he satisfied.
JIVO. € . B E L L .
J . E D A V I D * © .!,
D ,
P H Y S IC IA N & S U R G E O N .
IN D E P E N D E N C E - - - OREGON.
N E W
C O L f l i l B l A I V
H O T E L .
Main St.9 Corvallis, Oregon.
E.
S. A ltr e e ,
B
:
:
P r o p 'r .
oard and Dodging on reasonable
Meals at all hours.
terms.
J. K. LEBO,
RACTICAL
R I R R K R and
D K K 99EH .
H A IR
P I n d e p e d e n c c , O r e g o n .
M . C A N T E R B U R Y )
M . D .,
P H Y S IC IA N & S U R G E O N .
M
D IX IE , O REG O N ,
edical Examiner for Manhattan life In
surance Co. o f N. Y.
W O O L ! W O O L ! W O O L !!
n * f \ OOO
Pcunds o f WOOL wanted for
the California
market, at
MITC11EL A ROSENDORF'A, INDEPEND*
ENCE, who have the Agency for California,
will pay a higher Cash price for it, than any
other house in the county.
MITCHEL A R 0SE N D 0R F .
8m3
JONE» THE J E W E L E R ,
State Street, Salem, Oregon,
t the placa to go and get your watches,
clocks and jewelry repaired in good style.
1 warrant all iny work for one y ea r; if it
not right, 1 make it right.
RE ME MB E R
T H E SIIOP
IN THE POST OFFICE BU ILDIN G.
V. B. Fine watch«* repaiaed with the great
eat cara.
I
tf.
H r. W . D .J E F F R I E $.
P H Y S IC IA N . & SU R G E O N .
EOLA, OREGON.
Special attertion given to Obstetrics and
diseases of woman.
Drs,
M cC au H ey
ALEXANDER,
D E N T I S T S.
FFICE on State street, over GUI*' Book
Store, fie lam, Oregon.
All operations performed by as are warranted
to giro satisfaction.
&tr~ One of the firm may be fom d in onr
office from 8 o’clock a . m ., until 4 r. m ., of each
*•7-
8. D. McCAULEY,
l»ly
E. V. U . ALEXANDBR.
O
WATSON If GRIS WELL,
Architects and P ractical
HOUSE 0 ARPENTE& 8 ,
TN BPEN DEN CE
Uuion, speaking o f tho
Abolition party, said;
“ IP T H E IN F E R N A L F A N A T
ICS A N D A B O L IT IO N IS T S E V E R
G E T P O W E R IN T I I E I R H A N D S ,
T H E Y W IL L O V E R R ID E T H E
C O N ST IT U T IO N , S E T T H E S U
P R E M E C O U R T A T D E F IA N C E ,
C H A N G E A N D M A K E L A W S TO
S U IT T H E M S E L V E S , L A Y V IO
L E N T H A N D S ON T H O S E W H O
D IF F E R W IT H T H E M IN T H E IR
O P IN IO N S O R D A R E Q U ESTION
T H E IR I N F A L L IB IL IT Y ,
AND
F I N A L L Y B A N K R U PT THE
COUNTRY A N D DELUGE I T
W IT H B L O O D .”
That party did, by dint o f sheerest
jugglery, finally get into power, and
the result is before the couutry.
Take
heed, Patriots!
Grant, Jackson and Olay.
The Rock Island Argus says : “ It
is certainly not very respectful to the
memory o f Jackson and Clay to asso
ciate their names and memories with
the name o f Gen. Grant, but, by way
o f contrast, the apparent disrespect will,
no doubt, be excused
I d his letter
accepting the radical nomination for
President, Grant says :
“ I »hall have no policy o f my own to inter
fere against the people.”
U. S. G rant .
Now, i f you want to see the great
difl’oronce between this man and the
immortal Jackson, who was a statesman
as well as a soldier, read :
« I nay again, fellow citizen*, remember the
fate ol ancient Home, and vote Jor no candidate
who will not tell you with the frankness of an
independent freeman the principles upon
which, if elected, he will admiuistor your gov
eminent.”
