E8DAY. FEB, 4, 1891. Editor. 4N §LTKB, ' ' I STANDARD QUALITY, Bdjvr arriving daily which will be SQ14 OH the closest Pfofili only in ossible, c t. Car sistent with long experience ully examine our A Bn Hot 8al« PAPER * OOw*S Kewspap er Advertising lumat 8trMt)> where advertising NEW YORK- 1ST Batter was quiet, with large offer- ingK, on the Elgin Board of Trade, Mon day. Sales were 20,040 pounds at 25 cents, against 26 and 27 cents for the corresponding day last year. IV Articles of incorporation of the PeKalb, Aorora and Eastern Railroad •were filed with the Secretory of State of Illinois Monday. The principal office is located at DeKalb, and the capital is $350,000. IC* Resolutions for the submitting to the people of the question of .calling Convention to &mieud the Constitution of the State were presented in the Illinois House of Representatives by Mr. White- bead, of Cook. tSf The Senatorial dead-lock at Spring- field still continues, with but little, if any, prospect of an election. There are indi cations that it may be put off until 1892 The air is full of rumors around the cap ital, and guessing as to the final result is OBt of the question. iSfThe body of B. H. Campbell, the Hireaithy cifSzen of Chicago who has been missing since N ovember, 28, was found floating in the river January 28, just two months after his disappearance. It is thought to be a case of deranged jnind brought on by physical weakness. T}. ^ •GT'In the organization of the Senate Committees at Springfield, Senat or Fuller V is chairman of the com mittee on railroads is second on the committee on Judicial department, and is also a member of the committees on Judiciary, revenue, insur- V *ace, corporations, bapks and banking, agriculture and drainage, World's Colum bian Exposition, congressional appor tionment, and building and loan asso ciations. This gives him a position on ten of the leading committees of the Senate. HOH. CHAS. E. FULLER'S SPEECH : NOMINATING- OGLESBY. Hon. Chan. E. Fuller, State Senator ,'SVV- fW>m this District, made the nominating - speech for ex-Governor Oglesby, in the Joint Assembly at Springfield, Jan. 21st • assembled to cast their ballots for United States Senator, and it is reported by all v to have been a masterly effort. In speak ing of it the correspondent of the Inter- Ocean says: When quiet had been restored, Senator Charies E. Fuller rose to nominate Ogtosby. Fuller needs no notes or man ttwript. He spoke not as a star perform er, with studied gestures and periods, but as an eloquent advocate inspired by 1 subject. Bethought on his feet ' once was he disturbed by the he brought from the opposite t the chamber. He was master of i«*W»too<i in the aisle and a compliment for the eloquent Democrat who had preceded him, and de- dared that the people of Illinois had al ready elected a Senator. The Democrats broke into wild applause at this, but Fuller stood undisturbed. It was his first baited hook, but the Democrats didn't know it until they swallowed hook and all, and he began to draw in Ids line. His voice came clear and resonant as he spoke of his sympa thy for the ignorance of the law in that party, and remarked that twenty-five of $he members present had been nominated and elected two years before the Demo- crate knew, except from past records, that John M. Palmer would again ask tor office. This brought the Republican aide of the house up with a yell, and the Democrats regretted their eagerness in grabbing that hook; but their first ex perience taught them nothing. They grabbed the bait every time the speaker threw it to them, and applauded what thtty thought was a slip of the tongue in an extempore effort. But the Democratic applause never once disturbed Fuller, who stood with a smile on bis face and waited for them to allow him to proceed. When •hat time came he began to take In hie line, and landed the Democrats as ® wise fisherman does a gamy bass. He Sis