&acoxnm«nded *• a Candidate fer Oon 1891. AY, AUG. 5, ?A» «LYKE, Skulor. 4Ukd« DA DTM> lftkylntMWtw _ -SS-S IW (»tprao* atiwtx Where arfWrtMBf ina-iTs NEW YORK. 10** Butter wan active on the Elgin B >ard of Trade, Monday. Sales were made at 18 and 18^ cents, against 19)4 and 2034 cents one year ago. • tSTElgin and Aurora are talking of an electric railroad connection. The idea fe to take in the river villages, St. Charles Geneva and Batavia. It would be a great convenience and certainly, in pleas ant weather, the ride up Mid down the banks of the beautiful Fox river will be delightful and ought, of itself, tempt to enough patronage to fly far toward pay ing running expenses. I©* The story told by Thomas Bell, a negro, who arrived at Memphis on Tues day from a Mississippi plantation owned by T. J. Jefferson, would indicate that something very like slavery exists on some plantations. Bell was the sole sur vivor of nine cotton pickers who were lulled in their beds because they had asked for pay, and showed a disposition to quit work upon refusal of it, They were strangers on the plantation and were employed during the cotton picking season, The new constitution of Missis sippi deprives the negro of political rights and the next step would* natural^ be enslavement. WaT On Tuesday afternoon of last week there was a meeting of the Republican editors of Illinois, at the Grand Pacific Hotel, Chicago, to consult with the Re publican State Central Committee. The meeting was a large one there bang rep resentatives from nearly every county in the state, and there was manifested an enthusiastic and aggressive spirit. On<? of the results of the meeting was the organization of a State Association of Republican editors of Illinois, with an organization, and vice-presidents for the congressional districts of the State. This association will be a valuable aid ia tbe campaign of 1892. PH.: 169" District Attorney Nicholl has de cided to prosecute the most obscure news paper in the city of New York for publish ing accounts of the recent executions at Sing Sing. This paper is the Daily News and it probably needs the advertising which prosecution will give it. The ques tion is, will the owners of the paper de fend the suit with any energy, or allow it to go by default and thus enable the promoters of secret executions to get at least one decision in their favor. The public will soon be able to judge whether ration of the News is to test the the Court of Appeals or to secure from <me of tin lower The Wbitweide Sentinel, in speaking of the failure of the Legislature to appor tion the State into Congressional dis tricts under the census of 1890, therefore leaving the election Jor the four extra Congressmen to be elected at large by the State, says as we are now entitled to four additional members, making our Congressional representation twenty-four instead of twenty as now. Then says: "The northern part of the State, outside of Chicago, should furnish one of these Congressmen-at-laTge, and in looking the field over the Sentinel is of the opiuion that no more acceptable candidate can be found than Hon. Charles E. Fuller, of Boone county. Mr. Fuller has for four teen years served in the capacity of Sen ator or representative in the Legislature, and during these years among his many able associates has stood the peer of any, a leading and commanding figure in the halls of legislation. One of the best de baters and most eloquent orators in the Stat3, of great experience in legislative matters pertaining to State interests, possessing extended knowledge of na tional affairs, in the fullness of mental and bodily vigor, he possesses the neces sary elements to make him a strong can didate. Every word true, and a candi date that would be a pleasure for the Herald to support. As the Sentiuela&ys, the northern part of the State outside of Chicago is entitled to this nomination. It is here in the Fifth and Sixth Congres sional districts that the Republican party has to look to furnish the majority to secure the election of the State ticket at every election, and still from year to year the party insists in taking most of the candidates from the middle or southern part, of the State where they more often cast a Democratic majority, and leave the Fifth and Sixth Congressional dis tricts to save the candidates from defeat. The Fifth District is, we know, ably rep resented by the sterling man, Hon. A. J. Hopkins, still we hope to see them as patriotic for the nomination of Hon. C. E. Fuller, as