*• That man deserves to be a slave who
wjuld vote for a mum candidate when his lib
erties arc at stake.
Annaxw J ackson .
Henry Clay was not, like Jackson, a
warrior, but he was, like Jackson, a
great statesman. Do you suppose lieu
ry Clay would vote lor Grant, if be
wore alive to d a y ? I f so, undeceive
yourself by reading the following:
*• If my suffrage is asked for the highest
eivil office o f my couutry, the candidate, how
ever illustrious and successful be may be, must
present some other title than laurels however
aloriounly gathered an the bluodiatained bat
tle-field.
H enht C lay .”
N ew S tate — S outhern C alifor
n i a .— The proposition to divide
the
State o f Califoruia is growing in favor
every day, end it is now only a question
of time when the division will be accom
plished. It is proposed to divide on
the southern line o f Monterey and Fres
no ctfuutics, and this would give two
States, each o f which would have an
area equal to the whole of New England.
Population is flowing rapidly into
Southern California, and in a few years
the preponderance will be in her favor.
The great distance to Sacramento and
to San Fraucisco, with the meager
means o f communication, particularly
isolates our people, and imposes a
grievious burden upon them. But a
few years will pass ere we have a branch,
at least, o f the Southern Pacific road,
tapping the main trunk at Point o f
Rocks, or some feasible point on the
is
Mojave river, and connecting with tho
ocean through the fertile valleys o f the
San Bernardino and Los Angeles.—
Los Angeles will be the conceded cap
ital o f Southern California. Publie
ineu will be called upon at an early day
to take ground upon this question,
though we do not expect any serious
opposition to the plan from any source.
Politically, the Pacific oast should
have her just weight in the 'U n ited
States Senate .— Los Angeles News.
B a s h f u l M e n . — Are there any ?—
Not among the rising generation of
“ Young America,” most sorely. Per
haps, such may exist in the fo rm ’ o f
some antiquarian or library-man, who,
when dragged from his lair, may be
covered with confusion, trying to make
a bow, or frame a compliment, after the
latest approved mode. Bnt let the
etiquette-lover meet such on hia own
“ hunting ground,” and it would be he
who would be the bashful man. W e
are inclined to the opinion, which will
no doubt, be comforting to the diffident
and blushing o f bo)h sexes, that bath-
fulness and brains are generally found
in company. Your self-confident per
son is generally the one who has the
least ballast.
OREGON.
Blank Mortgages at
TIT ILL take Contracts for Building Boases
f f of every dMeriptieu and kind, la town !
Office.
| M n aakp. SaSefaetsea gaeeanteed. h f j
NO. 20.
DALLAS, OREGON. MONDAY, AUGUST .3, 1868.
VOL. I.
the S iokal
Our Dead.
A ,people who forget the memory o f
their dead, deserve, themselves, to be
forgotten. Yes, they deserve to be
branded with the brand o f infamy
while living, and go down to their nar
row graves unwept, unhonored and un-
sung. There is not in roan's nature a
nobler sentiment than that whieh ch er
ishes and reveres the memory of the
dead, who die in a just and ri^»teoua
cause. T hough the iron hand or pow
er aud oppression may trample ou the
rights o f the living, and thereby re
strain public demonstration in commem
oration o f those who laid down their
lives for us, the sentiments of uuiver-
sal love and refined affection cannot be
torn from the privacy o f the family
circle and the recesses o f the heart.—
There, at least, these memories can be
held sacred and cherished till the dawn
o f a new era, in.whioh it shall not be
deemed treasonable to pay homage to
the names of the gallant dead, who
went down to death because they were
not afraid to defend their rights and
die in defense o f their native land.—
That day will surely dawn in which it
will be deemed an honor aud a duty by
the American people to participate in
ceremonies commemorative o f the
“ Lost C ause/’ and the martyrs who
marched so grandly and sublimely
through the valley o f death in its de-
fensé. It is ODly the good and true
who hold fast, to the faith that is born
o f virtue and valor when defeat and
disaster is upon them. Thu mean and
ignoble are cowards, and cowards are
not far removed from traitorá, having
no regard for God or couutry, but al.
ways ready to fall down, and fawn, and
cringe, and worship at the footstool of
Dower. Aud so it is, alas! that our
own bright, sunny land is sorely op.
pressed and afflicted by those who were
once the loudest lip-tongued braggarts
in her defense, who, forgetful o f the
past, and their own manhood, have ig
noininiously sold their birthright for a
mess o f pottage— insulting the memory
o f the dead, and ignoring the presenoe
o f the living.
