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uaocrjMKA. L. BRISTOL, FAMILY GROCER if'Sr Stoplo and Fancy Gro- ri r aro' vHOtoDi08, 1,1- My New 'Stylo Mixed 1$ TEA' t.fferont Combination Prom nnv efore Offered in tho Market, uum excellent f lavor. dttakerHams WISCONSIN BUTTER, Swot asd Rich itral Hop Yeast Ac-ilnThla Summer. ;new SYLE P CHIMNEYS. SEE THEM ExGHT'STREET JA7T?9 ILL. UOAl 1 Coal TSBURGH, ? PARADISE, C ARBON(Bi g M u d d y) Vrlc -ami- Ve-T" - iar. i SlSYTONA CANNEL &d loz 1 "ft Jl,ydorB for Coal by the) car-load, it tr in noKinoaas, iorsrupmom, Mptly attended to. Wrn lamvA nnnaiimava'otiH all dufaoturors, wo are prepared nnnlv anv Quantity, .by tho nth or yoar, at uniform ratCB. . CAIEO CITY COALJJOMPAmr. llMllldir llro UolUce. No. TO Oh n Iv. hlluUiday llro ' whart'boat. -11 t-;jf)ixian mui, or yptiun Mill!, or fAt tltc Woul liiinip, ifioi vi i tiu ij t.txm i. Font Offlrc Drawer, XM. jENTINE resch, GROCER. Driller in ir, tgas, nsn, founry, iijmo and all kinds of fresh null iiiu voyemuiuo. fh Street, Carro, 111 'Vrderafur Sleainlwutii pvcmiiilly llllttl at icKir, day or nlsht, CI. I'll Sal College, T;ijiiis,aa.oo. third Annual Session iio'3eglns Sept. 29th. .ircuhirs AiMrfst '.IaiUiU filler, 928 Wabash Ave. i Mvat Preioriptlou Boob. P ,!f SmuU tiUeai,A,;hnn, Hrci.tl.ui.. i!,urrK CMHumlillOB.rllw, T 1?' ? ricnccni, lljilnvi I..- . cl11' IIJJIW.U, Scroru. tin , . nTT v i." 1 "n.u f rvoui we Bill'ir po Kiliauaiicn, Jmpoton. . l!ll, Mwtur. ..4 uWiW,.rl.. Iu from Eicou ,n4 Inirrudtnt Ublti. " lim.. uu.0,; f,f tsjes tir icuu.iK 8S centi for ilia Priu.t. in..... .. n.w.1... "..':""" "! 1 lit TV out Dtf iptton Book. On latl 1W lAGt U U lU.t lotruu, I UIM M ru'ti. l!. JTiTT..lgni Ucthoda of Treatment r... it. dlMiiu, o 1W yuan eiparlenue , naur. ""JhiiUMbMhiW., f '" OuW.fcr'iii. uaun4lDBooUeru'. Mallei unJtr .wl ea It mu. iMnn ' THE AMERICAN HEMlDV CO., No. 7W Dno Biract, til l)Ut, MO. lie VOL. 7. MQI'OH HKAI.KRN. R. SMYTH & CO., Wholesale mill Kctnll Knxlcrs In Foreign and Domestic WI,Kft OF AM. KIMN, No. 60 Ohio Levee, CAIRO, ILLS. MK991U. i-MYTIf A CO. hate ioiilmilly a larco stock of the lit kckkIi Iii the mar ket, and Kite Miieclal attention tilhe tlioIeiuiI ranch ol the lnuinf n. iri:. ICE! ICE!! ICE!!! JOHN SPROAT, Wliol.'.nlu and Itit.ill Under In PURE LAKE ICE Cairo and Kankakee, III. CAIRO omcE : At HuUn dtWlUon's, CornerTwelfth St ana unio ieven. will nin nn la- wnpon throughout the Smson. delivering nun- lute loe In anv jwrt nf the city nt the lowint market vrlr-, and . III - I ... A . . . . . ..... I. f. . l ' . I.. .'... n in ttinj iiuiHPii tit) irirnn uuumr ine guy wun by the eakc or ear load, nuked In aawdunt 'lilDnx-nt to any dJutaner. IIOTKLS. Grand Central HOTEL, COMMERCIAL AVENUE Coruor HUditlx Street, WB. WETZEL. Proprietor. ATISL'STY watch kept nf(5ht and iUy for trains and rtearubonta Tit. l--l of A KiifjH at'iwo I ilUr it day. lor iran.nm 3-l-lf m lim.iis.vi.i: ii:oi i:us. STRATTON & BIRD, Wholesale Grocers Commission Merchantj; AGENTS AMERICAN POWDER CO. 57 Ohio Levee. It A 'lliullii, I. D. Thorn. THOMS & BROTHER, (Successors tn H M llult-n,) Commission Merchants An'l dealers In STAPLE AND FA KOY v "GROCERIES, Fosijni and Domestic Prnits and Nuts 181 COMMXKCIAL AVENUE. ' G. D WILLIAMSON, Wholesale Grocer Doaler li BOAT STORllS,! Commission Merchant, No. 76 OHIO LXVE'E. Sl'KCIAI. nttcntUn gyta tooomlKruntnta