l^iljUNESDAl, MAY 3, 1893. VAIN SlaY It IS. Editor. S§fpf; Cleveland's Fla* Experiences J* H&ulinjf down the United States flag tl HHwaii by order of Prfisideut lleve- land recalls an incident" in bis former ad- i siiimMration of ordering a return of the ©oufodpirate flags captured by the Union *j tnitw during the war of the rebellion. SThat was a secret order, and this more Kwcent one seems to have been of like character. Nobody knew it was intend ed till it was done. He took the back track mighty quick in the former case, #ben the howl of defiance from oar brave veterans was heard from Maine to Cali fornia, and our generals issued their hot jwotents against the cowardly order. It ttiay prove somewhat so in this more re- etnt but similar case. Ab the New York $an very pertinently remarks, "the next Step will be significant. If Commissioner Blount undertakes to overthrow the pro visional government which the Hawaiian ^revolutionistserected in place of theridic- oJoiih and in some respects scandalous tule of Queen 1 >iiiuokalani, he will be en- listing the United States government in #jn enterprise which will make the cheeks Of patriots tingle. When the power of litis republic is used to crush out Repub lican self government in another land, §nd to put back a humbug queen upon a kumbug throne, it will be time for public Indignation to make itself heard." Supposes popular election to be re ported to, and that the ignorant and lethargic natives outvote the intelligent enterprising and prosperous element, di rected mainly by enlightened immigrants that would prove nothing more than that a majority of ignoramuses had toted to continue as they were, a semi- Civilized people, rather than to hitch on to the car of civilization and be drawn • (Onward to a higher and nobler destiny. Public opinion is not always to be meas ured by votes. The opinion of the en lightened few weighs a thousand times more than the opinions of ten times their number of ignorant boors, eveij on Matters pertaining to their own welfare -- • • - , j i n ii i' I I jli; Vii r i i i i1m' v | i ifijjt IST-But ter OP the Elgin Board of Trade Monday droppi>d from 88c --last week's price--to 25 aud 28«. At the former price 10,080 Ibf sold: at the letter, IJLj " bs. Market rather unsettled. yepr ago 20c. was the price. t It must be highly pleasing to the laboring men who helped to vote the Democratic party into power to learn that sugar and coffee, both put upon the free lift by Republicans, are to bo again made to pay duty by the administration tariff bill. Win view of the known opinion of Secretary Carli-!e it would seem that Mr. Cleveland rather overdid the thing with "my emphatic contradiction of the state ment that the redemption of any kind of Treasury notes except in gold has at any time.been determined upon on contem plated by the Secretary of the Treasury." ISTThe proposed administration tar iff bill is giving spasms of intense delight to the editors who worship everything that's English. One of them prefaces a commendatory editorial thusly: "As the country grows in population and wealth we are approaching more and more in National legislation to the methods prac ticed in England." These toadies would welcome a king and a hereditary House of Lords. Our Begnlai Washington Washington, D. C. April 29,1893. The „work of destruction which the Democratic leaders have inaugurated goes steadily on. For only is the Repub lican tariff and reciprocity to be destroyed but the gold reserve fund established in the Treasury by the republican party has, for the first time in its history been encroached upon and the work of de struction begun there also. The task of tearing to pieces the pension list has also been entered upon and the plans of the Democratic party thus fairly mapped out. The week has been one of extreme im portance in its developements regarding the plans of the Democratic leaders, kand their probable relation to the future of that party. As the reading public have already been told, President Cleveland has decided to continue paying gold and gold only for all coin certi flea tee presented Any intelligent man who taTread the I at tbf Treasury Department oreobtreas- Kurt fifty rears ol Hawaiian hiirtory, Thwe notes are .. oald prefer the judgment of one Cbrifr I,SBUed m Pa.™*" ft"- «lv" bullion pur- tjan statesman, as to what was best for m. r < - ".