Wrongs are sometimes neglected
even in our little world, and when
righted thoso instrumental in inflicting
them do not always escape that reward
which is theirs by the laws o f retribu-
tive justice.
Other nations and other people, in
other lands than ours, have passed un
der the rod. Broken.hearted, heavy,
burthened, foot-sore, and weary, they
traveled as we are traveling now, exiled,
as it were, in their own land; but in
their sufferings and sorrows they clung
to the past. J’ roud o f the history they
had made aud reverencing the memo
ries associated with it, and the men
who died fer it. they preserved their
honor aud their manhood*
By the hallowed associations o f the
past, and the hopes o f tho future,
which will surely bring with it a plo.
rious reward, let us never forget to hon
or the men, who, wearing the gray,
went down to death for us and posteri
ty .— Banner o f trie South.
Susan B. Anthony publishes a news
paper iu New York, called The Revo .
lulton , and here is what she say* about
our nice men in Cougress— the success
ors o f Webster, Clay and Douglas :
O fficial C orruption . — The charges
of bribery and corruption ho "led from
all quarters against Congress, the leg
islatures o f New Y ork,. Pennsylvania
and New Jersey, aud the cominou’
councils o f this city aud Philadelphia,
aud which everybody believes, and
which the implicated parties do not
even take the trouble to deny, prove
that political virtue in our country is
rapidly becoming an obsolete phrase.
Leading members o f Congress raise in
their places and charge each other with
venal practices that would make a bur
glar blu sh ; they write letters to the
public journals denouncing one another
for infamous crim es; they utter their
allegations iu their own hull uuder the
guise of “ personal explanations,” and
there in the presence of the people, they
place upon the enduring rcoords o f the
nation, speeches that would disgrace
the veriest dr&b&JbM ev<y cursed in a
fish market, the whole cheering on the
wranglers with shouts o f laughter, and
entertaining with the keenest zest the
final proposal o f the most vulgar o f the
disputants, that they adjourn and
“ take a drink ” at his expense. Gen
tlemen o f the House o f Representatives:
Yon do not expel such members from
your h a ll; but be it known to yon that
common decency spews them out o f its
mouth. Steal from the treasury i f you
must— your CQmtüjients expeot you to
do that— but they entreat you, iu your
official intercourse with each other, to
exhibit that honorable bearing whioh
proverbially prevails among thieve».
The Mixture of Races.
Grime.
Agassiz, io his lately published work
on Brazil, has the following on the
mixture of race* : “ Let any one who
doubts the evil o f this mixture o f races,
and is inclined, from a mistaken phi
lanthropy, to break down the barriers
between them, come to Brazil. He
cannot deny the deterioration conse*
quent upon ¡an amalgamation o f races
more widespread here than in any other
country in the world, and which is
rapidly effacing tho best qualities o f the
white inau, the negro, and the Indian,
leaving the mongrel monde^cript type,
deficient iu physical an^ mental energy.
At a time when the new social status
o f the negro is a subject o f vital im
portance in our statesmanship, we
should profit by the experience ot a
country whore, though slavery exists,
there is far more liberality towards the
free negro than he has ever enjoyed in
the United States. Let us learn a
double lesson ; open all the advantages
o f education to the negro, aud give him
every chauce o f success which culture
gives to the man who knows how to use
it ; but respect the laws o f nature, and
let all our dealings with the black man
tend to preserve, as far as possible, the
distinctness o f his national character
¡sties, and the integrity of onr own ”
W e scarcely take up an exchange
paper thfft does not contain one or more
accounts o f some tragedy having been
enacted— a murder, or rpbbbery; .an
incendiary fire, or elopement, o f ah at
tempted assassination— some one Of the
many crimes graven on the criminal
culeudar, all o f which is undeniable evi
dence o f the rapid increase o f crime in
our. Uiidst.