aud llllius onlera. rAINV ANI OII.H. B. F. PARKER, DvuliT in . Paints, Oils, Varnishey, zszt-XTSEcaas. Wall Paper, Window aiaao, Win dow ShadOB, &c. AlwnyR u limd, the celebrated llliunluatlm: AURORA Olli. Coruor ElovntU Street and WathinK to Avenue CAIRO CITY BINDERY, J. O- IITJEXjOI, I0PRIET0R, BINDER AND BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURER. aulUVln Buildinff , Cornov TwelXU Sltwet and WajiblBirton Avenue, Cairo, Xlllxxolai' ifTrwnlT mi'l Jtllto.T AVork a upcclnllr Ofto, Bulletin. 33ull5.ln.cTt Caraiwr Wwolfth. Street u&i 'Wiulilnctsn .A.-rervvi.o. CAIRO, ILLINOIS, (Tf t. 4 Hi ft 1 1 A. i. 4 MR. THURMAN'S SPEECH. THE OHIO SENATOR DELIVEUS OPINION UPON THE STATE PLATFORM. HIS II,- 'iiiiili'r- It Vnliiriillo In I'rlll elin, but Knli-ciii II n lnt t Mnml l,y m Tlrkfl. M vvmn:i.!i. Ohio. .Iiilv ill Owj ol' tliu larpost ami moet Ititclllgi'iitl yntncriii- Hint i-vt'f nspcniuivii lit .orui i.tii Ohio, took jilnce In till rlty to-day, a niiivtTMl ltliTust lcln felt, mid very (li;inotistrablv expressed to lu-nrthu view? oi' Senator '1 Inirtiinii upon tho Ohio plat form, and tho several Ksttcs Involved In the prci'tit .Stato f;niviis. It wiu cx (.'CU'il In Miiiio rin.mter-, ami tlw ul-h wiii tiuiior to me L'XiK'Ctatioii in oiiici j. that lie would take occasion, If not to do iiouutx; tho declarations of the Ohio JJein (MTaey iptelully upon the money ipiei tlon at leat to o crltlcln- them in to throw colli water on the catf-e, biitln this hU political oppoiienlx wen; radly disi)- noiuted.itu'l Ills Domical ?vnil:itlii.er eorrcpoudlii'dy ratltlcd. Aiinot at tno opi'iiiti' ol ni speech Mr. Thtirinnii proceeded to arralirn tho lieptilillcati party as havitif,' no higher pttrpo-e in tho present crin tiiau liow to fcavu Itself from dMnteratlon and ruin. Such wa the tenor of its policy all throiiL'h the lat seion of cotiun."'-!. and one of the results ol this policy wa their uiii lor t tic resumption 01 .specie pay ments, which lie characterized as fol lows, as a ".strange phenomenon." and a "mere piece of caucus furniture." Tin: M-rcn: itnsi'.MiTio.v hilt.. "It Is u hill that contains not a MiiL'le effective provision for that purpose: a bill declaring that resumption .shall tako place on tho lir.U day of January, IST'J, without providing, in any wio manner. one dollar 111 coin with which to eil'ect that resumption. No wonder that the lladlcal leader declined to discuss that bill. No wonder that the chairman ot the committee that re ported It declined to explain It. No wonder that he left its amhlguoit- pro-vi-ions without interpretation when to ntihliclv interpret them one way would have driven oil- the re.sumptlonUts from its support, and to interpret them another way would have drought the whole swarm of iiitlatioii -t ahout his car. And so the hill was passed; not a- a financial measure, not as a thing hi which any one lellevcd, hut rhnply a- a caucus comproini-o of coiilllctlng opinion--, a political Micklng-plaster to hold the oppoilng wings ot the Radical parlv together, an adjournment of the currency ipiuriiou, o tar as tno Jiatucats are cou ccriuil, until after the. next presidential election. Ami now tlio very men who made that compromise, tlio verv men who agreed to keep their opinions In ..I.. ji ih'i.h'ii i f m i - , ' , T." 1 autfiord and perH3tnitors of that sham in iinaiiw.' and trick In politics will, I have no doubt. Ik; heard saying to the hard money i;eiiiocrats ot Ohio, -How can you Mipport tho Democratic ticket nomi nated by a -mi-money platform V 'How can you tint- prefer party to principle, and desert one of the oldcM and most tlnie-honored canons ot your political creed':' 'I low can you abandon the l.dlli ol .lellcrson. .lack .sou and Benton, and become followers of Wendell I'lillllps, Benjamin 1'. Butler and William IJ. Kulley?' 