iDAY, MARCH 80, 1892. 8LYKE, Bdltor. ^SSS as&sv r. ¥J kr *v/. 7 ^ COUNTY CONVEN TION. ¥h6 Rcpubilc&u Vot'-iS of McIIcui> Count? ntf reqnerleri to send delegates to the iic- jw lit lean County Cou nty Convention to be held itthe Court House la WViodstock, Satur day, April 231, l£8i, at U o'clock A. M., for the pvriiose of pUtcing in nomination enndtdates for the following County officer#: Circuit Cletk, States Attorney. Coroner, and Omnty- 6urv»yor, and also for the purpose of select ing twelve delegates to represent McHenry County in the State Convention to be held at Springfield, May 4th, 1*94, and nine delegates % the Congressional Convention to be held at Elgin April 26th, 1892. and 24 delegates in the Senatorial and Legislative Convention for the 8th District to be held at Woodstock. April 86th, 1892, to place in nomination candidates for the Legislature ana the Senate from saiu 8th District, and for the purpose of transact ing such other business as may properly come before the Convention. Each town is en. titled to the following representation: Seneca Marengo., Dunham OnomiHIg... AiU^Ji •• • tiimjaad... Rita?..'.;.,., floral., .v... Grafton,.... Dorr (irpfnwood. And tt is . € H> 6 « s .....* ..... 7 Hebron Richmond.. ...... Burton. " McHenry.. Kun<i& Barrerille........ Alffcoquin....... Cary, precincti.. Crystal l.ake.... . Tote!...... 177 ed by the committee that the various towns hold their caucuses on flttnnitT. April 16Uv. 1893. J, K. OtiiT, Chairman. A. B. Cooir, Secretary, r -'i': if *' jTr.« l . ;• X;' • X, i,- V' • 7^ ± - f i t • >* V fjr I<f r,*/ • fi' K>:" IV | f" r* ^ h f , Si»' , &BPUBLICAN CONGRESSIONAL CONVENTION--5th DISTRICT. The Republicans of the conn ties com* posing the Fifth Congressional District are requested to send delegates to a con vention to be held at Stewart's Hall in : the city of Elgin, Kane county, state oi Illinois, on Thursday, April 28th, A. D. 1892, at one o'clock p. m., for the pur pose of placing in nomination a candi date for representative in Congress, a candidate for member of the state board of equalization, to appoint two delegates and two alternates to the Republican National Convention to be held in the city of Minneapolis, Minnesota, JuneTfh, A. P »nd also to choose a presi dential elector for said District, and to transact such other business as will properly come before the convention. The several counties of the district will be entitled to delegates as follows: Counties. No. of Delegated. Kane 38 DeKalb. 20 Me Honey ...............18 Lake 14 Boone 11 H. T. ROCKWELL., Kane, Congres- ABRAM ELLWOOD, DeKalb, sional Com- IRA R. CURTIS, McHenry, mittee Q. R. LYON, Lake, Fifth Dis- F. S. WHITMAN, Boone. trict. Dated March 8th, 1891 BBFtTBUGAN SENATORIAL GON- VKNTION. -- M - f * 3 * t u S ySSfitfeg tff Boone, McHenry and Lake, compris- ; ing the Eighth Senatorial District, of the State of Illinois, are requested to send delegates to the Republican District Con vention, to be held at the Court House in the City of Woodstock, McHenry County, on Tuesday, the 26th day of April, 1892, at 1 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of nominating candidates for State Senator and Representatives from said District for the General Assembly of this State, and for the transaction of any other business that may properly come before it. The representation will be on the basis of one delegate to every 150 Republican vote scast for President in 1888' and one for every fraction above 50. On this basis Boone County will be entitled to 14 delegates, Lake County to 19 delegates, and McHenry County to 24 delegates. F. K. GRANGEB, Ch'n LESTER BAKHER, G. K. BUSKER, REUBEN W. COON, Sec' JAMES POLLOCK, GEOKGEH. BURNETT M'Heniy Co. LakeCo. ROBERT W. WRIGHT, R-„ SAMUEL BATES, j" Boone Co- Senatorial Committee. At Elgin, 111., Monday, 10,140 pounds of butter sold at 28 cents a pound, and 2,880 for 28% cents. A year ago prices were 27 and 28 cents. I®*Congressman Hopkins delivered a telling speech In opposition to the free »lver bill in Congress which is being highly complimented by Hie lead ing journals of the country. - tftxirwt Two Caucuses were held on Saturday last, to pond delegates to the County Convention,Riefemond and Che mung, the former seeding delegate® in favor of Geo. W. Eidredge and the latter in favor of H. S. Williams, as everybody knew they would. Of one thing Mr. El- dredge will have cause to feel proud when this contest is over, wfmtfcor h« wins or 1 < * -»1 °. ottil thsii is tlnvt lie h:i3 niti'Jo 51 clean, straightforward canvass, has been connected with no