not once precipitate. He let them ve their play, and then made them feel W y. the sharp, pointed hook. His speech was One of the ablest, most adroit, and most eloquent ever delivered in a joint assem- | V Wy in this State. It gave a record of VSJoveraor Oglesby which few have touched upon, but which shows his loy- ' alty to the people, while in the executive " Office way back in 1867, when he vetoed tills in the interests of real estate corpo rations, and another corporation for the pHole manufacture of cheese. As he quoted from Oglesby's veto message on the last subject, that he could see no more right In one set of men holding a license to III make all the cheese in the country than he If:.; could in the same men holding a license to be allowed to eat all the cheese, the • Republicans made the hall ring with V-y ahouts. Mr. Fuller left that part of his l*{ f * v candidate's record which did not apply 'J ;5 - the present contest and devoted him- l ; «elf to living issues, showing that Gov fe^;; pernor Oglesby has always been right in - v these issues. Many Democrats afterward , admitted that Fuller's speech was the f e ; M* ; u K M t m a s t e r l y t h e y h a d e v e r h e a r d i n making a nomination, and it was the talk of €he hotels after the adjournment, ,r. ,r< As Interesting: Masonic Discovery. p., The Rev. Mr. Haskett Smith, vicar of v Braunceweil, in Lincolnshire, is said to ><} have made a discovery of special interest to Freemasons. Mr. Smith has been |4?«ojourning for some months with the Druses of Lebanon, by whom he had been | admitted into the most intimate relation J& consequence of the service rendered by I him in sacking the venom of a deadly snake from the body of a popular young member of their tribe. Among other marks of favor, Mr. Smith was initiated Into a number of mysterious rites, and among these, according to the narrative fie are quoting his hosts startled him, as 0, freemason, by passing the most charac- of Masonic signs. Hence Mr th argues that these strange people, by some are believed to be lineal de lta of ancient Hittites, are a branch great Phoenician race, whose an- eapplied the Lebanon cedars to of Solomon's temple.--Lon loriN PLAIKDKIUI, CEDAR MOUNTAIN, Wash., Jan. 10. This date seems wintry, but that is the only chilling surrounding present. Not snow-flake has fallen here this winter. Nineteen above zero has been our sever est weather. Ferns, mosses, and grass are in their richest, freshest green, and itiany flowers wear their sum mer glory. The air is mild and balmy as spring. The porch of our hotel is filled with guests enjoying an open air siesta. Sixty degrees marks the temperature to day. At early dawn, festive Chanticleer with his harem, struts, scratches and talks, cracking jokes with the early grub worm beetle. * Gating from ray window across the Cedar river, I behold a great log-shoot, 700 feet long, at an angle of forty-five degrees, and if 1 look long, I would see giant logs from four to eight feet in di ameter, racing down the incline against time. Six and one-half seconds is the best time yet made from the summit to fhe river below. Should a descending log strike another in the river, it would leap twenty-five feet in the air, and very likely land on the opposite bank. We have a photogroph of a fir stump which has over 72 grown people stand ing and sitting on its top. The base of the stump is 44 feet around. A. R. Allen, formerly of Rockford, 111., whom I chanced to meet here, says he measured one of those fallen monarchs of tbe forest which was 358 feet i*length, and he has seen a number whose altitude exceeded 400 feet. It is a tedious process to cut down these large trees. Sometimes they are gnarly and useless for lumber ten or fifteen feet above the ground, and in that case the tree is niched at the proper height. Two spring boards are then in serted at the proper distance apart, and two men mount these with a