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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 8 Nov 1893, p. 8

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* rj HISTOEY OF A WEEK. Ly ' , r Weduautay, Nov. 1. An injunction of court restrains the U «&*y of Madison, Wis., from purchasing a y new Are alarm system for owing to | a large indebtedness. § Governor Boies, of Iowa, is oonfined to | hi* bed at Waterloo, threatened with fever. The grandson of the late Emperor Dom v Pedro, a prince of Saxe-Coburg; and Got ha, Jm reported to have sailed for Brasil to lead the revolution against President Peix | otto's government. The wife of Broker John BT. SehoSald, of Chicago, has been granted an absolute di­ vorce by a New York court. The street car strike at St. Paul has been declared off by the union and all the men that can secure their old positions have been advised to take them. John Whaley, engineer of a freight train on the South Carolina railway, was killed and his fireman seriously hurt in the wreck that followed a caUia«y^with j'"1 ROW IN CHICAGO'S COUNCIL. NOW "•OMr, Thursday, NOT. FT.. In a qnarrel about a wagon Jeseph Meyer brained his father with a hatchet, near Sedalia, Mo. At a charivari at Elms, la., the groom, Michael Keefe, was shot in the head by some one of the party. C. W, Embury, a retired farmer, wa* killed at La Crosse, Wis., by a runaway Accident, his horse being frightened at an electric car. J. C. Savery, of Des Moines, with a good many business "irons in the fire," has as­ signed with assets of $1,000,000 and liabilities of 1880,000. Fire destroyed part of the plant of the Peninsular Stove company, at Detroit. Lots, 140,000. Mrs. Mildred Towle, of Idaho Springs, committed suicide at Denver by taking choral hydrate. She had been ont of em­ ployment for some time and wae deapon- ent . The grand jury at Denver has indicted Joh n F. Braunen, leader of the mob which lynched David Arata, the Italian murder­ er, last July. The sheriff and police are condemned for lack of nerve in not dia- yrsing the mob. Mday, Nov. 8. •*£im steamer City of Alerandria, of llie Ward line, between New York and Cuba, homed at sea. Two--the purser and stew­ ard--were lost. The vessel was valued at •100,000. Directum and Mascot, trotter and paoer, had a match race at Feetwood park. Di­ rectum won three heat in 2:10^, 2:07^ and 2:8%. Mascot broke in two heats. The Republicans of the Chicago city eonncil in caucus have chosen George B. Swift as their candidate for mayor pro tem. to succeed Carter H. Harrison by a vote of 3(0 for Swift to 14 for Madden. The choice is equivalent to an election. A visit to the World's fair drove Leon­ ard F. Seckwith, a New York millionaire. Insane. Redmond, the Irish J?arnellite leader, l&ys that Gladstone's words, "Ireland blocks the way," must be made good it home rule is to materialize. The controversy at Boston between the employers and carpenters over the eight- honrday has ended in a victory for the Winters. * - Saturday, MOT. 4. & Blaisdell, Jr., & Co., wholesale deal­ ers in cotton and wool stocks at Chicopee, Mass., have failed, with liabilities of (275,000. The five mills of the George H. Friend Paper company and the American Tablet company at Dayton, O., have been consol­ idated. The new compiny is incorpor­ ated tinder the laws of Illinois with a cap­ ital stock of $1,10(",(>00. Mrs. Mattie Covary committed suicide at Crawfordsville, Ind., just six hours be­ fore the time set for her marriage to Walter EL Rosebroe. A letter from a former wooer is said to have greatly agitated her. The Grand Trunk road will be asked to pay $85,000 damages for the death of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bradley in the Battle Greek wreck. A prisoner who escaped from the Cree- ton (Iowa) |ail ten days ago has returned to serve out his sentence. He had been to the World's fair. The World's Colnmbian chrysanthemum exhibition is in full blast at the Chicago Art Institute .on the lake front, not down at the World's fair as originally in­ tended. ' Fred Myers, a machinist in the Wabash shops, committed suicide at Springfield, Us., by hanging. V> Monday, Nov. 4 ~ The Galena Smelter works at Galena, bnrned; loss, 1100,000. %; James Morgan & Co., dry