•LAa * , ... tbem, to an adverse expression of the en- j'* tin population. Indeed, it should weigh I aiore, in giving direction to statesman- . V. ship. The majority of Hawaiians may -- - - be against annexation. But if so their ~~z©pinions would be worthless, because :;r ' ' they are based on ignorance, indolence And superstition. The revolution and v-. establishment of a provisional govern- vent and the offer of annexation to this £V tepublic, and our knowledge that it - 1*ould be best for the people there, would Amply justify our closing in with them, ^ knowing as we do that delays are danger ous--that to hesitate is to lose it. De- v\ lays in the negotiations are working great mischief there. The council of etate filling its own vacancies, auditing its own accounts, directing the expendi tures of the public funds, without legisla tion, gives opportunity forsuspicion and n:e. - chased under the law enacted by the Fifty-first Congress. Under that law they are redeemable in gold or silver at the option of the Treasury Department. There can be no doubt of the ample authority of the Department to redeem these notes in silver coin instead of gold if it chooses to do so. And there is every reason to believe that Secretary Carlisle's plans were when the jfold reserve became low, to stop paying gold for these notes on presentation and redeem them in silver. But President Cleveland is so much an anti-silver man that he would not permit it. It is stated on good authority that Secretary Carlisle bad prepared a circular announcing that coin certificates so presented would be redeemed in silver instead of gold when ever it suited the convenience of the Treasury This circular President Cleve land it is said, required Mr. Carlisle to submit to hiui for revision, and after iinrest. Unless some decision is reached I reading it he ran his blue pencil through noon it is said that proffers will be made I aijd ordered Mr. Carlide to supptees it 1 the President giving out in its stead a statement prepared by himself iu which he stated that coin certificates would be , to Great Britain. An orderly republic W ** there just now is impossible, and a peace- f able restoration of the monarchy is out ^ *)f the question, while the provisional government is too insecure. Officers irigh in that government indicate a pur pose to seek some other power that does want them if the United States does not. ; ^ Should that be the outcome of the whole : fbueineas, it would not make an enviable I 'v ' ' page in the history for Mr. Cleveland's | l-j • ^administration. " ' -- c/r'} The Infiniteslmalness of It Governor HAltgeld claims that he did not know Dr. Clevenger's politics when ^'.j-. s he ordered the trustees of the Kankakee • Asylum to put bim in the place so well wp 1 filled by Dr. Dewey. People familiar * V with the Governor's coarse will take J - * that statement "with a grain of salt.' ' But whatever the Governor thought v ** </~ of Dr. Clevenger's politics, he was not ^mistaken in his man. He wanted a,man L iJ, -who would take suggestions from head s'! ; quarters, who would "fawn upon the hand that fed him." and in Dr. Clevenger §^ , he evidently got him. A .wink from the Governor is sufficient, and it is done as wanted. •" The thinking is done in Springfield, the ^ ' -wactiori is taken in Kankakep. The later "Ocean 4s no longer allowed to circulate * . t*le Kankakee Asylum, but in itsplaee '• 'democratic papers „ are substituted. who contributed to his election now de* mand. TLr, foreign msaufactarpra and capitnl- ista who contributed money to help elect levelnnd are evidently demanding that the contract under which they gave it shall be carried oHt. They want the tariff reduced, reciprocity destroyed, and onr increase of silver currency stopped, ^iiice they are the chief gold owners of the world of course t-he.v want gold to be the only currency; since manufacturing is their business, of course they want the doors of our custom houses opened wide to their productions in free competition with those of the United States; since reciprocity enables our mai^facturers to more readily compete with them in for eign markets they wanr reciprocity de stroyed. And it seems that. President (leveland and his Democratic adminis tration are carrying out ns fast a* possi ble the commands of 'these foreigners whose monev elected him. What will be the effect upon fhe Demo cratic party? There are wide differen«,es of opiniofi a* to the propriety of the re- Iieal of the silver law, and equally wide differences on the methods of tariff revi sion. The manufacturers of the east do not at all awrree on the tariff question >>ith the producer# of the south and west and the producers of the south and west are indirect antagonism wUh Mr. Cleve land and the east on the great silver qnestion. Will it divide the Democratic party? O.P.A. Berry Wall la Wall Street. 