'Vou were not wont. In times pat, to nicak of thcto men with uncommon respect. If we rcnu'inltei' coircetlv, you called 1'hil lipsa fanatic, Butler a lover ot other peo ple's spoon-, anil Kelley a maniac on the subject of pig-iron, l'ray tell us what miracle has been performed bj- which this tiinlty of taiiatlei-iu, poous;uid pig iron have becomo the lltiauclal proplicts and leaders ol the Ohio I cmocraey V I tav. my liard-iuoncy friends of iiiclilantl, that I have no doubt that those nueetloiw will bo put to us, these iircani uttered hist winter enacted the financial sham of against u.-.by the very compromisers who which I have spoken. And, therefore, hut, .tbovc all, from a tcn-e of duty that I owe to myself and to the Democrats who think as 1 do on the currency hsuo, 1 propose to srive reasons that, in mv judgment, make it our Imperative duty to support our uc;;cr, nowever niticn wo dlrlikc some planks in tho platform, and tho onii.-ioii of others that wo think should have been in it." WHAT Till'. PLAH OItM Mi:.Nn. "You, my fellow Democrats of 1'ieli laud, are what ate called hard-money men, and I am a hatd-money man that is to say, we do not believe in an irre deemable paper currency; so believe that such a currency must necessarily fluctu ate lu value, lea.l to speculation and ex travagance, and benefit no one but mou-ev-sliavcrs and speculators. We believe that our currency should consist of gold and silver, and, for convenience, paper convertible at par into trold and silver at tho will of the holder. In this we concur wllh tho uniform teachings of the Demo cratic party, with tho opinion of every really eminent political economist the world over, with the lessons of experi ence found In the hl-tory of every com mercial nation, and with the views of al most the entire body of the business men of America. ov, it has been roundly asserted, and with a violence of speech that might be considered intemperate, that the platform of our late convention means just tho opposite of our opin ion; that it means an irredeemable paper currency now and forever, and, consequently', that gold or silver, or pa per convertible into gold and silver, shall never form a part of onr circulating me dium, if ur certainly no sucn idea is :v preswllw tho platform, nor do 1 believe that it is entertained by a majority of tJioso who approve it. I know that there ate men who advocate the abandonment of gold and silver as money ; who scout the idea of rcdecmabillty of tho currency; who assort that whatovorthe government callw money Is money, and who regard Ir redeemable greenbacks as the best cur rency the world ever saw. But I do not think' that those men constituted a ma jorlly of tho late convention, or of Its commutes on resolutions. Had .such been the case their views would have been expressed without ambiguity. But you look )u vain in liiu platform for a di rect Dxinosslon in favor of irrcdeeinablli- ty, or n direct ns-ertiou