long cross cut saw and go at it. Sometimes it takes days of persistent sawing to level one of these tall fellows. Logging is mostly done with from four to ten yokes of cattle and not unfrequently with as team logger, which is a late invention. From Seattle we went by the Seattle & Northern Railway to Fairhaven, on the north-east corner of Pugit Sound This road has been completed about a month. We were ten hours riding about eighty or ninety miles. At Sedro, we met an old Elgin friend, Mr. Woolly, who has started a new town, bearing his own name, "Woolly." A* that point on the road, a darky woman poked her head from the car window and inquired, ."Is this here Woolly?" An Irish laborer looked up at the window and answered, "Well, I thinle it looks purty woolly." Mr. Woolly sold several lots, 25 feet front for $600 each, while we were at his place, and we do not believe there are 400 people, men, women, chil dren, dogs, bears and transients, in his town, all told. They use dynamite and fire in clearing the land of its monstrous growth of firs, cedars and hemlocks. The bodies of the trees stand so thickly that it is impossible to see twenty feet ahead of you in an ordinary forest, and In places yon can scarcely advance at all It costs two hundred and fifty dollars per acre to clear off the timber from this land, and yet the first crop of potatoes or hops more than liquidates this ex pense. Nothing is killed or stunted here by the cold of winter, and raspberries and whortleberries were brought in fresh and ripe between Christmas and New Years Cranberries, salmonberries, duberries blackberries, raspberries, thimbleberries and four varieties of whortleberries, thrive in prolific profusion, and can be gathered from May until January. Lon and Mabel are in a state of con stant and delightful excitement, over the abundance, variety and novelty of mosses, ferns, and monster forests. To all of us it seems like a veritable wonder land. The roofs of buildings look as if painted green, and the trunks and limbs of trees are nearly hidden with a luxur ious verdant growth of moss. When one walks, he seems to be treading upon a thick, yielding carpet of matted vegeta tion. Now a huge fallen cedar obstructs his progress, which has lain there hun dreds of decades, and seems to be yet sound, with live trees several feet in diam eter growing out of its prostrate form. Yeins of coal from four to twenty feet thick, crop out here and there. Great mountains of iron ore, excellent in qual ity, abound. The streams'indicate the presence of the precious metal, but pros pecting is very difficult oq account of the rank vegetation. The Indians here are too indolent to hanker after hair. I do not think the most enterprising of them would take your scalp, unless you pulled it off and handed it to them. They are a lazy, re pulsive, filthy set. Over east of the Cas cades, at Ruby City and Spokane Falls, they are quite different. Six companies of militia from Tacoina and Seattle, have been sent over to quell the ghost dancers; but it is looked upon as a little Quixotic. Perhaps I can't see well enough to get badly scared, but I have purchased a silver plated Smith & Wes son, 38 caliber, and am practicing at a big stump, ten feet by fifteen, at five paces. 1 have not hit the stump yet, but expect to before my one hundred cart ridges are gone. I intend to have George stand on the stump and whoop, a la ghost danoer, which I think will have a tendency to render my aim more deadly. Monopoly has its greedy clutches on this land of promise. A rich company, owning a line of boats and narrow gauge railway, running through this rich valley of coal fields, possess everything, even the miners themselves; and th^jroppress ive arbitrary greed is fast sucking the wealth and prosperity from this richly endowed land. At Black Diamond every thing must pay tribute to Cuesar. If a poor woman wants to help pay her fam ily expenses