2Tot much has been heard of Berry Wall of late, but he is very much in evi dence in Wall strict, where his talents, which are of no mean order, are being guided in one of the largest brokerage houses. He still displays his old charm of dress, although his waistcoats are not so stunning as they used to be, and he only changes his clothes once a day now. He is really very well informed in in dustrial securities, and one morning lately he sent a group of brokers into convulsions of laughter whence was ap pealed to by an operator to go into a lit tle speculation in one of those stocks. Berry Wall straightened up, looked sternly at the man who dared make this proposition ancf then said, "I have been sweetened with Sugar, I have been stupe fied with Gas, a few weeks ago I was strangled with Cordage, and I have been paralyzed with Whisky, and if you sup pose there is anything left of me for fur ther experience of this sort you know me better than I do myself." And there was quite as much of truth as there was of sarcastic humor in this comment, and the experience has not been peculiarly that of Berry Wall. Some of the brokers think that the time is com ing when the famous deposed king of the dudes will cause quite as much comment upon the street as he did in the old days upon the avenue.--Cor. Philadelphia Press. * aassBa •m»e Line of White." Trousers are very wide. Morning coats ars single or double breasted sacks or S-tbutton cutaways. Vests are cut very high, and with black clothes many gen tlemen fill in the space above with a square folded scarf, which is apt to be blick also, and separate the scarf and vest with a line of white--I forget what the men call this band--placed inside the vest.--London Letter. When the rising generation gets hard pressed for instances of early fame thrust upon the contemporary young man it al ways has the governor of Massachusetts to fall back upon. A schooner under the command of Captain George M. McClain will leave Gloucester, Mass., about June 1, with a large number of passengers for a cruise to the World's fair. ife Under Dr. De^ey Republican andT Demo cratic papers had free sway together in the asylum as they do elsewhere in the State. But under the Altgeld-Clevenger administration visitors and employes of the asylum must either read Democratic papers or do without. The infinitesimalness of the individual • elected Governor last November is grad ually showing itself. Apparently he is securing as the head of the State institu tions men in full accord with him, men tally and otherwise. The people will soon j learn their ways. They are not the ways • of the broad men who have borne sway in this State for the past thirty years. But sometimes a change is a good thing. It turns thought into anew channel.-- | present silver law. later Ocean redeemed in gold so long as the Govern ment had or could obtain a dollar for that purpose. One result of this action of President Cleveland was that the reserve fund of one hundred million- dollars established by the Republican party to secure and make good the three hundred and fiftj million dollars of green backs in circula tion was for the first time in its history invaded. Thus the work of destruction which had previously been begun in re gard to Republican tariff, Republiban reciprocity and Republican pen-ions is now turned against Republican money which everybody admittfeis the bestcircu- lating mediiinrand best financial syBtem that the world ever saw. The one hun dred million reserve has been cut into two or three times during the present week and temporarily made good again by gold from banks in Boston and cer tain western cities. Oreat reticence is observed at the Treasury Department as to the exact condition of the gold bal ance or the places from w hich gold is abtained. About the only information freely given the public is President Cleve land's determination to pay gold for the notes issued in payment of silver pur chases and which he has undoubtedly the power to redeem in silver if he chooses so to do. Probably the next step by the Demo cratic party in the reversal of the policy which the Republican party has carried forward will be an increase of the public debt. The Republican party has steadily reduced the debt which the Democratic party forced upon the country by the late war until instead of amounting to nearly two and one half billions of dol