goods, at Mil- wiukee have failed. w ith only fifteen minutes rest between heats, at Independence, la., John S. John­ son, the wheelman, made one mile in b57 4 5 and the other in 1:59 4-5. Only one man was killed on the Ohio Southern near Paris, O., an Italian laborer named Benedict. Eleven were more or less hurt. The Weir Plow company, of Monmouth, .Ills., has resumed work, giving employ ment, to a large number of men. The Lake street "L" road at Chicago has hegun business, giving Chicago two ele­ vated railways. A soup kitchen has been established on ; -the "west side" at Chicago by Jewish Women at which a good meal of soup and 'f bread is provided for one cent. I ' A dynamite cartridge in Rice's stone 'f • quarry at Grand avenue and West Ohio street,Chicago,exploded, killing Dominick Farina and injuring Michael Brelt and , Toney Carlina fatally. Over UM - .Mayor Pro Tola. CHICAGO, NOV. 6.--The scenes in the council chamber Saturday over the elec tion of a mayor pro tem. have been sel­ dom equalled for turbulence in any de­ liberative body in the land. During the "trouble" there were * dosen times when it looked like a general riot would result. One "city dad" pulled off his Mitt to be ready for the expected general fight. The Repu^icans have thirty-eight mem' bers of the council 'and the Democrats thirty, but the first ballot on mayor pro tem. showed that some Republicans had deserted their fellows. The row began when Rending Clerk Neu- meister put the question on a Democratic motion that John McGillenbe made chair­ man, ignoring a Republican motion that Hepburn be chairman. Neumeister put the question and declared McGillen choeen without waiting for the nays, and refused a roll call. There was a fight over the chair, but finally McGillen held the fort, and matters quieted. A resolution fixing the third Tuesday in December for a special election to fill the office of mayox was adapted. Then the mayor pro tem. question came up. McGillen ignored all Republican mo­ tions or resolutions, refused to entertain appeals and listened to no one except Dem­ ocrats. The Republicans wanted an open ballot, but they were not listened to and a secret ballot ordered. It resulted: Swift (Rep.),84; McGillen (Dem.), 38; blank,1. Mc­ Gillen declared that no election resulted. The Republicans left the chamber, and no quorum was present and later the Democrats adjourned to today. Later Swift took the oath and made his bond, but the Democrats put a guard in charge of the mayor's office so that Swift could not fcet in. , • , CHICAGO, NOT. 7.--It was hot while it lasted, but it has ended--that fight in the city council as to who should hold down the mayor's chair nntil a new mayor is duly elected. At the bottom of the difficulty it is mat- tar of most serious character, but on the surface there was a good deal of humor in the situation. For instance the stury of the difficulty as told by the men who saw it states that when the Democratic minor­ ity met yesterday morning there were anxious looks for certain of that side who had not put in aa appearance. As a quorum was a necessity that the minority had respected so far, it is probable that some of the anxiety was for the majority members who were alleged to have been bought. Then the spectacle of the leaders of the majority locking the aforesaid ma­ jority up in a suite of rooms so that no one could get awayl The end came last night. The Repub­ lican aldermen came into the council chamber in a body at 7:30 o'clock. Most of the Democrats were there already, and the others came in shortly afterward. Roll call was held on the question of a quorum and it was found that there were sixty-eight aldermen present. Then came the question of electing a temporary chairman. Kent moved that McGillen take the chair. This was agreed to. Af­ ter some skirmishing a ballot for mayor pro tero. was had with this result: Swift, 50; McGillen, Id. The tellers reported that one alderman had dropped two ballots folded together. One of them was for Swift, the other for McGillen. It was at once decided that to make the vote perfectly legal a second ballot be taken. The tellers went to work again and a third time the non-committal alderman got in his work, for when the ballot was an­ nounced it was Swift, 6?; McGillen, 5; blank, 1. And the question remains: "Who cast those blank ballots f" •<? c •> •V Tuesday, Nov. 7. .