ring or clique, but has presented his claims in a manner that has won the respect of even those who are opposed to him. Can his opponents truthfully say as much? At this writing Mr. Elcjredge's chances are looking bright and notwithstanding the underhanded and villanous work being done by the opposition is gaining ground every day, and if there is any honor left in politics, will receive the endorsement of the Coun ty Convention April 23d. The syndicate and their Harvard gang, who want all the offices in MeHenry county, are strain ing every nerve and using every appli ance known to pot house politicians, to not only carry the county against Mr. Eidredge, but against Gov. Fifer as well, and will leave no stone unturned to ac complish their ends. Will the Republi can voters of McHenry county allow them to do it ? The last Connty Conven tion must, be still fresh in the minds of the people, and we do not believe they will al'on a repetition of that dis^raoefnl proceedings. It is the people against the gang and the question is shall the people or the gang rule. IFFL^The supporters of H. S. Williams for renomination as Member of the State Board of Equalization are evidently get ting desperate. During the entire can vas their stock in trade seems to have been misrepresentation and vilification. At the outset Mr. Williams' organs made a great hurrah over the large reductions their candidate secured on the assessed valuation of property in this district. The Gazette and the PLAINDEALEB then produced figures showing that he did no better than the greater part of his fellow members on the Board, and other figures showing him to be the friend of the rail roads and big corporations of the State! No more tales of that description appear ed. Next some of the loud mouthed sup porters of the ring candidate began throwing mud at G. W. Eidredge of this place who had dared enter the ffeld in op position to Mr. Williams. We do not claim bur candidate to be a saint (there are very few fn this world and none of them ever meddle with politics) bnt we do claim that he is well qualified in every way, to fill the office for which he is acan- didate. The next charge hurled at Mr. Elureuge was thai he "brought Out'* Dr. Blanchard, of Harvard, as a candidate for the position of County Coroner, and has been furnishing him with money to injure Mr. Williams at home. The doctor comes out with a card denying these changes and now they are busy circula ting the story that he tried to induce A. W. Young to become a candidate for the Legislature in opposition to R. J. Beck. As to this last charge Mr. Eidredge in forms us that he never wrote or said a word to Mr. Young on the question. A new campaign yarn is look for at any time, but judging from the past it will simply be another boomerang.--Rich- mood Gazette. MP* The fight is on in New York state. Dave Hill can not carry the state alter his recent illustrious career, and besides, Cleveland men would cut his vitals out at the polls. Grover can not carry the state because Hill and his faction would bis scalp on the first round. .'V K*- a, v Richard Yates has organised the industrious, comprehensive and persistant literary bureau imaginable to aid him in his canvass for the Republican nomination for Congressman-at-large. In the meantime Charley Fuller is quietly but effectively getting his" friends on the delegations to the State convention and , when the round-up comes there is every prospect that he will have the votes and Mr. Yates will have an extensive adver tising throughout the 8tate.--Roekford Republican. W> * M's; t i > >*i TOM •MM* ^ ^ vCUBSO»Y STUDY, j'W ••V WILLIAM A. NASONiM. Bi IPS FILL •©""Democratic assertions that stee rails, wire nails, plate glass, silk, plush and many other articles could not be made in this country have each and all, in their time and turn, been just as posi tive, vociferous and unreliable as the present wail that American gumption and capital are unequal to the making of tin-plates. It all goes to verify the fitness of the title of the "Party of Ne gation." It Never says let's strike out for ourselves and try It is ever a camp- follower ejaculating "Don't" and"Uan't" and cant. When tin-plates of home pro duction are as common as either product above named, and it will be but a few years hence, Democracy will pose as the projector, promoter and fostering guar dian of tin plate making in the United States. It is already claiming Abraham Lincoln and Gen. Grant as Democrats and joining their names to those of Horatio Seymour and Samuel J. Tildeu, while