. The Commercial and financial chronicle. ONOVER, Hibbard, Spencer, Bartlett & R. CRANE, Crane V. FARWELL. of John V. Farwell Co,J. B. GREENHUT, Capitalist, PeoriaH. W. HEINRICHS, Vice-Pres. M. D. Wells Co. ROLLIN A. KEYES, Pres. Franklin MacVeagh & Co. ROBERT MATHER, Pres, Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. JOHN R. MORRON, Pres. Peter Coopers Glue Factory HENRY SIEGEL, Pres. Simpson-Crawford Co., N. Y. E. B. STRONG, Capitalist LOUIS F. SWIFT. Pres. Swift & Company FRANK E. VOGEL, Vice-Pres. Siegel Cooper & Co. W. T. FENTON, Vice-President Commercial Bank
. The Commercial and financial chronicle. ONOVER, Hibbard, Spencer, Bartlett & R. CRANE, Crane V. FARWELL. of John V. Farwell Co,J. B. GREENHUT, Capitalist, PeoriaH. W. HEINRICHS, Vice-Pres. M. D. Wells Co. ROLLIN A. KEYES, Pres. Franklin MacVeagh & Co. ROBERT MATHER, Pres, Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. JOHN R. MORRON, Pres. Peter Coopers Glue Factory HENRY SIEGEL, Pres. Simpson-Crawford Co., N. Y. E. B. STRONG, Capitalist LOUIS F. SWIFT. Pres. Swift & Company FRANK E. VOGEL, Vice-Pres. Siegel Cooper & Co. W. T. FENTON, Vice-President Commercial Banking Foreign and Inland Exchange Travelers Letters of Credit 31 FORTpi&RBORN ?i& r^ ^M Nation lr ban K MONROE and CLARK STREETS CHICAGO Capital, Surplus and Profits, Deposits, $1,000,000 425,000 12,895,000 WM. A. TILDEN, President HENRY R. KENT,Cashier CHARLES FERNALD, Asst. Cashier NELSON N. LAMPERT, Vice-President GEO. H. WILSON, Asst. Cashier COLIN S. CAMPBELL, Asst. Cashier IllinoisTrust&Saviitgsllank. Chicago CAPITAL and SURPLUS $13,300,000 Interest Allowed on Checking and Savings Accounts Loans Only on Approved Collateral Bond, Foreign Exchange and Trust Departments CORRESPONDENCE INVITED 32 FARWELL TRUST COMPANY 226 La Salle Street CHICAGO, ILLINOIS MUNICIPAL CORPORATION RAILROAD IRRIGATION BONDS FO R INVESTMENT YIELDING to 6% 33 A Conservative Investment P|RQT mortgage SIX PER CENT, bonds on New Mexico* **^-J * Irrigated Fruit Lands, secured by a first lien, covering3,000 acres of the finest fruit land in the world, with water now beingdistributed over it through the irrigating canals from the PECOS RIVER. <$ The value of the land is SIX to TEN times the amount of themortgage. <I An irrigation bond combines all of the best features of a farmmortgage with those of a railroad, proven industrial, or corporation bond. <I The rush of capital into irrigation projects is of tremendousvolume and will eventually push the interest return of this class of bondsto a b
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