that gold and silver should be demonetized. "It advocates the substitution ofgrccn hacks for national bank notes, but It no. whero says that tho greenbacks should he Irredeemable. On tlio contrary, it con templates that they shall be brought to par Willi gold, and although wo may not lw quite able to see how that can bo done lu the mode proposed, its desirableness I" most distinctly and fully recognized. And then, as to does not oxpro' Itillallou, the platform lv demand nuro cur. 1110 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 4, rencv. It denounces contraction", but does' not sav in plain words. lo u.s lu I Itatlon. What It does say is, 'that the , i volume of currency be made and kept i ; equal to the wants of trade;' and this Is ' all." "Xow. tho gentlemen who framed this. . platlurm arc able and bold men, masters I i ol the Kngllsii tongue, capable oi saying i what they mean, anil by no iikiui? afraid to sav It. i When, therefore, they plainly denounce contraction, hut fall to cxpresily advo- i catuintlatioti, Is not the presumption fair thai tliev do not mean inilatlouV Under- t stand inc. I am not defending the plat- j lunn,, lor III some imiucuiai.i i no not like It, and 1 Iismmj t those, who may ni prove it the task of its advocacy. Nor am I erlllci'.lng It. for 1 have no dlsposl sion to In; critical,' and I leavetlial role to our common ndvcr.arics. But I think it but Justice to -ay that the platfoim ha been coii-tniid to mean more than Is ex pressed lu it, and more than was meant, us I believe, by tho-e who framed it. 1 know that some of its warmest advocates regard it as n declaration against gold anil silver, and for an irredeemable gieon back currency now and forever, coupled with great and permanent inflation : but for reasons that I have partly stated, and others that 1 have no time to state, 1 believe that thc-c men are comparatively few In number. The truth is that there fs A W1DK iiw.i:.sity ok on.viov anions the people of all parties upon this subject. There are Democratic hard money menand Democratic paper-money men ; Bepublleaii hard-money men and Kepubllcun paper-money mm ; iJemo cratle rcsumptinnUt and Democratic lu tlatiouNts, and Bepiiblican resumption l.sts and Hcpublican Intlatl'itilsts. The question 1 not strictly a party question. Hon. st men oi all parties mr.v bo found on its opposite sides, and so it has ever been after every great panic bv which the country has been alllictfd. I have not heard an argument, pro er con, that has not been advanced a hundred times in Kuropo and America before tho panic of 1S73. But lu the end; truth is sure to prevail, and hi the mean time hard words anil bitter accusations serve no good purpo-e. So man has firmer convictions on this subject than I have. They are the result of much experience and or a long, patient anil cui-cicntlous study. I have exprc-sed them time and again, lu conversation, in public meet ings, in conventions, and in iay place ill the senate. I stand bv tlieiu whatever may be my political fate; but r do not a?siune to bo Infallible, and ruthlessly condemn men as sincere a-1 am who en tertain n dlllercnt opinion. .Mien i.r.ss can i 4.nctiov .i nisiifnio.v of tho Democratic party, I'ccaunj hi a single state it has so liappened that a convention chosen to nominate slate olll ccrs only olllecrs who willhavciio juris diction over the currency