will be the Sixth Congres sional district. The manly and firm stand taken by him as the head of the Republican steering committee of the last legislature should commend him to every Republican voter in the State, and should give him the unanimous nomina tion in the next R "publican State Con vention. Put us down in favor of the nomination of Hon. C. E. Fuller, of Boone county, as one of the nominees at large for Representative in Congress. Rochelh Herald. The bureau of statistics of the; treasury department has issued a sum mary and review of the foreign immigra tion and commerce of the United States daring the fiscal year ending June 30, 1891. It gives also a comparison of the imports and exports during the past nine months, during which the new tariff law has been in effect, as compared with the corresponding nine months of the preced ing fiscal year. The statement says that the total value of the commerce of the past fiscal year was the greatest in the history of the government and exceeded the total value of the commerce of 1890 by the sum of $82,191,803. The com merce of 1890 was the largest for any year in the history of the government up to that time, exceeding the commerce of the prior year by the sum of $156,606, 063. Oar total commerce during the past fiscal year amounted to $1,729,830, 896. Hone so Blind ®te» A free trade investigator found ia Cleve land aod Chicago tin-plate mills in course of construction but not yet in operation. That satisfied Mm. He announced that lie was "at the end of his quest." It satisfied the New York Times, also, which quoted the report of the investigator, beaded with the gonlishly gleeful words "Mythical Tin Plates." The search evi- dently was not exhaustive. The investi- t- , gator didn't want to find any tin plate t; mills; he was only after material with which to decry the new industry. So, in t .furtherance of this purpose, he brought Us quest to a sudden end, It is not difficult to find tin plate facto- V lies in this country. The product is / being turned out by several establish mente, among which are the following: The Niedringhaus work at St. Louis; „V Norton Brothers, Chicago; United States Iron and Tin Plate Company, Demmler, Pa.; P. H. Laufman & Co., Apollo, Pa.; the N. & G. Taylor Company, PhiladeL phia. Others are being erected in Brook lyn and Jersey City. Several firms in Bfennsylvania and Ohio are making the iron sheets which, after being coated with tin, become tin plate. Any investi gation which fails to discover these establishments is a fraud. But let the IMS traders croak. They are only mak ing a record that will plague them in the future and stamp them as creatures whose assertions and predictions are utterly unworthy of trust. If the Ameri can people cannot make tin-plate that' is as good and as cheap as the foreign article, the enterprise will be the first great manufacturing undertaking in . which they have failed. But they will not il, no matter how many blindfolded in stigators go gr oping a botii the iftji errands of non-discovery. Devil's l*ke. to this marvelous Lake, 111th. Round trip only $2.00. LMP Ringwood on regular train at 7:SBr'a. m.; McHenry at 7:30 jhuI TerraCotta at 7:40 a.m. If you " »see some of the grandest scenery continent go on this excursion. A Decree of Exile. The facts in the case of the American boy, Frank Sherman, who came to New York as a stowaway on the steamship England, working his passage, have been freely published in the City, and it is sin gular that no one has taken the trouble to bring him into court on a writ of habeas corpus. Although he was born and educated in Milwaukee, General O'Beirne, acting superintendent of immi gration. would not allow him to land, bat returned him to the steamship Eng land on which he is confined while the vessel is getting ready to sail. It is a singular decision that prevents an Amer ican citizen from landing on American soil®* It is possible that General O'Beirne will relent at the last moment and release the lad instead of sending him across the water again. Sherman is not an immi grant in any sense of the term, and Gen. O'Beirne is simply stubborn in refusing to accept the boy's statement and the telegram from his mother in the West as proof of his American citizenship. If the methods employed in the boy's case be followed in future, it will be im possible for a poor American who loses his money abroad to land again on American soil, even after working his passage home. The return of young Sherman will be