Ilow feai fully it strides
sending it« poisoned arrowa.»4nto
all classes and conditions o f society, fill
ing with its foiil pollution the very air
we breathe.
Is not this a fact to be deplored ?—
A fact that speaks very little in favor
of the rigid administration o f our laws.
Nay we fear, aud charge this rapid
growth o f crime, to the laxity with
which tho law is in a majority ofinstan*
ces meted out to the criminal. W e ad
mit, that io these day of money-makiDg
and political notority, it requires some
stamina for a jurist to faithfully and
impartially administer the laws— to
avoid offending the feeling and earning
the enmity o f those who in a measure
elevated him to power. But is he a
true man, aud honest administrator o f
the law, who will thus thwart its good
meaning by pandering to the desires of
its would.be.violaters ? W e think not.
For the obligation assumed by a jurist
should be sufficiently weighty to influ
ence him to a firm and faithful perform
ance of his duties. Yet do facts justify
us in the belief that this is always the
case ? W e are afraid not, i f history
records a true tale upon its pages, fur
do we not very often read o f some great
ariininal escaping the penalty o f the law
he violated, by means o f outside influ
ence brought to bear in his case. J u s
tice, we fear, is too often bought with
a price, and crime rewarded instead o f
punished. Let us draw a comparison.
A poor wretch, to save himself from
starvation, steals a loaf o f bread, or
something else of light value ; he is ar
rested, tried and committed perhaps to
an imprisonment iu some penitentiary;
having no friend, he is thus compelled
to yield to the decree o f fate, and shat
•ut from the world, his breath iV drawn
within the walls o f his narrow dwelling.
On the other hand, au embezzlement,
to a large amount is committed, or some
other overt act, whereby the law is
broken
But the criminal being in
possession of means, and capable of ob
taining influence, fails to receive the
reward he so justly merits. But is he
not as great a transgressor as his poorer
brother? W e think so. Both ar« vi
olators o f the law, and both should atone
tbereior,
It is this distinction iu
inctiug out justice, that has tended to
the growth o f crime, apparent to every
one, aud which blights the prospects o f
the thousands who are drawn into
its mesh38. Do we not see it in the
numerous gambling hells and dens o f
infamy that are constantly springing up
around us? and can we not read it in
plain and unmistakable language in the
ribald jests and blasphemous oaths o f
the bar-room loafer or the corner-loung
er? To such an extent has its influence
been fostered, that it has even been
urged as an excuse for a man not serv
ing upon a jury.
Verily, justice 18
blind.— Reading (P a .) Times.
A Rich Scene.
A correspondent gives tho following
description of the closing scenes o f the
North Carolina negro Convention :
“ Just prior to adjournment, a ‘ dele
gate ’ struck up 'J o h n Brown’s B ody,’
with great unction, liniug out the song
from a Freedmeu’s Bureau Missionary
hymn book. In joined the saints, up
rose the chorus. At first the negroes
in the gallery looked on in amazement,
but pretty soon they too began to sing,
and the uproar grew tremendous, * Old
John Brown ’ gave way to ‘ Hail Ool-
urubia,’ and that in turn to ‘ O ! say,
yallar-gall, oan’t ycr come out to-night/
and then all were swamped in the roar
ing o f 4 Ilog K y«,’ favorite negro corn-
shucking melody, which begius, ' Sal’s
in the garden siftin’ sand,’ and has for
its second line a rhyme too indecent
to repeat. Fired by this, the saints
j ined hinds all around, and executed
a war danee to chorus :
“ And a roPy, sholly bool,
A n ’ a hog eye.