iiie-tioii haj, upon this one question, adopted a plat- 'i in jtiiiginciuuotrsiiowippiovo. f have been a iJeioocrat all my lite, and when and when; to lK- a Democrat was to bo politically o-traci-ed. I have eliin" to the party in its darkest hour- a-; ,u.fi approved its fundamental principles, t yet look to it as destined to restore to the Republic, constitutional, hou cit and economical government, to piomote fraternal feeling- between all lti parts, and to perpetuate" free lu-tltutiou- forsigc- to conic; and I cannot, by any wont or act of niiuc,'coiitiibute to its overthrow. I know that It is not luf.il llblc. for no party I- infallible. I know that it has committed irrors, mid that (.very parly has committed them; but Inl-okuow that Us fundamental prin ciples are sound, ami that its puiposcs arc honest and Patriotic, it thoicforo well deserves aiiiicommaiid- my support and although my iniliicnco may bo small tuui my -ci vices nine worm, it uas a Jn-t claim to tlieiu both that I cannot deny. wiii.m, j ii i: (ji i:-rinx ki:sj--. The currency qticstloh, so far as legis lation can ailed it, rests with Congress. Theolllcers to be elected ill Ohio this f.Ul will have, as I have already said, no jurisdiction over it. It ha national, and not a mom Slate concern; and although every State has a perfect right to express Its opinion upon it, and may very proper ly do so, yet its solution Is devolved upon the rcprcscutntlvi - ol all the States in the Congress assembled. And the draft lug of a national party platform upon It, to be submitted to the people, Is the oiliec of a national convention representing the party lu all the States. Such a conven tion of our party will meet next year, and Its deliberations we may fairly pre sume, will rcllect the opinion and mani fest the will of tho entire Democracy of the Iteptiblle. It is soinuwh.it amusing to read, hi tlio liht of history, some ot the criticisms that arc dally seen in the newspapers upon the subject I am considering. Ono class of these papers denounces, with great severity, the hard-money Demo crats of Ohio because they do not unite with tlio Uepubllcaus to defeat our ticket, forgcttlnir that even Horace Greeley, then chief Whig editor of the United States, exerted all his power and Inilii cnco to elect General Scott to tho Presi dency, and, at tlio sanio time, to use his strong but certainly not courteous language, "spat upon the platform." Another class of editors denounce us because we do not surrender our convic tions and support paper inonpy and Intla- tion a wcu as uio uckci. rney are not conlcnt that wo shall help to elect the ticket they require that wo shall also abandon our faith; forgetting that not three years have elapsed since they were themselves among the most ardent and clllcicnt supporters ot Horace Greeley for tho Presidency, upon thu most pro nounccd and unambiguous; hard money and specie resumption platform that could bo written. But let us pass to more important eon-lderatlons. I hnvo no de sire to speak ot the Inconsistencies of politicians. I am content if I can main tain mv own consistency and at the same time do what i believe to be right." The Senator then proceeded to nn elaborate and masterly review ol those national questions that have most agitated the country during tho past several years, and through the neglect, perversion or betrayal of which, as hi regard to