Calhoun, Buchanan, Davis and some others of the blood royal seem to be forgotten. Obstruction, kicking, near lighted ness and short memory mark the peculiar political sect calling itself De- - We Are Going- To Be There. Most of the Republican papers down in the Central and Southern part of tile State are claiming one of the Congress- men-at large, and very generously are Offering to concede the other to Chicago. This is very kind in them, when we take into consideration that it is from the Southern half of the State, and from Chicago, where comes the majority to elect the democratic ticket but what care they so long as these two sections can command delegates in convention to place their candidates in nomination, and why need they pay any attention to the Northwestern portion of the State, until they, have majeure of their illustrious son in convention. They will meet at Springfield and have a jolly good time, smooth over their troubles by patting the members from the strongholds of Republicans in the state, on the back, calling them good fellows, thus securing the triumph of the ringsters, and then adjourning the convention, but not be fore cautioning the delegates from the Fifth and Sixth Congressional Districts, to go home and work like beavers until election as they well know unless these two districts poll **lip their usual large majorities defeat is certain to come to the entire Republican ticket. We have been in the habit of feeling that the soft rub-down we got in the State convention was sufficient to cure our ambition in hoping to secure a place for one of "our favorite sons" on the ticket, and home we come and off coat for the pull, and in every instance have we saved the "South era favorite sons" on the ticket from defeat. That is not the way we are going into the next convention. We are going to start for Springfield from this North western part of the State with Charles E Fuller as our candidate for Congressman' at- large, and we are going to stay right alongside of him all through the conven tion. We have at length discovered our rights, and in convention we are to main tain them. You will find that the Re publican party of Northwestern Illinois is in a better mood to be patted on the back before the convention, than we shall be after. We do not present a candidate in the field whose greatest qualification is "he is the son of his father" but name a gentleman who is the pear of any gentleman in the State, whose ability and true Republican principles are as sound as any person who can be named in the convention.--Rochelie Herald. XComfaded from Last Wee* ) * Another interesting point in regard to the recommittments is that we find of the whole number only twenty-four convict* peiwuu. This is less ihtui ieu c«iit *>! the whole number who are seryingsecond Or later terms. We found of the whole number of convicts, however, thattwenty- seven per cent were imprisoned for crimes against person. These facts would clear* ly show that the tendency to recommit crime is most strong among those who commit crime against property. These are the criminals who belong to the vi cious and weak classes, the ones who make up the habitual criminal list, and they are those who Bhould have the long sentences when convicted of wrong doing. The more time this class of criminals spend in the penitentiary the better, for they will not become good citizens and hence should ever be kept where they can do the least harm to society. There are less than forty female con victs, but it is ft startling commentary on the eex to find that twenty were guilty of the crime of murder. In a penal establishment of the magni tude of the Illinois State Penitentiary, at Joliet, the question of discipline, and em- pioymeiiii of the convicts beccsses aa im portant one. Where so many convicts, who from necessity are mostly of turbu lent, vi&ous and unreliable character, are gathered together the system of manage ment must have wide scope, and com plete adaptability to the situation. Such seems to be thoroughly the case at Joliet. The penitentiary is run on what is call ed the "contract system," that is, con tractors use the convict tabor to manu facture goods, paying therefor a certain rate per day or per month. This gives the convicts constant employment under the proper guard to secure steady and constant labor, and strict discipline. The convict goes to his work, is required to do a proper amount each day, and is held strictly to account for bis behavior in every respect. He works a fair days work every day in the year, except Sun days, and goes from