a disgrace to the city of New York and to the government of the United States. That government is sup posed to protect its citizens instead of expelling them from the territory of the United States because of their poverty, WASHBURN Flour Mills Co. BEST IT IS THE BEST. Use Pillsbury's Best Flour and your bread will always be a well spring of joyin the family? light, aweel and wholesome. BAKES WHITER BREA E>, j BAKES BE J TER BREAD Than any other flour manufac tured. If you are not using Pillsbury's Best try a sack and you will use no other, only$1.50 per sack. We also carry JjPASHBUEN'S BEST. ^ And' will guarantee it to be the best flour offered on the market for the money, $1.40 per sack, made from No. 1 Hard Northern Wheat, and a strictly first class Patent Flour. Every sack war ranted to please or money re funded. Remember, only $1.40 per sack, and delivered to any part ot the city, (jive us your orders and we will try and please you in quality and price in any, flour you might want. Remember the pladev Tie Foi Biver Valley RoiJer Mills. !. 500.000 BARRELS' M#NrHN IIIIfllH*1 iiiii n|!JI }i||nTn !>'!!!! Famous Milwaukee Lager Bear. MANUFACTURERS AND BOTTLER6 OF THE ANNUAL CAPACITY 1.500.000 BARRELS .ITR method of bottling beer is the only and the best way for the simple reason that the beer goes direot from the cask to the bottle. Our brewery is the only one ia the United States that conveys the beer di rect from the storage cellars through an underground pipe line to the bottling department, where it is bottled without once being exposed to the open air and its impurities. It is thus kept at the same low tem perature of the storage cellars all the time. A recent act of Congress allows us to operate a Pipe Line be- tween our Brewery and our Bottling House. This great innovation enables the Pabst Brewing company, the largest establishment of its kind in the world, to furnish the public bottled beer for family or table use which contains as much natural life as a glass drawn from a freshly tapped barrel. Visitors to Milwaukee are com dially invited to inspect the operation of our new line. THE BOTTLED BEEB8 OF IWI BREWERY AREf OUk ALLJDVEB THE CIVILIZED W0BLB. Agonqit in All tin Lading Citm. * j Our Most Celebrated Brands are"Bavarlan." "Export" "Bohemian." "8eBect.""Hofbraetia9" „ and the World-Renowned Concentrated Extract of Maltand Hope, the "Beet Tonio."* j IkBBMttlPUSTBBEWIlie COMPANY It tki FAVMITE BEVERA6E at iU ttl IEADWS HOTELS* SUMMER RESORTSbAMSKK H. C. SMITH, Agent, McHenry, 111. NTA defect has been discovered in the ballot reform bill passed by the late- Illinois legislature. It does not affect the legal value of the bill, '.but it may affect the exchequer of 101 Republican newspapers and an equal number of Democratic county papers throughout the State. The county commissioners are instructed, according to the last sec tion, to have the law published in the two leading papers of opposite political complectaon in their county, but there is no provision in the law, or in any other law, for executing the provisions of the last section. This section"incurs a maximum expense of |6,000 Sor pub lishing the law, and makes no appro priation of money, except inferentially. A bill appropriating the money to psy for this work was prepared during the session, but it did not get through, and now the matter must be settled by the courts.--Newspaper Union. America 301 N. Clark St., CHICACO, MLL» 'W' Ifc"-< ' • ^ Great Blood Purifier. Cures all Blood Diseases tint arise from the effect of Bad Blood. A »ure euro for Cancer, Oaten-rah, Piles, Sick Headache, Dys- Whooping cough, iBheumatisrn.hOon- •tipation, etc. Blossoms, per pound* - : : Fluid Extract, per bottle SofeiD Extract, per ponnfl «UK> 1.00 2.80 . Both the Solid and Flo id Extracts are made from the same stock of Blossoms, and are equally as good and eflioaeioas as the Bios, soma. FOB SALS BT ALL DRUQQ1BT&. Excuufliotr to Devil's Lake, Tuesday, jLugust 11th. Bound trip only f 2. Are you Coming to n Const? Fair? AT WOODSTOCK, AUG. 25-28, 189J| » ' ' * * • \ > * • <£#• * A*-4- » ,-t : No Premiums Paid to Exhibitors outside of the County this year. This ought to arouse the People wno are interested in THE FAIR, and encourage them to make Greater Efforts In Its behalf than ever before. !»'C. For Premium Lists address A. F. FIELD, Secretary. n iliiiini'i'n 0AYLO ro*D nonw* Embracing the celebrat* ed General Giflord. Green Mountain & Morrill blood. Stock for Sale. Stallions snd Fillies, eiend for