And a roily, sholly bool,
A n ’ a hog eye,
For Sal’s in the garden siftin’ sand. Seed
“ And thus did the North Carolina
Congressional destruction ‘ Convention’
lisport itself in its closing hour.”
D eath W on ’ t S ave Y ou . — It has
O f all thè party platforms which we
have yet seen, there is none whieh so,
clearly and conclusively ' meets onr
view of the situation as that o f Frank
Blair, given by * Washington corres-
ndent o f the New York Herald o f
une 25 :
A ' j
General Frank Blair, o f Missouri,
is now in Washington; i m i is daily
visited b y friend» who desk »h is momum <
tion fbt the Presidency. ]*b<rmtih 'tn- *
fiuences are being exerted t o this end,
and his friend* profése, to-b e. papguine
o f succesé. His views o f bublie~policy
are expressed fréely,' an i are xx th e
most emphatic and pronounced charac
ter on the issues o f tho day. They are
given with the point, terseness and .vjm
of a positive and fearless nature, and
are the application of fried opinions’ to
the existing situation; The following
is their substances* derived from per
sonal conversation, and is entirely au
thentic :
« n sdT
General Blair* now as always, scouts'
the M etudLg iyiti*. Jtui ballot *
negroes. . The question o f negro suffrage
he regards as the cardinal issue in the
canva-s.' In his judgem ent inflexible
opposition to this radical duet rioe is
the chief issue on which'the Conserva*
tives must expect to triumph. He
holds that the Reconstruction A cts
establishing military despotism and
negro suffrage in the South are unoon
stitutional, noil and void, and that the
Democratic National Convention should.
so declare them, Just as the Supremo
Court would have d ded in the case
o f MeArdle had it
adj nested. The
laws o f Congress
nohieing person*
who were embrac in amnesty procla-
«nations or special
rdons, are illegal,
arbitrary and void
Test oaths for vo*
ters are unconstitutional; aud this is
why General Blair refused to take the
Missouri test oeth. His appeal to the
Supreme Court in that case onght to
have been decided at the last term, and
he regrets its postponement.
The R e
construction A cts establishing negro
suffrage and governments based thereon,
he holds to be usurpations, and declares
they have bo basis excepting by the
lawless violence and force o f the army,
and the Federal Government most with-,
draw this coercion, correct its own
wrong and leave it to the white popula.
tion o f each State to regulate the Ques
tion o f suffrage. The bastard nod
spurious governments set up at tfie
South have no right to control this
matter and must fall as soon ss the
military despotism is withdrawn, H r
asserts it is tho duty o f the incoming
President to see that jnstioe is done and
to restore the governments' which are
the creation o f the white population to
those to whom they belong: General
Blair is not willing to accept or ac-<
quiesce io anything done by the R ad
ical Congress on this subject o f recon
struction. He is for confining the
government of the country exclusively
to the white race. H o is very confi
dent of an overwhelming defeat to
radicalism if the issues o f the hour and
future are boldly made by^the NeW
York nominations and platfortn,'and
dead issues ignored. H e predictssuoh>
an uprising o f the people as has never
been seon in America, and says this
is felt by the Radicals.
been decided that dying won’ t save
A p p e a l in g for V o tes .— T b r can
man or woman from the payment o f
didates on radical ticket, «. iw appealing
raxes. Assessors are instructed that
to all classes o f our citizens for votes,
“ incomes o f persons who died after the
are both proscription ¡sis. Grant issued
31st o f December, are taxable, and
au insulting order expelling the Jewe
should be returned by executors, and
“ as a class ” from the Military Depart
also all iucomcs whieh accrued in 1807,
ment o f the Mississippi. Colfax roda
to persons who died within that year.
into Congress on the Know Nothing
Incomes accruing after disease should
ticket, in 1854 intermitted his smile
be returned by heirs.” Thus it is seeo
loug enough to take the solemn oath o f
that the insatiate tax-gatherer follows
that order, that he would never give
a man in his coffin ; aits at the portals
his “ vote or influence for aoy man, for
o f the tomb, plants himseif by the side
any office in the gift o f the people, un
o f the grave digger as he drops the
less he be an American born citizen,
clods upon the mortal remains, and after
nor
if be be a Roman Catholic.”