*•*• • President Cleveland will retire to Wood- ,, *$ey and put in his time preparing his mes- ^ |jage to congress, so it is said. Gladstone has given the home rulers no- ^ ^ce that nothing for the relief of Ireland Will be introduced this session of parlia Maeut. - By a collision on the Central Pacific rail /•ray, eighteen miles east of Reno, Fred ch, brakeman; Ceorge Givens, fire aa, and four tramps were killed. Sir Andrew Clark, a famous London hysician, who numbered amoDg his pa ents such men as Gladstone, is dead. -i The recent extra session of congress cost .the country $500,000. Jean Charles Cazin, the French lands- ipe and figure painter, has arrived at ew York and will make an exhibition of work. iftre at Pern, Ills., damaged the Peru '^Carbon works $15,000. Current talk in Pittsburg is that the ilate glass combine will wind up its affairs. Frederick Lovecraft, theatrical manager irho committed suicide in New York, left £106,000 life insurants. :'f? hi . . "~i STATUTE. HURLED INTO ETERNITY. Six Uvea Lost by the Explosion of a Boiler in New York. NEW YORK, Nov. 8. -Six men dead, oth­ ers supposed to be dead under the ruins, a dozen persons injured, several horses dead and property damaged to the extent of about $10,000, is the sum total of the havoc wrought by the explosion of a boiler here. It was in the stables of the Dry Dock and Battery Street railway on East Twenty- fourth, street, between Avenues A and B. Following is a list of the dead so far as known: John Armstrong, engineer; Thomas Hasson, laborer; Samuel Mullen, driver; John Royal, lampman; Joseph H. Quinn, laborer; Charles Breslin, laborer. Of the injured thU is but a partial list, as many who were hurt disappeared from the scene: Michael McDonald, both legs fractured below the knees; Patrick O'Don nell, both thigh bones fractured and bruised about the body; Mrs. Jacob Sol- dinger, cut by flying glass; Annie Galla­ gher, badly bruised by flying dehris; John Peters, cut by flying glass; John Ruhl, struck by falling timbers; Myrtle Gal la' gher, cut by flying glass; John Rhein- frank, cut by glass. r'fw; End of the Matabele wafc - LONDON, NOV. &--The war with the Ma- tabeles, whose king, Lobengula, took it into his head to resist white aggression by pitting his impis (regiments) against the Caucasian rifles, has practically ended with a fight on Oct. 81, in which the black soldiers were terribly decimated by tho Maxim guns and Martini rifles. The king's capital is in the hands of the British and his forces are scattered promiscuously. The Devilsh Train Wrecker. CAIRO, Ills., Nov. 6.--Train wreckers opened a "blind spur," track near Ullin twenty miles north of here, and threw the, locomotive, baggage car and all the day coaches off the track. No passengers were injured by the diabolism, but Chas. Har man, of Centralia, the tireman, and tvtb colored tramps were killed. Cleveland Signs the Bill «•* pealing the Purchase of Silver,, WASHINGTON, NOV. 2.--Silver purchases by the government have ceased. The pur­ pose for which Cleveland called congress in extraordinary session has been ac­ complished and he has affixed bis signature to the toil! to repeat uncondition­ ally the purchasing clause of the Sherman law. The struggle in the house was short. Only twenty-seven men conld be rallied for the last, stand by the silver leaders, Bland and Bryan. Bland and his colleagues, knowing that further opposi­ tion was futile, preferred to sacrifice the opportunity for a few hours debate offered by Wilson in order to force the majority to bring in the cloture and concur in the senate amendment by duress. But even in this they failed. The vote stood lt*3 for concurrence and 94 against. When tlie original bill passed the house on Aug. 28 the vote stood 201 to 100, so that although the total vote this time was smaller the proportion was practically the same. The bill had already passed the sen ate by the following vote: Yeas-- Aldrich, Brice, Caffery, Camden; Carey, Cullom, Davis, Dixon, Dolph, Faulkner, Fyre, Gallinger, Gibson, Gorman, Gray, Hale, Hawley, Higgins. Hill. Hoar, Hun- ton, Lindsay, Lodge, McMillan, McPher- son, Manderson, Mills, Mitchell