CHICAGO 
NTERNATlIOHAl SILVER COMg*£X= 
ama 
are represented with their prairie schooners eagerly 
seeking the land of golden promise and the miners 
delving for its generous wealth. At either end are 
the two figures of Commerce typifying the Trans¬ 
continental Railroad industry and ocean shipping 
with the waters of the Atlantic and Pacific united 
through the Panama Canal. 
A S A TRIBUTE to the spirit, achievements and 
destiny of the West, the allegorical group ex¬ 
hibited in the case in the illustration is offered by the 
World’s largest makers of Sterling Silver and Silver 
Plate Designed and made by the Company’s artists, 
it is wrought from those metals which they use to the 
largest extent in the production of their wares, i. e., 
pure silver, pure gold, white metal and nickel silver. 
On the base are etchings symbolic of the changing 
conditions which accompanied the transformation 
of the West. The Indian Council and Buffalo Hunt 
are memories of a bygone day. The Forty-niners 
and energy of t 
International Silver Company 
Succeding The MERIDEN Co. Established 1852 
49-51 West 34th Street, through to 68-70 West 35th Street, New York 