by keeping a few boarders, she must pay five dollars per month roy alty to this oppressive monopoly. The employees are compelled to burn coal at the Company's exorbitant prices, when wood is rotting on the ground by thous ands of cords. The company has, fig uratively, built a Chinese wall around Black Diamond, and its inmates are slaves. No drummer, no tourist, no con , wrt troupe, can cotne to this town, there are no aOMttDaodations for theto. The company** boarding house, poor at best, is atwagre taxed to its utmost ca pacity, and all others are frowned upon who dare to give shelter to strangers. Added to this is the natural clanishness of the miners, and the suspicion with which they look upon all now comers, especially should they dai-e to drees or appear in any way different from them selves. Yes, we look upon Black Diamond, New Castle, Frauklyn, and other puffed up Washington mining camps, as su preme humbugs, and dangerous ground to tread upon from every point of view. In regard to the threatened war with Canada, should it commence, it wi'l prob ably last from six to eighteen months, with the result that Canada would no longer belong to John II. Bull. Germany and England have all they ean attend to across the pond. Should they have the supreme bravado to attack Uncle Sam, France, and other European powers would look upon this as their oppor tunity, and if the tory element, so exten sive in tbe Revolution, and undoubtedly a waiting its opportunity in the South, dares to show its teeth, how easy it would be to turn the long oppressed colored population loose upon them. It. D. SCOTT, ' The Blind Musician. In quajity, quantity, prices and style to suit all. Weddinsj Outfits our specialty. Men's good heavy suits. $4 to $25, Boys Suits $3.50 to $14. Chilpren's Knee Pant Suits $1.50 to $5. In boys two-piece suits we have an extra bargain in two extra heavy j etyiea clark woo' suits at $1.90 to $2.75, each of which you cannot afford to miss. Just received a large and carefully selected stock.ofl ^(®"The production of tin-plate in Chi cago, St. Louis and Demmler, Pa., puts to shame the evil prophecies of the free traders. The latter, however, continue to assert that the industry can never be a success in America-, thereby showing a mean and stubborn spirit. But they can not keep the world from moving. * S pecial 30 Day Sale ! Your Eye"on the Discounts. Dissolution Notice, The firm of Fitzsimmons & Henderson has this d*y been dissolved by mutual consent, Mr. Andrew It. Henderson, of the late firm, will collect all outstanding accounts due the late firm, and Mr. J, 0. Fllzslmmons will pay all liabilities. J. O. FITZSIMMONS. A, H. HENDERSON. The undersigned will continue the business at the old stand, and solicits the continued patronage of his old friends and customers. J O. FITZSIMMONS. Administrator's Notice of Filing Final Settlement. STATE OF ILTJINOI51. McHenry County, SB. Estate of wm. Stewart, deceased, Public notice Is hereby given that the un dersigned, administrator of the estate of William Stowart, deceased, will attend be fore the County Court of McHenry county, at the Court Hons© in Woodstock, on the] Sd day of March, 1S91, next, for the purpose of making a final settlement of said estate, at which time and place I will ask for an order of distribution, and will also ask to be dis charged. All persons interested are notified to attend. * Woodstock, 111., Feb. 2d, A. D. 1891. ROBEttT ANDREWS, Administrator estate Wm. Stewart deceased. 