lars the interest bearing debt is now less than six hundred millions, and the an nual charge'per capita only thirty-five cents instead of over four dollars per capita as it was when the party assumed the enormous task of reducing it by a judicious system of taxation. Now it. seems that the first work of the Demo era tic party is to be an increase of that debt for one of the events of the week has been a proposition by this adminis tration to sell to the New York bankers fifty million dollars worth of bonds in order to get gold to go on redeeming coin certificates which it could redeem in silver if it chose to do so. President Cleveland's real plan in thus resorting to desperate measures to ob tain gold to redeem certificates issued in the purchase of sdver is clearly the result of his determination to force the repeal His hostility to silver is well known. He has taken R I P A N S TABULES REGULATE THE STONACH, LIVER AND BOWELS AND PURIFY THE BLOOD. RIPANS TABI LKH are the best Medi cine known far Indigestion, Blllouiineaa, lleadactie, Constipation, l>y«pep«ta, Chronle liver Trouble*, lllulaeM, Bad Complexion, Dysentery, Offensive Breath, and all dis orders of the Stomach, Liver and Bowel*. Ripans Tabules contain nothing injurioas to the most delicate constitution. Are pleasant to take, Bafe, effectual, and tpre immediate reiief. Price--lsox (ii vial •), "ijcentn ; Fackafje (4 boxeg), 9>. May be ordered through nearest dru?gMk or by mail. Sample free by mail. Address THE RIPANS Is ncrw complete, and prices on the same are VERY LOW. s H SHOES E S CHEMICAL CO, 10 BFKCUE STREET, NEW "SORK CITY. 1 C. P. Babnes, Sol ic i tor . Master's Sale ot Seal Estate. STATE OR ILLINOIS. ) IfcHenrv County* t In the CI)cult court of MeHeDn CoutT At ibe May teim, A. D. 1®92- Leonard Bonslett, ) v* t Michael Doherty, et aL j BY vir tu* of a decretal order maie and entered in the »bo>e ent i t led cause a t the May tern, \ D. 1892, ot the O'rcui t court of McHenry county, I l l i r .oi- , 1 shal l on Satur day, the 13 ' l i f lay of May, A. D. 1-H3. a t iho hour of one o 'c lock p. m of said clay, a t . the »b«i «loor of 'he Court House, in the ci ty of Woodstock, Mcilenry county, I l l inois , offer for sale and b«I1 a t publ ic vendue to the high est and bent bidder for cash, the <o*lo *i v premises situated in the county of McHenry and s ta ie of I l l inois , to-wit :-- The sou 'heast quarter (J<1, of tbe southeast quarter (X) of sect i >n thi r ty . f nr . (3D, in To«n»ht number for ty l ive (46) . and the west ha f (X) of lot one (1) , of the northeast quar ter (J i i of Sect ion two' j ! ) , and the couth on--hal t (% of the nor hwest quarter of a id Scr i iO" two (2) and the norrhesi- l quar ter (JO, of the nori he»st quar ter (JO of >»e ' t i< n three (3; and the northeast qu %i ler (X) of the nort)^ west quarter X) of etion tw«<ve(W>, In T"wn(ih.p number or ty- tom (44) , a l l iu Knge eight (8> t et of t t« I b i rd pr incipal merid 'an, conta 'nirg two hundred and for ty I®*®) acres of la^d more or leea, Said pieces to be sc Id separately. Dated this 18th day of April. 1803 M I, JOSLYN, Master in Chancery of the Circuit uourtof McHenry Count- ' . Men's and Boys', Ladies' and Children's V =SB1ESI= In endless variety and prices lower than ever. It -1 occasion to advertise that fact at every .r- , „ . i opportunity. Not only has he rushed to Unlees Secretary Carlisle changes I front with letters on tbe subject at his mind the silver souvenir quarter dol- I inopportune times but during the last lars, which Congress authoriz-d him to I davs of the recent congress he sent Don Dickinson, and Henry Villard, and Mr. Carlisle and Chairman Harrity here to plead with and threaten members of con gress in tbe effort to get them to repeal the law. The House by a majority of some ten votes refused this and the Sen ate also refused bv a nearly two-thirds vote to be dictated to. Yet Cleveland, elected by foreign gold, is turning all the powers of his position, even including a prospective increase of the public debt and an invasion of tbe sacred gold re serve. in the effort to render unpopular the pilver law and force upon congress ttbe repeal which tbe foreign gold owners mint for the Board of Lady Managers of the World's Fair, will be the first United States coins ever issued with a royal crown on them. So far the new administration has maintained the financial policy of its immediate i>redecessor, and as a nat ural consequence disaster has been avert ed. What will happen if it attempts to eroes the financial