his work to his cell. Instead of having his days 'and hours only occupied with thoughts of his condi tion, instead of having no occupation ex cept that of brooding over bis confine ment, and nurturing a grudge against law and society, which he treasures to wreak in revenge when again at liberty, he is learning and practicing a trade that occupies his time and thought. Instead OI iiiiiViug iiib'p^Uiibaiiiir)r ?VllU UIi or demented mind, he leaves it with ear pacity, if he so wills, to become a useful member of society again. Instead of having his labor still more debase him,- as some systems of chain-gang work in use in some prisons is sure to do, he learns, by the system of labor at Joliet, that be can again be a man if he so chooses. And practically these results occur in numbers of cases, so that the discipline of this prison life saves many convicts, who never again appear aa criminals. The discipline of the Joliet Penitentiary is most excellent. As soon as the visitor enters the guarded door, the atmosphere of the place impresses him. Everything seems to move as by clock work. A quiet, subdued air surroundsevarything. There is little talking, no boistroos sounds; all moves by rule, and each man has his place. There seems to be no friction any where, either in what is being done, or the order in which it should be done. The order that can only come from thorough discipline and organization is .not only seen, but is felt. It Is the supremacy of the State and the law over the individual man. Never did I realize this idea of the State and law, in their majestic strength, as while within the walls of Joliet State Prison. In the shops where hundreds 6f convicts were making shoes, cutting stone, or em ployed in other manufactures, the same quiet, noiseless, but unceasing motion of convict, and discharge of duty prevailed and the visitor could not but admire th most excellent shape in which the disci pline necessary proved its efficacy. S that I was not at all surprised to learnj from Warden H. D. Dement, that an average of two prisoners undergoing punishment each day, represented all the necessary violent measures needed to pre- serve this system of discipline. The only punishment now employed isconfinement on short rations in a solitary cell, for one or more days, acording to the mag nitude of the offense against rule and order, and it was very seldom, and only with the moot vicious and depraved con Between the lines of an interview 'in the New York Sua Senator Gorman raps Cleveland unmercifully, intimating quite plainly that his inordinate self-esteem makes him an impossibility so far as the Democratic nomination is concerned. fcatne in regard to the duties of tf ex-convicts. He believes that J# crime should, on frolftthe psattantiary be helped to the State. That all those cwpi^ ble of leaving the prison strong with the intention to become honest men should have a friendly hand extended to them by the State to keep them in their good p'lrpo.svs. i."hoy »huui<i- not be curoe-d adrift, to fall back helplessly into crime, but be furnished with work until theie; tnpral stamina and industrious habits become so fixed that they become rew deemed. He would have them kept at work under strict supervision^ until all danger of return to vicious idleness and crime has been passed. Now they are turned adrift at the prison door at the conclu sion of their terms of service, and home less, friendless, and devoid the means of self support drift speedily back to their old places behind the bars. He says that a large proportion of the street assaults and violent robberies that ha ve occurred in Chicago and other places this winter, were done by recently discharged con victs. Want, and the shame of being an ex-convict, keeps them from honest work and makes them become habitual crimi nals. He would ha ve this corrected by plans such as are suggested above, an#! all others that would conduce to the de* scribed good end. Such then are some of the problems re* lacing: to crime niu criiiiii:als which atthft present day are enlisting the powers and thoughts of students of this branch of social science. There are many other directions in which scientific work is being done relating to these subjects, but we have not the room here to specify them. But these matters have a most imporr tant relation to the welfare, socially, of every man and women in the State, and should not be shunned nor neglected by any citizen. •As a matter of self protection, as well as a matter of thought for philosophical investigation, they deserve careful investi gation, and the writer of this will be much pleased if these brief suggestions enlist the interest and thought of some who have never heretofore "paid much at tention to crime and criminals. Supervisor's Statement Of the flnannlal nflfcirs of the town. A full st&'ement of the financial Affairs of the town of McHenry, county of McHenrv, and stato of' Illinois, as existing on the 29th day of Mareh. A, D. 1892. robalar.ee received from predecessor in office $436 08/ v To amount received from County '43^-; « Collector, being balance of tax tor 1591, less his commission.. 