30w8 Sale of Real Estate. STATE OF ILLINOIS, McHenry County, ss. McHen ry County Circuit Court, Jan uary Term, A, D., 18!»1. Anna M. Pitzen, et al, vs. Elizabeth Barbian et al. Bill for Partition. By virtue and in pursuance of a decretal order made in said case at said term, to me directed and delivered, I shall, on Monday, the 9th day of March, A. D., 1891, at one o'clock p. m., on the premises at Pistaqua Lake, McHenry Co., Illinois, offer for sale at public vendue, to the highest bi.ider for cash, the following described premises mentioned in Baid decree, to-wit: The N. W. fractional quarter (K), on the riirht bank of Pistaqua Lake of fractional section seven teen, in township forty-five, range nine, in the district of lands subject ro sale at Chi cago, 111,, containing sixty-three and 16-100 acres (63 16-I00a). Also the couth fraction of the S. W. fractional quarter (3tf) of fractional section eight (8) ia township forty-flve (48), range nine, containing tbirty-one and 46-100 acres (31 46-100 acres); also the north fraction of the north fractional half ()4) of fractional section seventeen (17), and the east fraction of south fraction of the N. E. fractional quar ter of section eighteen (18), in township forty five (45) north, range nine (9) containing sixt^ of fractional seVtion seventeen (17), tovns&tp (60) acres; also lot number four (4) in the W. corner of ttje S W. fractional quarter Of) hip Of th# very newest styles ami colors, at greftly reduced prices. New and staple Dress Goods, Prints. Ginghams, blue and red Calico and Cotton. Good Prints, 4c; standaid Prints. 5«; good Shirting, 5c; good Gin^hams; 5c; good and stylish spring Dre&i Goods, only 5c. New Embroideries and White Goods. This is for money savers. One- of the value donated to our customers. NEW CARPETS, NEW STYLES,lucentdiM„oT * "20 •• " Bed Blankets 20 .. !• J* Dress Flannels 20 «'• •£* , Jf* /;Shirting. • 20 ,Yarns- '$ 20 " ^ : Overcoats 20 . : J* , 1 Wens H'y Suits 20 '• §\f} *-<• % $ ur Caps tie#'.-, 30 ' Shawls Inspect our stock of new Carpets just received, all new and cheap. Extra heavy Hemp. 23c to 25c; half wool, 40c to 50c ; Oil Cloths, Stair Carpets, Rugs, Wall Paper and Borders, New mounted Window Shades all ready to fasten on. window with best fixtures, 30, 35, 42, 50 and 60 cents, all bargains. Our new stock ofl SOOTS, SHOES & RUBBERS,= 15 per ceni d!scrt on Under wear 15 ««••««• Quilts 15 *** , £ & G Hosiery 10 « «. • glen's Boots 10 * Men's H'y Sh't Good Standard Prints 5 cents Cheaper grades . 2 ** • Yard wide good Sheeting 6 " Job lot Buttons 3c per dozes ^ arrive in about 10 days. Please wait. New Trunks. Va-J liles, Satchels, etc., at correct prices. Good large grey or white! Goat Robes for only $3.5C, almost given away. Fifteen per cent discount on all warm or winter goods, for cash,! during February, without exception. * Clean and Wholesome Groceries. Only kept by us in stock and on the prices ot Groceries and Flour we lead them all and cheerfully deliver all goods promptly inside the corporation. Never satisfied to sell you a liberal share of your goods we even protect at present by Insurance, in reliable companies, the property ot almost 700 parties, and will not rest until we make it 1400. All business iu this line transacted care fully and with abundant experience, to insure entire security to the policy holder, as all policies, including all transfers, changes, etc*, a"re carefully copied in register and locked in sate. 0 J 3, ^* fe west McHenry, YOUHS TRULY, Simon Illinois. forty-five (45) north, range nine (9), east of the the third P .M., bounded as follows: begin ning at the qW»t«r ,'ii) poet on the west side •if fractional section seventeen, tience south eighty-nine and one-half degrees (89# de grees), east seven chains and forty-three and one-third links to a post in th« mound • from. which a while oak tree fourteen (14) inches in diameter leans, thence south forty-four de grees (44 degrees), west iifty.one (51) links distant, thence south one-fourth (}£; degree, east nine (9) chains and seventy-five links to a post in a mound from which a black oak tree eight (8) inches in diameter leans, north forty-five degrees, east forty links, t> ence north eighty-seven and one-half degrees, west seven (7) chains, fifty-two and one- third M links to a post in a mound from which a black oak tree tour (4) inches in diameter leans north forty five degrees, east forty links, thence north eighty-soven (87) and one- naif (X) cegrees west seven chains and fifty- two and one-third links to a post In a mound from which a black oak tree four (4) inches in diameter leans, south forty-three («) and one- half (J£) degrees, east nine (9} links, thence north on the section line nine (9) chains and seventy-fl^e (75) links to the place of Degin- ning, containing seven and 34-100 acres (7 34-100) more m lees. Also lot three in the south-west fractional quarter of fractional section seventeen (17) in township forty-five [45] north range nine eaBt of third P. M., con taining seven [7j and 25-100 acres. Alro lot two [2] of the S. W- quarter [Jf] of section seventeen [17] in town forty five iioitix range nine [9] east of third P. M., containing seven and 37-WO acres [7 37-100] more or less, bound ed on tbe north by lands owned by John Pitzen, on the east by Nicholas Mulladous' land, on the south by lands of Chauncey Beckwlth. on the west by the lands of John Pitzen, excepting from all of the above de> scribed lands the homestead and dower of Anna M. Pitzen, widow of John Pi zen. de ceased, and bounded as follows: Commencing at blazed line tree sixteen inches in diameter thence west 3J>7 chains, to a hickory eighteen [18] Inches in diameter, blazed, thence south 4.27 chains to an iron stake in orchard, thence east 6.81 chains to an iron stake, thence north 26% degrees, west 4.71 ehains to place of be ginning, striking a hickory 97 links from starting point, containing 2 U2 acres. Aiso a piece of land bounded as follows: Commenc ing at Pistttqua I.ake, at a point where east and west quarter tines of said section seven teen intersects the lake, thence west on quarter line thirteen and elghteen-hun- dredths [13 18-100] ehatne, to notched oak fence post, thence north 1178-100 cha ns to an iron stake, thence east 4 8-1C0 chains to blazed hictory, being northwest corner of homestead, thence south on west line of homestead, 4 27-100chains to south-west cor uer of homestead, thence east on south line of homestead 5 81-100 chains to south-east corner of homestead, thence south 26% de grees, east 2 00-100 chains to a hickory nine teen [191 inches in diameter, thence east 2 26-100 chains to a boulder 26 by 2® inches on border of lake, thence Booth % degrees, west 5 chains to place of beginning, leaving an tr ular niece between last line and lake, con taining 11 76-1U0 acres. Also & piece of land commencing at one quarter post on the west of said section seventeen, thence east 21 24-100 ohains on east and west quarter line thence south 9 80-100 chains, thence west 21 -24-100 chains, thence north on section line 9.80 chains to place of beginning, containing twenty and 8f-100acres, All of tbe above de scribed land situated in the county of Me Henry and State of Illinois M. L . JOILYW, Master in Chancery, McHenry Oi Woodstock, 111., Jan. 24, 1891. mvite «5omparison goods and rices. FOR THE NEXT T C DAYS 1 will offer £the greatest Bargains fn a) J Goods in before seen in McHenry County. This is Cotton and Woolen Dress Goods, Prints, Ginghams, etc. Do ilot fail! !|tostep in. J OHN West McHenry* i^* ; : i / A y Alarm Clocks, $1.25; Spectacles irom 10 cents to $1;. Good Gold] Filled Watches, from $10 to $20. '•r?W Rogers Bros* Knives and Forks, Double Plate, $3.75 per set of | six each. ' All other goods in proportion. Qall and .see me* will pay you.- m: OHN P. SMITH. MoBENBY, ILLINOIS. .any Articles in y our stools; are being offered and V sold at prices way below competition. Call and we will prove our assertion & A RELIABLE FAMILY NEWSPAPER. That ia the Character Almost Universally Given to Wbbki,Y INTER OCBMI> So great la its popularity that for years it has had the IiAROEBT CIRCUX*fe> TXON of any CMcago weekly newspaper. It is ably and carefully edited in ©very department with a sceclal view to ittt usefulness in THE HOME, THE WORKSHOP" and THE BUSINESS OFFIC®. It is a ^pijsisteijt F^epublieai) JVeu/spaper, Rlnpwood, Illinois!! agonistic to both put . 