pedigrees. Kesex and Registered Poland China SWINE Choice Merino Sheepf •BREEDOTSSoiv^OICt jnPJGANltfOgSESM [w-m«Y-rrofiY CO^lunB --vl MAMMOTH Bronze Turkeys* HIGH GRADE JERSEY CATTliE. For sale. Come and In spect stock, or address J.R. Sailor & Sons, West McHenry, 111. ft. 8. CtJBTIS t SOS, Crainer. Paper Hangers, Kalsominers, Decorators. McHENRY% ILLINOIS, Alt work promptly done and sat'sfbetiott guaranteed. Country work a specialty. Gall on or address ^ Q. 8. Curtis A Son- McHBNRY. ILLINOIS, 4 " v * CANDEE TENNIS C.N. Fargo &Ct. AGENTS, f CHICAGO, ILL J • WST? HOTEL WO0D8TOCK. ^ CANDEE BrrUATKD OPPOSITE The Minora Spring. W, H. ROTNOUR, ^ r 'v / THE BEST Of SAMPLE ROOMS IN CONNECTION. SIMON STOFFEL, A ent for McHenry III. D. NKIDHAM'8 SONS Iie-Ilf DearbornStNst CHICAGO WOODSTOCK, Bend for air* It is next to impossibleto make a special price list of all the items that this store deals the most liberally with. Do you know why? Things come and go before the writing man gets at them; and its hardly fair to advertise things likely to be gone before notice of them is read. Better take t&e wieer oourse ot coming here daily or weekly, if possible. Those Cballies you were told about (all choice styles) as being cheap at 5 to 7c. are now 3 1-2 cents per yard. The 12 1-2 to 15c. aie 9 ots» The 5c. Lawns are now 2 cents. 3 B A T E B N S Of high order, usually selling from 12 1-2 to 15c. are 8 cents now On the whole the price disorder going on here hints of every sum mer need. . u. SUMMER COATS and VESTS.. # There is a small lot here that is below the uguai money. OS wntjJor the 81.65 sort. ' S1.35 tor the S2 sort, ' 81.50 lor the 82V sort. - PARASOLS. The different styles of Parasols that were sold at $2.50 are now 95 ceniiu - : ; " ^ ^ k V, ;• * ^ T V:"'" A line is as good as a column to tell of our Ladies' Misses' ant Children's 'Jr'TQ Walking Shoes, ffoe Button Shoes, ^TENNIS SHOES, * Also MEN'S SHOES. We mako it as easy as possible for you to get a good Summer Corset. TENNIS FLANNELS are cheaper also. Be ture and come ever, it will pay you big. Evanson -'1 ONLY DURING AUGUST Spring & Summer Goocu Of every description. Inclodliqi Dry Goods, Notions, Dress Goods, - Underwear, ^ Hosiery, ^ Clothing, •i ^rf WV Wall Paper and Borderr, Lace Curtains, vVr • • "' Window Shades. ^ lAwns. ^Buntingflri-'v' i, -h'. 'M _ m Tennis Flannel!^ Rallies, CambriciiJ. 1 QfrliCO^ .J! Gingham in • L a c e s , ̂ • . 'i »r 3: STRAW GOODS, Ttunk^ Vatl^es, ; NECKTIES; ' •, J Tennis Shirts! Blousesft 1 t ii-j ^ * ' Waists. & 7 - 4 . • ' '* * * v* ^ , vi.'. Fly Nets, Summer Footweay* §;?: •i-. j '-•••fx* Our stock; fi "above goods islj very complete^ ati^ we make the! above tL* .CASH. '"(POR TBI- NretSO Days Oalj, To Reduce Stock an Make Boom for Our Heavy Fall Purchases) soon to Arrive. y " "i : •mLL HAVi" ' , .^.1 ' •' •% G R E A T B A R G A I N S 1 BIMIfANTS In all kinds of Merchandise, which must be sold at once, and; r* regardless of cost. ht sr*"* - f c # I S I « l « I S | S ! f ^ t f -- •. .oca stock o*r With Matched Borders now com prise over 120 styles, and all are new and desirable* - -- i n i n i -- " See our new Carpels, from. 25c, to 90cu West McHenry. SLICKER T1" """ *" 'lmfTlWfHtrr-*'-1 ti^t**>i afwMkwp joadryfa the hardMt .torm. Th« nrw POMMgL BUCllfa l» » pwfcct r»dl»c ««», »»< covars the «nt[r..addlfc BmnotlnlMIOM. Hon. g*nuln« w1tho«t tn. Drand" tntooul I1h»tn«*4 CaUlorw frw, A. J. Tow.r, lortw, It • 'MM*. STOFFEL. ^ *-Agtni for-- PIRK, > LIGHTNING, And AoflldenUl Inmmaee. Alae IOWA, MlnnesotA, Kabraska, AUbsmft. and OallfornU Lauds. Call on or address WM. STOFFEL, McHonry, ill; Save $36.50 Torclv°uo California. J. C. JUDSON ft CO.*8 personally condnoted JJ»H-fornfa iCxcii'«lon8in broad gau^e Pullman Tourlat SleepbiK Oars, ?ia IJeiiver & Bio Grande U. K., (tli® Menic line of the world) leave Chicago vin ChlwiKO ft Alton It. It. 12:00 noon Saturday ot every week, •ach excursion ia uhiiTxe of an efficient and gentl®- mauljr exGuroion luanaiter. Pullman tourist Bleeping can tbroueb from Boston andChicano to San Fran* eltco and Los Anveles. For rates, reservation i* berths, etc., call on or address-1. C.» UOSON ft CO. IK Clarir Streets Cbteac o. Now is the time to buy good merchandise for one month, at actual, and aome ^l less than, cost. :ll We expect with this issue .H)0 sacks ot good, Warranted Flour, , !/ which we will deliver anywhere * :; * ' in the village for onlv *1.00 n*r%,, e for only $1, p- •> Q0 very tru '•Mx Simon Stoffel West McHenry, ' if' %£••: !"#•