28 88 * To amountof tax of 1891, received from Collector 787 8t A- " Total amount received from all -- \ f Houroea $J1»2 2& V- CONTHA. Total amoant paid out, and the account on whlfth tho Attrao wAa itawf aa f • By jni H U Meaa moderator town •'.-.".•v-Jmeetingc .. ..9 800 M M piaimiaaler publishing ed- jiuial reDort ** *v;yPlam<)ealer pub. notice Sep. \3meetkig Auditors. >i»ift- • * ihi o&rd auditors Sept, meeting •laindealer puli, notice M 'r, •^^uditors and town meeting, 6 OK 1 SO Board review of assessment " " Johc Huemann,assessor, '91, •• " K G Mayes town clerk. *• •• 1) Parker thistle commissn'r ** " Treas village use town ball, ff # PiaitKlealer printing tickets. «• «• Hoar') auditors M'cii meeting /ptimages and costs i'or killed und injured; **- J*.' Page Colby ...Si HW K Colby : •»T «* Frank Hutson *• •• poor bill Hour &i: H WMoT.ean *• " •' Mrs Winkle cash A w'd * •• •• Althoff, Mrs Winkle... " t " Perry & Owen •• " " Perkins saw wood Mrs Gibbs ,* •• Simons •• •• *• •• 8 cords wood Mrs Gibbs " J Bonslett stove pipe " •• ii Perrv & Owen, Mrs Gibbsac't " " H E Wigtitmau hauling wood •• •• Dr Ho ward atnd'ce Mrs Gibbs " •" Aire Murphy care Mrs Gibbs l>r Howard att'nd Winkle boy **. iLoad wood Mrs Oonisky ... f "*• Bill at Ley & Adams on acc't . Mrs Simons.... H '* Co Treas one yrsbtllat, poor h S* Fare R E l wards to Mcllenry . . and return... *• *' To al tramp bill fer year. .. ,• " Service l'oor Master.. 4,80 4 50 4 50 125 00 12 71 82 00 10 W 1% Dated Ml88 AA Teacher of Visits MflTenry every week, l'hursdavs, Fridays and Saturdays, and is prepared "to tft'ic scholars at hny time Term" reason ble nnd satisfaction guaranteed Can be seen at the barker House on any of above i.amed days tion of the bill providing that when- r France opened Its mints to free age of silver at a ratio of 15& to 1, United States should adopt that o. He called attention to the fact for seventy years France had by open mints fixed the prlco of both als and kept them on an unvarying ity of 15i to 1. To allay any appre- sion that might arise because of the nch ratio being 15£ to 1, while ours 116 to 1, it was proposed that the ited States should adopt the ratio of to 1 whenever France did eo. Continuing, Mr. Bland declared that action of the Government of the Ited States on the silver question had n an invitation to Europe to go upon gold standard. We began „-- - -- silver's victs, that any protracted confinement monetization in 1872, and in all our was necessary. prts to restore silver we had been de- Warden Dement stated that all theH,,by llmitatio.n- a free coin- . , . . . . . . . | e b i l l w a s p a s e e d d n t h e H o u s e i n 1 8 7 8 breaches of discipline that it was ever a two-thirds majority and sent to the necessary to punish, were committed b; a small proportion of the convicts. Less than three hundred out of the whole number of over fourteen hundred convicts would embrace all those who ever made any trouble. The convicts serving for life were the best behaved of all, for they fully realized their position and that any possible hope of executive clemency must be earned by most faithful service. nate, the same idea of an international reement was injected into the ques- and meanwhile we provided for the rcbase of from $2,0(10,000 to $4,000,000 mouth. The last Congress passed aet to purchase $4,500,000 of rer monthly, and its friends (claimed that it was done in the in- est of silver. Ho opposed that bill, i said the gentlemen were deceiving mselves and the country, and that ver could not be brought to par in such manner. The law of 1873 A visit I made alone, tlirough the cor impelled the coinage and use of the ' - "XT vrh *- ridors of the cell honse in the evening where I bad a view of the prisoners ii their cells, revealed the same excellent order. I found most of the prisoners reading either books or newspapers, some evidently studying, for they had slate and pencil in hand, and all were quiet and respectful in appearance and man ner. There were over