He
dogging the carriages o f the mourners,
T he E lectoral C ollege — The
stalks home like a spectre, and enters following table shows the number o f iook as a Know Nothing the further
upon his books the expected income Presidential electors to which each oath, that in any official position em
powering him to do sO, he would “ re
the Treasury is to dcrivo therefrom.— State is entitled :
move all foreigners, aliens, or RotnaU
W hat a blessing is a public d e b t!—
California
5 1 Nebraska
3 Catholics” within bis official reach, and
Connecticut
6 Nevada
S would “ in no case appoint such to sqj
T he G irl of the T imes — Accord Dataware
3 New llainshiro
5
1« New Jersey
ing to the latest authorities, the “ girl Illinois
7 office or place ” in his gift, . Smiling
Iu liana
13 New York
33 is Colfax’s forte, but he will hardly
o f the times ” is a creature who dyes I owà
8 Ohio
21 smile at his old record .—‘■Nett YbtTc
her hair; paiuts her face, flirts, dunces Kansas
3 Oregon
3
World.
j-
*
11 Pennsylvania
26
round dances, and is alw ays on the look Kentucky
out for a rich husband. She drink*
sherry coblers, takes her breakfast in
bad, governs her “ ma ” and “ pa,”
goes to all the balls and attends a fash
ionablc church on Sundays. She is in
more senses than one a “ dear creature/
as the happy man who secures her
virgin affeotions will find to his “ cost.”
Maine
7 Rhode Inland
4
Maryland
7 Tennessee
10
L o u i s i a n a .— The Legislature o f the
Michigan
• 8 Vermont
5
Minnesota
4 West Virginia
b ‘‘ reconstructed ” State o f Louisiana or
Massachusetts
12 Wisconsin
8 ganized a few days ago, and elected one*
-
Missouri
11
State* now represented
247 Sable, a negro, Speaker o f the H oto*. ;
statkh NOT RKHRICSEVr*».
AU the Democratic members Were ex
Alabama
8 Mississippi
,
7 pelled and their seats given to radicals,
Arkansas
6 1 North Carolmna
9
although the Democrats were declared
Florida
8 1 South Carotina
«
elected
by General Buchanan, com
Georgia
y ! Texas
6
Louisiana
I Virginia
10 mander o f that District. The election
T yler , the uegro preacher, convicted
o f rape, in Nevada county, Cal., has
States not represented
7n
been sentenced to five years imprison Total votes
817
159
ment in the State Prison, by Judge Necessary to a choice
In
case
Colorado
shall
be
admitted
Niles.,
prior to the eleetion, the aggregate num
ber o f electors will be increased to 320.
N o ta b le A ccession .— Onr tele
graphic dispatches announce the fact
T he Sacrement.) Reporter contains
that General Halieck has declared bis
intention to support Seymour and Blair. an account o f one of the largest and
This is a most notable accession. It most enthusiastic political meetings ev
ia significant of tbs feeling o f the army
er held on the Pacifio coast which was
towards Graat. “ Old Brains,” as the
soldiers delighted to call Halieck, will held by the Democracy o f California,
now come in for his pbare o f radical in Sacremenfo City, July 11, 1808.
abase. Unfortunate Halieck. Sensi* California is good for forty thousand
ble Halleek.— Sac. Reporter.
against Universal Suffrage Grant in
Blank Deeds at this Office.
Novembar.
o f the negro was but proper, for it
be safely set down that he up mere hon-,
est than the set o f carpet-bag bummers
who emigrated South for the sole pur
pose o f getting into position so that they
could plunder again an oTer>.plandared
people.— Solano (G el.} Sentinel.
K eep to t h e R ig h t — Tf people
would observe the rule iu walking to
always keep to the right, many side
walk collisions and much annoyance
would be avoided.
The S ig n a l goes everywhere and ia
read— advertisements and all.
Get your Blanks at the SiGNALOffiee.