of Wis­ consin, Morrill, Murphy, Piatt, Proctor, Quay, Ransom, Sherman, Smith, Squire, Stockbridge. Turple. Vilas, Voornees, Washburn, White of Lousiana--43. Nays--Allen, Bate, Berry, Blackburn, Butler, Call, Cameron, Cockrell, Coke, Daniel, Dubois, George,Harris, Irby,Jones of Arkansas, Jones of Nevada, Kyle, Mar­ tin, Pasco, Peffer, Perkins, Pettigrew, Powers, Pugh, Roach, Shoup, v Stewart, Teller, Vanoe, Vest, Walthall, Wolott. Total, 33. The following pairs were announced, the first named being in the affirmative: Alli­ son with Mitchell of Oregon, Chandler with White of'California, Wilson with Colquitt, Gordon with Morgan, Palmer with H tnsbrough. WASHINGTON, Nov. 4--The house con­ current resolution to adjourn at 3 p. m. yesterday was adopted first thing by the senate, Coke, Dolph, Harris, Call, and others opposing on the ground that con­ gress should remain in session to continue nesded legislation. The other side said it would be impossible to retain a quorum and no business could be done. The usual committee waited on the president and learned that he had nothing more to offer. An executive session was held and a few minutes after the appointed time the sen­ ate adjourned sine die. The house insisted in its non-concur­ rence in the bill making appropriations for recess work by employes of the Fifty- first congress. The bill also contained ap­ propriations for the clerks to members oi the houses and the senate notified the house that it was determined and the bill failed. The house committee waited on the president and made the usual report, and at 8 p. m. the extra session of the house ceased to exist. Conghllu'a Second Trial Begins. CHICAGO, Nov. 4.--Daniel Coughlin, the only one of the three men sent to the pen­ itentiary for life for the assassination ol Dr. Cronin, appeared in court before Judge Tuthill on the retrial of his case, a new trial having been granted him by the supreme court. The first panel of jury­ men was exhausted--all except one saying that the newspaper accounts had given them an unalterable bias against the prisoner--and a special venire for 150 jurymen was issued, and the case ad­ journed for the day. /Evidence of Coal MarMh GALLIPOLIS, O., NOV. 4.--Thd body of an unknown man wns found at Brighton. He had from all appearances been waylaid, murdered, robbed and then burned. Hti is supposed to have been a traveling sales­ man, about 60 years of age, with gray moustache and chin beard; height 5f. Kin. HARVARD. P. E. Saunders, superintendent of water works, is around collecting water tax. Thofl. Burdetk an old resident of Har­ vard, died Mosday morning. at the resi­ dence of his daughter, Mrs. J as. Lake. Chas Pierce, living just north of thia city, had ths misfortune to (all from a load of bay, whisk tipfxwiover, and was quite seriously hurt Monday p. m, Mahlon Piper, of Sharon, visited friends in Harvard Monday. Oapt. 3chillinger, of Sharon, Wis. called Friday. Rev. J. 8. Maxim, of Hook ford, and F. H. Bos worth, of Elgin, both real estate men, called on our people Monday. Union religious services were held m the M. E. Chnrch Sunday evening. Kev. Bain, of the Presbyterian chnrch deliver­ ed an eloquent sermon to a large and at­ tentive audience. Sheriff Udell, of Woodstock. Stmdayed in Harvard and vicinity with his many o^d friends. Dr. and Mrs. GrOesbeck visited Satur­ day in Woodstock, with the sheriff and family. 8. H. Callender is fitting up his house and he, with his mother, will wove into it from Lawrence, 111,, when* tbey have r»A»n living for the past, forty years. What is Lawrence's loss will be Harvard's gain. 8. Richnrdson. one of our old citizens, is very sick at hi« residence in this city. Mrs. Unwell Diprsnns has been very pick et the residence of her parents, in Dun- hem. Fred .Tackman's. M. W. Lake, onr mayor, may he seen driving a beantifnl span of chestnut horses. Thev are fine and not very slow either. Lake knows a good horse and kn'ows bow to use them. E. A. Harper will wed Mfsrt Nettle Smith Wednesday evening, in Harvard, at the residence of the bride's parents. Chicago will be their future home. Fred Smith and Miss Nettie Gates, both of Alden, will be married Thursday, in Alden, at the bride's parents. Cody's Indians Are All Right. RUSHVILLE, Neb., Nov..