seven hundred and fifty prisoners in the ten rows of cells in the cell honse I visited, bat there were no murmurs of disorder nor boistrous sounds to be heard from any cell. The impression of order and discipline was as marked here as in the other departments of the prison. Although Warden Dement ia a and strict disciplinarian, he ver dollar. The law of the lot t Con SB used the bullion as mere dead pitsil In the Treasury, which might as 11 be at the bottom of the Potomac, conclusion, Mr. Bland said: fcowi in Miii imiiiiiln mrn pji this floor to SALARY. and Commission to Agents, Men an"< Women, Tiach ersaninierg men to introduce a tiff '*•. ' * "v . - v Jj If it wet© ii * . HSI" sellers yem could not live. Therefore, wo mast oo-operato. we help yoja m t • x,. * • S .r»4 ; •* tr Ed 25 a £ a Moment of?our Think oyer this and come and seq our Good# Buy your next bill of us as an experiment. Stock is very com- I"o THE FARMEHS OK MCUJSNBY COUNTY AND VICINITY. • - am now prepared to show a new and clean assortment of Agricultural Implements, second to none in the county, and at prices that ! am confiden* it will pay you to investigate. Hist -1'i Pi 'Pwwil Plows 1 We carrj the -Grsley. Fuller and Johns n, and the celebrated Bra«ll«»y Garden < ity Clipper, in wood and steel beams. In Seeders you will find the Steel Frame Prairie City Improved tor 1892, haying steel frame and hinged scatterers, allowing scatter ed to pass any obstruction.T TB^roll cut off in feed cups, AND A POSITIVE FORCE PEED, ' DISC HA.RROWS. deft We havo irf stock the Budlong Rotarv Disc Harrows, also the ex^ Bradley Rotary Disc Harrow, and you make no mistake when you ; purchase either of the above harrows iuraished with three-horse Ale equipment, complete. > : ^ £}" Lever and. Common Harrows. Go thi the tht wtl noi lnj th< s&; be pr< to su< el* syi A. full line i» steel and wood, and at prices guaranteed to pj^ase, You will find the celebrated. Abbott Buggy on our floor, in anv style you might want, and would be pleased to show you goods and name prices, We thank you for past favors aad hope for a share of your patronage, believing that we can do you good in anything you might want in our line, Very respectfully, ) v 5 RICHARD Od Record, 2:28%. ^ ; r _ "/• £ ? V . Will make the seaaou of* 1898 at Woodstock. DESCRIPTION--Dark brown,16 hands If* weight 1200; elre of JLo^fer, trial 2:20$ at 4 years, fhe fastest $900. new and popular standard book. MARVELS of the NEW WEST A new Agent sold 70 in one week. • Ag>i\Ct pro/its, #138 60. over 36<» original engravings 10,400 copies sold in one week, Exclusive territory. Endorsed by the greatest men of ocr country. Apply to THE HBNR Y BILL PUS. CO., Harwich, (torn Barb Wire i« cheap this spring. Don't neglect the fnncPH but put them in order with Kli or the K. borh wire bought Mtfkt of J. W, Cristj & Son*: • . -y" colt ev«»r rals u In McH» nrv Co.. Gee Z Dee 2:37, Fona 2:3.1 at 4 jears. Modesty 2:40. Typhoon 16790. by Xarraganfet 167®9 1st dam bv Swle^rt 650, the df»« Vic D, record 2:13| ; Typhoon, 2:28}; Valentin* S *>5g«it. 2:26J 2d dambv Goldsmith's Ahdallah 2:30, he dam of Mar.v Sprague 2:21* TKWMS --$25 to ir.eure a mare In foal, payable when known to be In toal. After Nov. 1.1892, he will be aivanced tu W0, Paature furnished, C get tabulated pedigree E. W. HOWE, Woodstock, i ' M CHARLES STRAIGHT, Chicago. >$• pi Sfi : WKHM •; 'CxOT FOl 3 ' ftUYEhS WE CQ& Mr GET* '^,V*" - \ ^ Vou help us. x'A' L Let us sell vou a 8uit of the Best $ 10 Clothe# ever ^or inn dollars, perhaps no more, "«V t •' 1 bill dollars saved oVef * what it would you tti most ei Thus all other things at a like saving, - * S1'- < "*•. .1'^- .v - We bid you welcome. 3IZLS: ,-%r * Fiour Mills Ct. B 1 .V.'S *.^•3 Better than ever before, always the be^t. We head the list with though .WrJ Pillsbury'a Be t at $1.45 per *ack Lily of the Valley, 1.25 A No. 1 family flour, 1.15" • 35 lbs. strictly pure Buckwheat Flour, 60 cents, J5 lbs, granulaUd Corn Meal, 50*conts. 12 1-2 lbs granulated Corn Meal, 25 cents, 25 lbs. winter wheat Graham r Flour, 70 cents. » 12 1-2 lbs., winter wheat v v'#lour. 35 cents. -ft m HENS LAY ANJ> KEEPS THEM J EALTHY. Try It, -.1 -v * JOHN EVAtf*ON A CO. West McHenry, III. CHA .̂ FUBNERT, Johntburgh. IH, W. CBISry &80N, Ring wood, m. ' '^ ..-v T.-** • . All flour guaranteed | money jrefundedi" . . . . . . >*'<•> ^ the village free of charge * ii 'H ' '* S*ye us your orders and ire. will trv and please you in quality and price in any flour you might Rememherth« Hthron, HI. J Fox River Valley Roller Mills. ' ... . i :»