sea in a boat of its own eeastntctioa remains to be seen. 2^ y>. ' f .. * '** J .rfi ... : O. P. Babmbb, Solicitor. STATE OF ILLINOIS, , /•a McHenry Connty i Circuit Court of Mctlenry county, May term, A D 1893, Wil l iam Cisrk, Mary Galagher and Ka' ie N»ai in vs Mary Clark E len O'Brien. Jeunie Alexander , Mnggte Knox and James p . Casey V xe<*utor of he lad wil l and tes tament of Mi< h«el Clark, deceased, in chancer?. AflHuvit i f the non-re tdencn of an 1 of the unknown residence of El len O'Brien, Jennie Alexander ant l Maggie Knox, defendants above named, having b en Died in the off ice o t the Clerk ot said Circui t Court of McHenry Counts , not ice is hereby given to the caid non re«>dent defendants th*t the complain, ants died their bi l l of complaint i» said Court on the Chancery »ide thereof on the 11th i iay ; Apri l , A D. 11-93, and thata summons there pon is-ued ou t ' f said Court agi t i i .g t sa id de» tendinis re turnable on t e 22dday of Mav. A. D 1W)3, i t s i s ».y law r"quired. Now, therefore , unless \ou the said El len O'Brio", Jennie Alexander and Maggie Knox, ahal i personal ly be and appear l iefure the said Circui t C ur tof McHenry C unty on the f i rs t osy ot the next Ter" thereof , to be.hold- en a t the Court House, In the City of Wood stock in said County, on the 22d dayrf Maw, A. D 1893, and plea • answer or demur to the said con pi inants ' bi l l of complaint , the 9»me and the m l i ters an t thing** therein charged and s ta ted wil l he taken as confessed, ' and a de ree entered against yon according to the prayer < t sa id bi l l . In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed t< e < eal of said Court, at my office, in Woodstock, this lltb day i,f April, A. D. loflJ. W P Mosaic, Clerk. Si. P. Bakkkb, Complainant*' Solicitor .life's-.,' We will do all in our power to merit your trade. Respectfully, J.W.Crist] & Son ilKQWOOD. ILL. For spring of 1893 I am offering advantages in the way of prices and quality that are un equalled by any of my eompetif- tors. The Vteady growth of my trade is convincing proof to me that i am on the right track and that my effjrt4 to give satisfac tion to my cuHomers are appre ciated I aim in every instance to give you the best value for your money. Is it not to your iuterest to: share ot your trade? " ; ./ I CHtr^$r largo stock of Dry Goods, Boots and Shoes, Hats and Cip*. Crockery, Glassware, Tinware and Groceries. TEAS.--Hundreds of mer-h aits and thouaxnda of von^utners will tell you that t state the t^uth when I say that you will never have the Best Japan Tea until you buy tin Red Dragon Tea. The increaeed demand for this te£ astonishes some oi my competitors and they wonder P -9 wh^ it h they can't find a Japan Tea to equal it. M iny h ive given it up, and its well they have tor its equal is not to be found. I have a full line of! hose Toas from 25c, to 50c. per pound. Please call and see what I have to offer. A, P. BAER. West McHenry, 111. DR. FRUTH! --WILL BE AT-- McHenry, Saturday, May 6th, At Riverside House. Office hours, 10 a. m. to 3 P. M. AND AT WOODSTOCK Friday, May 12, 1803. Office Hours from 9 a. m. to 5 P. M. AT HOT PL WOOD&TOCK. w DR. D. O. F.iUTH, Ztdle Surges* in the Provident M"dicta I Diipet?. , tary of Sew YorkntvwT*resitlerit'\f the Friuh M- d eat Institute, chartered His long experience in the largest hispi ta 's In the w «rld enat t 'es him to t r a t al l Ohkonic NfKTWit , f<KiN ani» Bi .o -D diseasesupon ihe la tes i scient i f ic pr inc p.e* Dll KH L'I 'M has no snperi 'T in diagnosing and t rent i ig di°eapes and deform t ief . He wil l g ive |6(» for any cas»< he cannot , te l l the di»e«8« and where I c .Hted in l ive minute Medical and surgical diseases , sou e and chronic Catarrah, diseases of the Kye, Har N' s - , Th ' a t and Liidkh, Dyfp»p-ia , I t rnrht . ' s Disei t -e , Din be es . Kidney, l . ivr Bladder , Ohronlc Femul* and Sexual Diseases »j ;ee 'M!y c, red by t reatment i hat h is never '*Ued n th ' iUHS nds of ca^es t l a t i ad been proh ' iunced beyond hope. Manv people meet den th every je ' r who tmpht have been restored lo pcr tect in a t th had they placed their cases In iho hands of ex»"r ts . DR, FRUTH hits a t ta ined the most wonder ful success in the t reatment of cases to which he devotes special a t tent i n , and af ter ye«rs of experience, t as perfected the most infal l i l>le m' t l" d of ' ' t t r tn* Organic Weakness , Ner vous Deui l l tv , l ' remaiwe Decl ineof ihe Man- .y P"wer. Invo t<n !arv V' ta l Losses , Impair , ed 'Memory