3HARY DEPARTM: Its contributors some of the MOST PO The FOUEION AND :osses all PUDUC Questions candidly and ably, while it gives ialrtn political oppon ents, it is bitterly OPPOSED TO TRUSTS AND MONI . - as antagonistic to both public and private interests. u. THE IjTTERARY DEPARTMENT ct^hejgager^ia^excellent, and has amoH0 T A A \ T O M A D E O N F A R M L A N D A N D LUAN .SrSsDittorroiers. J* W. BANSTEAD, Bordon Blk. Elgin, 11). TENNIS CANDEE C. H. Fargo &&>. AQENT8, '» 'Wrt • Bonslett & Stoffel Agents for MoHen y, Butdlscussea all public Q ue st i on 9 c andi d 1 j _and ably~ -3££i le. it lvea_ OLIES5^ aper ia e: AUTHORS of tbe day. __ DOMESTIC CORRESPONDENCE, SERIAL AMD SHORT STORIES are the equal of those oi any similar publication in tbe country* ill loitk's Depamneit, * Curiosity Shop, * Yonai's Kiigtoi, • aid • Til m|| ARE IN THEMSELVES EQUAL TO A MAGAZINE. " % In addition to all this the NEWS OP THE WORLD ia given in its columM every week. In all departments it is carelully edited tor competent man eiX* ployed lor that purpose. TEE PRICE OF THE WEEKLY INTER OCEU IS $1.00 PER IEUL THE SEMI-WEEKLY INTER OCEAN is published each Monday aad Thursday morning, end is an excellent publication tor those who can not secujW a daily paper regularly and are not satisfied with a weekly. t TEE PRICE OF TEE SEBI-WEEKLTIHTER OCEAH IS $100 PER YEil By Special Arrangement with tbe Publishers o That Magazine and Tbe Weekly Inter Ocean are • SoU Smnt to Subscribers One Yemr for Two Dollars ascf Ninety ' TEN CENTS LESS THAN TUB FK1CE OF THE JUfiAZINE ALONE. F"SH BKtf® sr " SLICKER Tho PTSHEEAKDSLICKBEifwarrantwl waterproof, «nd •wiUketp yon dry fa tho iiavdeat etorm. Tho Dew POMMEL SLICKER la • perfec* riding CO«», «M cows tbo entire saddle. Bewmro of Imitation*. Nona genuine without U» r Brand" trade-mark, nitutrated Catalogue free, A. J. Tower, Beaton, M-- Ht faterpf Coat BEST WEEKU $1.00 PER YEAR. E9TABU8H£D AT CHICAGO, IN 1841. $1.08 PER YEAR. iv . i fj i; me? JournafSr AL COMMISSIONS given to activeagents- BAM PUB COPIES never asked lor. Address all orders TBS mTBR OCEAN. ChiOtgO. S A V E Y O U R C H I L D ' S L I F E ! If yonr little one ahonld be taken Tf-HICNT with MtDbnii- «» Crujip, what would yon dof Wbat pbyiieUa coald aave Rest jn»lble iu life t illE. Bsldin'sl CROUP )veara reran la • ImHlan, barmlen powder, aad I* tbe only Mfegnard •It baa never failed. Order MOW from r<rar druggia' itw. Prie«, *oc. ARStapiopowderbr mat 1 for 10c. Til W. WIW HWHOTUW BO, M«AICA,i.f |anquet Lamps, Piano 9, Hanging Lamps. Call and Lamps A fine WANTED! urente; tarrl ction and tranaportauon WHATP THE FARM.' ORGH^RO ANO TIFLESIOC. DEVOTED TO PRACTICAL AND CORRECT INFORMATION ON ^•CULTURE, LIVE STOCK, VETERINARY, DAIRY, HORTICULTURE, ENTOMOLOGY, POULTRY, BEES, ' GARDEN AND LAWN, SCIENCE, MARKETS. rf ilM aaenta. No can. •aaalug, bat. to take charge of local axente; territory riffhte re- •ervedtbuelneM too large to be managnd from main office. Instruction and tranaportauon VBEt to rUrbt par- tios. AJdww Treae. UAKKBIX LITBRA- RY Ci/DB, » Frank. 11a St., Obleago, IU. The finest line of Whitewash and Paint Brushes in town at Besley'a West Side i VAUSLLY Journal for two generation*, the acknowledjfed favorite, at tbe flrecldK of western homes. riie Mouweltold Department* oarefnlly prepared and illustrated deUfthtsthe ladles. (ie miscellany. Pnzxles* and Tonne Folks endear It to the jauag members of tbe ̂ family. ' I with Practical Illustrations and Concise, Timely Topics ot General TnUu'ei ;. ' 1 • v* ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. its 51st year. Send ArtWWSfc, CWCA60, HAr Do not fail to read TH* PRAIIIIE FASMBS during 1891--its 51st year. OOpy or subscrite at once, addressing THF PPAIPIC FJUBMEB PUB. M Send for free 1