local self-government and tho reconstruction of tho South, tho Hcpublican parly has steadily and hopelessly estranged it-elf from tho contldcnco ol the people, i Mr. Thin-man's position upon the financial plank of tho platform, though not hi harmony with tlio views of the great masses ol tho Democracy, is such as might have been anticipated by those who know and liavo observed his course In Congress on this point; but that lie has clearly at heart tho success of (bo Demo-1 , craey at the polls, that ho will exert till i his powerful Iniliicnco to that end, that 1 ho considers tho questions of contraction and hitlation subordinate to tho promi nent Importance of vindicating the greater general and well established prin ciples of the party, not a doubt is enter-tNlnct 1875. F. M. STOCKFLETH. Importer and Wholesale Dealer in Wines and Liquor s, 62 OHIO LEVEE, - - CAIRO. ILL. Keeps a full stock of TZLoxxtxxolxjy Bourbou, Monongahela, Rye and Robinson County . FRENCH BRANDIES, HOLLAND GIN, RHINE, KELLY ISLAND AND CALIFORNIA WINES. PHYNH'IANN. 0 U. LEACH, M D , HOMfXOPATHIST. l)r lii'h luin had n lnrfff lAKrivm t in tin lmictiei- of Mftlli'lnn nd Surxfry Kir?cliil at- tontion I'ulil t Die llunxi oinlhii' trcatntcnt of' Siirgicnl di-cac.i, nnd dlr.i-ci of vnin n and ) chllibrn. JE3"0i r.t i: Curnrr Omuri chil n in- mid Niiith ititi-t ll-T-l-lf rILLIAM R. SMITH, M. X. JU:SlI)i;SCi:: Si. JI Tlilrtmith street, bo twuii Wa-)ilnxton nvcuue and Wnlnut strii't. OfKtt.'l.i Nortli mMu of Klxhth strn't tx-twei-n Commercial mid Washington avenue. G. W. DUNNING, M. D. UKSIDEKCK- turner Ninth nnd Walnut Mrift. OFKICK: Corner Sixth srrrtt am Ohio tvee. UKKtLi: UoUIJsj ; Kromna.iH. liin.,iiud from 2 to : li.m. i.awii:ks. J OHN H. MULKKY, Attorney nt Lair. CAlllO, n.r,txois. OKRCE: Klshtli .m-'t, Itetween Commcr ciii! mid Wu-liitW'ii mcniiCK. OAMUEL T. WHEELER, O Attorney at Law. OKI'ICK! Ohio Lcieo, over room firmeily ocriipltil Vy firat atlonul Jl.iiik, (JAIlio. II.I.ISOI- REEN & GILBERT, Attorneys and CounselorM. at. Law. OVnev: Ohio .ci, room 7 und H City Xitlounl Hunk, Uilliamlt. limn, ) William 11. Gilbert, I.AIltO, ILLINOIS. Mile Fn-l'k Olllnit i 53Pieclul attention K'lven to Admliallr anil Slramlxwt bn-ini . iikam:siatk Ai;i:.vr. JOHN a. HARMAN & CO. Real Estate HOUSE A.C3-E13SrTS COLLECTORS, ;ONVEYAKCBS, NOTARIES PUBLIC Laud Afrenta of the Illinois Central and Burlington and Qutncy R. R. Companies, North Cor. Sixth and Ohio Levoa, CAIRO. ILLINOIS. I.O, LYNCH. M. J IIOWLKY. LYNCH & HOWLEY, Bouse Agents, olloctors and Conveyancers. OFFICE At the Court Ilouae. MRS. L. J. SPEARS, Weat side Commercial Avenuo, between Eiithth and Ninth stroot. (Next door to .1 . llurirei 's dry (jonrts ntoiv.) A full llin! of the huest and most fit-hl'iiKU'Ie styles of HATS AND BONNETS idivnvs on hand. Also even' mriely of Ribbons Lnocs and Trimmings, from the cheapol lo thu most eouly. fjidie. will tin. I uny unit eierylhlng in her ittnre lor ii coiuplititreet, ball or piuly outtlf 1'ilces to eoninte vr Itli any In the W est, tlrAlijO utrent for the Home Sewing Miiehine, ".Hi..',-lt-ir HOWIE BROTHERS, PACKERS, Wholesale, Retail and Commission. Wiloox'i Comer Poplar and I Blooli, Elovsnth Street. Knirlie8t CbbJi Prioo pnid fov ff"a "Ti'l ,flntlo I i NO. 103. BOBBINS' 112 COMMERCIAL AVE., CAIRO ILL Pianos and Organs, SHEET MUSIC AND MUSICAL MERCHANDISE OP UViiliY