©.--Buffalo Bill's World's fair Sioux Indians have arrived here looking like university students--well dressed and well conducted. Red Cloud himself and over 500 warriors met them with a grand reception. The citizens were pleased with the appearance and con­ duct of Cody's Indians. One of the Horrors of War. LONDON, NOV. 4.--A special from Lisbon gives a private telegram from Buenos Ayrea saying that the Brazilian rebel war­ ship Republica ran into and suhk the Bra­ zilian transport Rio de Janeiro and drowned 1,300 soldiers. The number lost had formerly been reported at 500. Stone to Hang Feb. 10. WASHINGTON, Ind., Nov. 6.--James K. Stone pleaded guilty to the murder of ths Wratten family, the jury found him guilty, and Judge Heffren sentenced hiin to be hanged in the prison south Feb. 16 next. |jflARKET8 BY TELEGRAPH, Ksw York Financial. NEW YOBK, Money on call easy. Offered at 1H pet cent. Prime mercantile paper per cent. Sterling exchange steady with actual business in bankers5 bii ̂ at 484@184% foi demand and for sixty days; posted rates, 488&4B5, Commercial bilk, 470?£ @480. fiUvor certiflcataa, 70s bid; no aides; har s0> ver, «&%, Government bonds, 4*8 regular, lllMfc do A coupons, 111}$; do 2's *96; Pacific 6's UHL Hew York Grain and Produce. NEW YORK, Nov. 6. Wheat-^Janoary, 60®fl»^c; May, 74J4@74%ct December, 67^(307 13-16c. Rye--Nominal. Corn--December, 47}£<&479£c; May, Oats--December, 3596@85}£c; white state, 40@ 41c; white western, 40@41c. Pork--New mess, |1».()0@2Q.00; family, $a0.00®a0.g0*. siioi v clear, $19.00@20.7«. Lard--Easy; prime western steam, $10.40 nominal. Chicago Grain and Produce. CHICAGO, NOV. «. Following were the quoations on the Board of Trade today: Wheat--November, opeued flic, closed 60>^c; December, opened 63^c, closed ei%c; May, opened 69^c, closed 68J£c. Corn--November, opened 38%c, closed 38%c; December, opened 38J^c, closed 38^c, May, opened 42>^c, closed 42^c. Oats--No­ vember, opened closed 2H^c; December, opened 29%c, closed 283^c; Mav, opened 32c, closed 31%c. Pork--November, opened $ , closed $ ; January, opened $14.35, closed $14.32}^. Lard--January, opened $8.37& closed $8.40. Produce: Butter--Fancy separator, 27^c per lb; fancy dairy, 24@25c; packing stock, 15@ 16c. Eggs--Fresh stock, 21c perdoz. Poultry --Hens, per lb; roosters, 5c; turkeys, 9@9^c; ducks, 8®8^c; geese, $5.00®7.00 per doz. Potatoes--Burbanks, 55®58c per bu; Hebrons, 5SJy>.jt>c; mixed stock, 4;Vj£50c; sweet potatoes, Illinois, &2.(X)@2.26 per bbl. Apples- Fancy, $2.7&Si3.50 per bbl. Cranberries--Wis­ consin bell and cherry, $4.s0®i>.00 per bbl Honey--White clover. 1-lb sections, 14®15c broken comb, 10@.12c; dark comb, good ouoUi- tion, 10®12c; extracted, 6©8c per lb. Chicago Live Stock. . I , CHICAGO. NOV. 8. Live Stock: The prices at the Union Stock Yards today ranged as f°ll°w Cattle--Estimated receipts tor the day, 16,000, including 2,1)00 Texans and 3,000 westerns; native steers rather easier; yet a prime lot made $5.75, and good mediums, $5.0lXts»o-'i->; others, »4.50f</j4.N0. Hoics -- Estimated receipts for the day, 30,000; markot slow at llXSftlSc lower; rough, $5.76@5.80; mixed and packers, $5.90®«.IV>; mediums, »i. )5a»6.10; heavy weights, |8.10@8.<i0; light, receipts for the day, top sheep, ^3.80®3.76; Proossdinors of the Board of Tmstees. COUNCIL ROOM, NOV 6,1893. Board met pursuant to adjournment. Present fall board except Trustee Howe. Minutes of last meeting read and ap­ proved. Tbe following bills were presented and ordered paid. N. L. Holmes, police Mrvioe0..»....f4O 00 John Wateb, " " ........ 41 60 «. W. Besley, bill to date 3 30 A. O. Rupp, pub. 2d quarter pro.. 12 50 Perry & Owen, bill to date 14 50 Wm. Bacon, " " 50 S. McDonald, street commissioner 3« 65 H. McDonald, street labor 22 50 John Derraont, " 4 50 S. K>«ijw5y, " 2 25 G. McDonald, " 4 50 N. Wirtz 150 Owen Estate, gravel 7 50 On separate ballot the bill of G. W. Owen, of |28.2T), for Are pump was ae- epted as follows: v Ayes--Nordquist, GwiigertV Nays--Howard, Besley. Being a tie the President voted aye and the bill was ordered paid. On motion by Granger seconded by BeBley, C. B. Huber's bill of |9.15 was was left with clerk for settlement. On motion by Granger the committee on