Mental Arix-eiy Al»sence< f Wil l Power, Melancholy, Weak Back and kidney effec l io^s i f con " i l l ted before Id iun\ . Ins? nl ty I 1 al l intr Kits or T 'Hal Imp tency resul t f rom YOUTIII* U I . Bl tKOR", t t^e awful effect , which bl ight the tnnt i l radiaut hopes,* unl i Ing pat i ent tor busi t ies , s tudy, society or marr iage, i invt ' s l lv *weepirg to an uni inaely grave thousand* of young men f ex ' I t d ta lent and t i r i l i iant Intel lect . PII .K* f!U KD with out pain, hnifec.ut«ry, El ' l I . K P>Y po i t ive- iy cured b> our new aud never ia i l tntr l iospi ta l t reatment , KUEK. EXAMINATIONS of the t i ine . chen. ical and microscopical , in a i l cast s of Kidney D'seases , Bl ight ' s Disease, Diat ie tes and dpermttorrbSB. Bring cpeci . mens, WoKDERFUL CURES perfected in a l l cases that have been neif iected or unsKit t ful ly t reated. No experiments or fa i lures We undertake no Inc.utable c tses , but cure thou^anas «iven up to die Remember the i ls te and eotne ear ly as his rooms are always crowded Caf-es and eonrespondence csnfldent ia l , and t reatment sent by express with ful l direct ions tor use, but personal consul ta t ion pre fer re I . DR. D. O. FRUTH. 3532 Lake Avenue.'Chloago. COMING TO 'THE WORLDS FAIR? •>& " f'• . u"* "V v"T y' - «» ' • • WORLD'S PAIR COtJPON THE INTER OCEAN, '•kk ^"3 , fry* ^ t -' 'T ̂ Chicago's.Greatest Family Dai^y Peper, tm opened a "World^l ^ Bureau*' for the acecmmodaiidii ofthe readers of;,; ̂ 1 „| . - - T h e P l a i n d e a l e r - - . Chicago during tbe World's Columbian ^ A ihorouoh canvass (»1 ibe respectable hotels, boardii.g aud lodging | houeen iu Uhic»go has been made, and to an\ person who brings pr | sends this Coupon to The Inter Ocean's World's Fair Bureau we will give our card of introductioii to a first class boarding or lodging house, WITHOUT ONE CENT OF EXPEN8E. v : ̂ • ; Remember, you must br ing this iNTRODUcndJr Coupon ftotii your own h >2ne ^apet with you to get tbe beuetits of this offer | wiih^ut c^ar^e. :v.-;. / THE WORLD'S PAIR BUREAPy ' .iti Boom 212, Inter Ocean Building, Chicago, lit' >. JOHN EVANSON & Co* Jackets. Wraps. Capes. A little misunderstanding about m small shipment of Ladies Jackets and Wraps. Will yon care If it be a Bett er, a long cape or a medium length, with button -flye collar, a tan, nivy browner black? The tact is the manu facturers sent us too many and have ordered us to sell them, hence we offer you a very decent, well made, staple Jacket, in light colors, at $2.75, and better, finer,and high er prices, up to $10 and $15 each, if you wish. It is ol importance for u* to sell you a good suit it you need one Mere than 200 have airived the past 10 days. 'Would you care to look them over now? Perhaps you may buy later if the style, quality and price auits you. . Any other article needed (and remember we furnish whatever we do not have in stock fresh from headquarters) we can assure you will be carefully filled and at as low figures as can bo made and live. JOHN EV ANSON & CO. West McHenry. Ill , 1893, <• piM'sTi î xxxxj^: /i/IIWirms 9/ mm. All Competitors Acknowledge it as the Standard. It makes more Bread. It makes better Bread* It makes whiter Bread Than any other Flour. For Safe by all the Leading Meixharts in town, and at The Roller Mills. Pillsbury's Rest at lowest market price. Washburn's best $U0. A choice Fancy Patent at $1.05. Try a sack of any of the gialea mentioned here, and if you do not obtain the best results jour money will be cheerfully refunded. Leave your order at the Mill, we will do the rest. Bran and Middlings for Sale. JR. 1 Important Announcement. • I beg leave to inform you that in believing to supply a long felt want we have established Jn W. McHenry, III,, a large store ot general merchandise, which will be known as the CHICAGO FAIR STORE, WHERE ALL KINDS OF Clothing Diy Goods, Notions, Boots and Shoes. B TirSWAHK. KTt '. will be sold at very low prices. We have the best facilities to pro cure the best goods at the cheapest priccs obtainable, and in order to build up a good trade we are going to sell everything at a very moderate profit. It will benefit you greatly it you will call at our store and examine our goods and prices at your earliest convenience. You are assured to be satisfied with every article bought at our store. Very respectfully, THE CHICAGO FAIR STORE, 0. GOLDMAN & CO., Prop's. Wett McHenry, U. * 1 'MJi • ; . .. _ , _ , .. .. ...... _ .. .. , ... ..... . .• , .... *, ... . . . . m , V * , . „ i . . r . . w a . t a » . :