DESCRIPTION. HALLET, DAVIS & CO.'S PIAWOS Of World wido Reputation. AeknovIeln-d by all irood Jtuslci.im to be II bct riauo not? made. THE GREAT UNION PIANO, Of which wu have solJ over I0i) dunm twelve years pj-t, licciiiiiitu- more anil more. popular every uay. SMITH'S AMERICAN ORGAN, .Splendid tone, Power and Durability. Kimball's Orchosfral rtrnan A very flue liiitniiiirnt, adapted to Instru mental as well as vocal imi-lc. AM. nn: aiiovj: auk oifKitKt) ox Kasy .Monthly Payments, nt loivilgtircs regardless of Mit Prices. SHEET MUSIG In tsrc-it variety. Including all tlio new and popular nmlo ot the day. orders from the Country promptly tilled snd -cut " by mail. VIOLINS GUITARS BANJOS ACCORDEONS. CLARINETS FLUTES, PICOLOS, TAMBORINES KTC, ETC. FHENCIl liAHl'S Band Instruments of all Kinds Fiintishrd to Order. STRINGS FOR VIOLINS, GUITARS, ETC. Of the Best Quality. Classical Studies and Exercises Of nil grade for Piano or Voice. JSTEvery description of Musical Mer chandise furuii-licd to order, promptly ami at prices lower than ever oll'crcd before. UEXOY ALSO OK ROGER'S ELEGANT STATUARY. Send for niustratcil Catulouu mid Price Mit of thc-o beautiful groupef. All Goodi Warranted as Reprtiented. Address, ROBBINS' MUSIC BAZAP, Cairo, Illinois. vahii:tv ntoiie. N"ew-York Store WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Xjax,KOfat VARIETY STOGE IN TnE CITY. Goodd Sold Vory Close. Ooruor 10th 8t. nd Cominorcial Av CAIBO. ILLINOIS. G. 0. FATIER & CO. JACOB WALTER, j BUTCHER ?tti Dealer in Fresh Meats EIGHTH STREET, Between Waahln hlniftoD aA ComtoercUl Avenuee i, aujDuuai jaanny i. KKKVH for nalc the li Beef, Pnrk,;Mnrton t Veal. LamliaiKape, o . and la iro Iwinsifl mm IIIUBIU COlMlftftUj M KUCH A XT. ' RV w. miIlkr, ' FORWARDING .INt . CominiMion Merchant, Ati'tilrnttr In FLOUR, MEALjGRAIN HAY, OMIT. fintiiji.iAKr. Ir M.ir t'AIKO,!l.r.l.VOl3 O. CLOSE, tinrrnt Commission Merchant AKTl tlKAMII 1.1 LIME, CEMENT, PLASTER, HAIR, fee., Under City Natlon&l Eaak. IWU.I, Mil In car-traul tott nt uatLfaetarfri LtlCfS, aitdlntc rrrlicht. JOHN B. PHIIXIS AND SON, (Successors to John II l'hUlls) FORWARDING -AM)- Commission Merchants And Dealeri In nAY, CORN, OATS, PLOUR, MCAl, BKAK, etc. Agent for LAFLIN AKAND POWDER CO ZCorasr Tontk Strt tad OhU LftTC. 7. II MnlhtiM. K C. MATHUC3 & UHL, FORWARDING And fieneral Commission Merchants Pcnler.1 In FLOUR, GRAIN, HAT AND PRODUCE, G-4 OIilo Itovoo. P. CUHL, F.xchnlie Flour Merchant Millers' Agent. Xo in Ohio f.eiv, CAIRO, ILLINOIS. K. !. AyiTS. S. V. Ayrea. AYRES tc CO., And general Commission Merchants No. 78 OHIO LEVEE. MAS I. r.W'.KEIl II. II. ( I NMSIHI OI. PARKER & CUNNINGHAM, ("iiereeoii to Miller A r'arker,) FORWARD G AND Commission Merchants And 0,'jler.s In WHEAT, MEAL, GRAIN. HAY, ETC. ornctc : C1 OHIO UA KE. CAIltO, ILLINOIS. 13" e have leaned the fjn?e Yllow Ware tiuu.-c, aloraw eapucity 3,ouo tons, which iv lis nniple facilities for stoiinR iimt ahlpplnir. t-i-tf. INNVHAXCE. C. N. HUGHES, General Insurance Agent. ovicbi OXXXO Over KktbnM TTU'i. NOXK but tented. l'liit-Claaa Compaaka reprt INSURANCE. ESTABLISHED 1858. S AFFORD, MORRIS AND CANDEE, Oeneral Insurance Agents, 73 OHIO XXVEE, City NaUcnal Baak SulULUg, f-Ulri. The Oldeat EtabUsUd Asrasoy in South era IlUnola, repreaeattng ovfr 65 000 000. CAIRO - BOX and BASKET CO Dealer in ATI Limit barif and ofl,) FLOORING, IIDINQ, LATH, o. Mill ua Turf,