The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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But now there was need of capital to manufacture and market the  
wonder. Clemens, casting about in his mind, remembered Senator  
Jones, of Nevada, a man of great wealth, and his old friend, Joe  
Goodman, of Nevada, in whom Jones had unlimited confidence. He  
wrote to Goodman, and in this letter we get a pretty full exposition  
of the whole matter as it stood in the fall of 1889. We note in  
this communication that Clemens says that he has been at the machine  
three years and seven months, but this was only the period during  
which he had spent the regular monthly sum of three thousand  
dollars. His interest in the invention had begun as far back as  
1
880.  
*
****  
To Joseph T. Goodman, in Nevada:  
Private. HARTFORD, Oct. 7, '89.  
DEAR JOE,--I had a letter from Aleck Badlam day before yesterday, and  
in answering him I mentioned a matter which I asked him to consider  
a secret except to you and John McComb,--[This is Col. McComb, of  
the Alta-California, who had sent Mark Twain on the Quaker City  
excursion]--as I am not ready yet to get into the newspapers.  
750  


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