miscellaneous business were given un­ til next regular meeting to report Motion by Howard seconded by Owen that tbe old walk in front of Edward Perkins' residence be taken up and re­ placed by a new three plank walk to con­ nect with street crossing running east and west. Ayes, full board. Motion by Howard seconded'by Nord- quist that the present crossing from Wm. Walsh's lot north be discontinued and a new one laid from northeast cor­ ner of same lot across, it to connect with anew three plank vralk to be laid on north side-of- -Jstreet running east from old walk to east corner of John Evonson's lot. Ayes -- Owen, Howard, Nordqnist, Besley. Nays--Granger. Motion carried. On motion by Howard the President appointed a committee consisting of Besley, Granger, and Howard to ascer­ tain the probable cost of an electric light plant for the city, and to report at next regular meeting. On motion by Owen seconded by Bes­ ley the village attorney was instructed to enforce the R. B. Ordinances regard­ ing crossings. On motion by Besley tbe board were allowed their salaries to data as follows O. N. Owen 00 G. W. Owen 18 00 Henry Nordquist 19 50 f!.H. Granger 19 50 R. A. Howard..,.--- 18 00 E.W.How e 18 00 G. W. Besley 18 00 F. L. McOmber 25 00 On motion adjourned. G. W. OWEN, President. F. L. MCOMBER, Clerk. Sheep Ebti 1,000; no top lambs,. St.' Wheat 57c nominal bid. Corn 35c bid; 34%c-, Janu er; cash, 'M cember, 27c Quiet; &1H.' Steady; '.M $• ' i and Produce. ST. LOUIS, NOV. 6. 57H»c; November, asked;,, May, 6f££c November, 4%e asked; year, 38^c. Oats-Low- nominal; De- 81Mc asked, New buckwheat floor, fancy patent white flour, graham, corn meal and rye flour at Evan son's. Note the many reductions at Evanson's. Be sure and examine the heavy cotton flannels offered at EvansOn's for 8 cents per par(3. Dress flannels, of good quality, 36 in wide, 25 cents per yard, at Evanson's. An elegant new stock mittens has just been Farmers' Store. Handsome mors' Store. of gloves and received at the caps on sale at the Far- 48.60. Whisky-- Fur caps a specialty at the Farmers1 Store. A. P. Baer has made arrangements with a talented Chicago artist to enlarge pictures for the patrons of the Farmers Store. Each person will receive a beau­ tiful enlarged picture for every twenty- Pork-- t flVe dollars' worth of trading done at Vm store. •c * -Mt ^ NOTHING SPEOIAJTI IlisTHIS EXCEPT THE FACT! • v. That we have made a &weepine Reduction In our| Iprices on all. kinds of Dry Goods, Notions ̂Boots & Shoes, Also Groceries, And ask the people of McHtenry and vicinity to call and inspect out wtok jja always complete* a#d «•* ̂ „ 4 Yours, . JOHN L STORY i seas { $ . y \ •' 4 *•* ' V * ' ,, " -< ' ..At. ! * .I;, V 1-' /4 jjl * r +*" tk i\* \^ ^ Hi Some articles are now e are stowing a stock of UNDERWEAR V* : That cannot fail to suit you, both in price and quality. Do you intend to buy an ? y If so let us talk to you. 4 > 1 > mm* i R CRingwood, 111. -- ' 4"r i 5 •¥mm THE STAFF OF J /IFJESjj y * v*; - r" j -Vi* ^ " *< s.-'f ; 11 I H 'ii i;':!1' ; m % vow -f „ wm-' f , V n ! W: Th.k.ku. beeanse tbe»re«»ord has bee" brok«n. and the rechrg St this tine IS: C- Sold in M* Uenrv since the 1st day of January. 1893. to the l.t day of Oct. 18*3, ^ | Fourteen Car Loads of Pillsbur»'s Best Flour. jT'Sr. . AND IT STILL STANDS AT THE TOP. For Sale by all the Leading Merchants, and at the Roller Mills ^ W« >10™ «. irood hieh jrrade of Flour at f 1 per sach, and for the price we challenge; comparison ®A?so a full Patent Flour at«1.05, and we do not exagerate when we ?• .= guarantee it equal to other grades that cost more money. Try it and be convinced. - Tn thA mTm«ra ofVcHenry and vicinity would «ay that we are again prepared to do yonr ; F/»Art and w «ft GrinrtinK i.rompttv. On wheat w® wUi jtuarantee as pood a return la , i snd ou«ntUy M any c «tom mill in the State of lliino .̂ and wor.kl respectfully a»lt WttW p» necdqof2nyrh"giny is line to giv^e ™«»^»al on the a hovejtuawntes Bran and Mtddlings for Sal©. WlW in need Of 11 <'"r leave your order at the Koiier Mills and we will do the rest. &A1L.14L ,'y *' ' . i ' - i -u ^ ̂ «ii *¥' V * i1 w . . ....at *\ %r ... t- . i* ... JfcO mailto:5.76@5.80

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