J.B.! „ Trewfel ep£:: tve© door* nort#| of CttleensY; OR IUISCRIPTION: |«"'i«^Vrod' f«r' three <*-; ! proportion. wrsday, October 18, 1900. , REPUBLICAN TICKET. to be Held on Tuesday, vember 6th, *900. National. WILLIAM McKINL&ir Sifresldent. TH EO1 K)BE ROOSE VEM State. . RICHARD YATES ̂GtoWMff. ....W. A. NORTHOOTT of State. .. .JAMES A. BOttp . JAMES t*. M'tT l.LOUCMt kwsr .. . .. .34.0. WILLIAMSON General... ...... .. . B. 3 HAMLIN |$Prastee*» - . C. ALEX ANDER, 9. A. BL LLA^D, AJLKK M'LEAN. - VT Congressioi*i. •> nan...., .A.J.HOH0NS • State Board of Equalization T. S. ROGERS Legislative. > Senator DUFAY A. FULUSR ^*W^^&SBTTBTLE»;w«» * 1 GEO. R. LYON, 1% votes County. t̂!lerk.it.«...»lu..OEO. B. RICHARDS' n- LOWELL. JR. -.:̂ OftrW>tr .JJCU ....DR. J.S. MAXON Sungw...̂ .: CHAS. H.T»f|>N VOTE STRAIGHT. ?! WlMili J Oil so to fche polls on Novem- jW6«hMxt yon should mark your hal- . •ar.-.w . • ; 0 REPUBUCAN TICKET I This Indicates a straight Republican | ballot and with a ticket so marked no can arise as to how it t he counted. With the volumin- ; fli a general election the above • 4 is the only safe method of marking. ••jl ' .ItMlLJf, "»V WHILE in Chicago recently Ex-Sena- ."^pir W. A. Piffer. of Kansas, said that would go Republican by 25,000 to $0,000. Qood for Kansas. .'•» IT is the chief work of the Bryanite ||v . managers in every presidential cam » * - paign to Beek to induce the voters to f- forget what they said and % during the previous one. ^ ' > . - » ' THE reports of the banks all over the ooontry show a large increase in depos it bat a trifling or no increase in •jpflfa shows that the people have ideney in hand than they have use Fortunately for the banks, Europe is coming to this country to borrow money and is getting it. DEMOCRATS decry the claim that a blican administration has had any- to do with bringing abont the COttntry's present amazing prosperity, but they have quit denying that pros perity is here, and cannot deny that it has come under Republican administra tion. Proof of the pudding lies in eat ing it _____ A CONTINUANCE of the prosperity the is now enjoying is of far more to every voter than the snc- (••ssittflf any political party or of. any pol itical candidate. No argument is neces- p saTy to show that any change in the ex conditions will interfere with ' ftst prosperity. And it is equally plain the continuance in power of the present administration will result in ̂ , maintaining the conditions that now * exist and will Insure four years more of general prosperity. mn eneesof Hon to later the views of some of the stimtigMt in Ms own party. He !>ad the eqtaa- Ifee patience, the disci tiie wide informa- the hî li pergonal character tf ofpracti- . WaB.'lMi privi lege to iirte Ul wwlty in a period When OLD SONG. There is not&iagBew about the pre tended feus of the Bryanites regarding the preservation of the constitution and titeltbqrties of the people. In pretend- istifcntion will be shatter ed into fragments and liberty wiH be destroyed if they are not placed in pow er, they are singing a song that has been heard in political campaigns from the time the government was founded. The cries they ace now raising have been ra||edin former years over pretended daiigers that even Democrats themselves will admit now never existed, and these cries naturally fail to' alarm or disturb those who are old enough to remember pteffotis presidental contests. And even the cry which the Bryanites cries assume this year lacks originality. Democratic campaigners always have wailed about tyranny, despotism and militarism, and always have pretended that the success of their party was the only chance of saving the country from revolution and ruin. As far back as the time of George Washington, that patriot was denounced by tne Democrats of his day and charged with attempting to subvert the free institutions of his coun try. Ever since that time Democrats have denounced the purest patriots of the nation as scoundrels seeking to de stroy liberty. Many men are yet living who remem ber well the course of the Democracy in these respects previous to and during the civil war. At that period they de noanced Abraham Lincoln as a man who was trampling down constitutional freedom and fracturing that sacred document beyond repair. In 1864 their national convention made this memor able declaration, which sounds very much like what Mr. Bryan is saying now abont the Philippines and alleged Republican violations of the contitution: "After four years of failure to restore the Union by the experiment of war, during which, under the pretence of"# military necessity of a war power higher than the constitution, the constitution itself has been disregarded in every part, public liberty and private right alike trodden down, and the material pros perity essentially impaired, justice, hu manity, liberty and the public welfare demand that immediate efforts be made for a cessation of hostilities." At their next national convention, four years later, the Democrats were in a still more pitiful state of anguish and despair. Again they "viewed with alarm" the awful schemes of the Re publican party to throttle freedom and Set up an empire, and they then fur nished Mr. Bryan with the following text for the speeches he is making this year: "Under its repeated assaults the pil lars of the government are rocking on their base, and, should it succeed in November next and inaugurate its presi dent, we will meet as a subjected and conquered people, amid the ruins of liberty and the scattered fragments of the constitution." Even this was improved upon by the convention of 1880, which invoked the hideous specter of militarism and de nounced that mythical monster in these tenuis; "We are opposed to an increase of the standing army in time of peace, and the insidious scheme to establish an enor mous military power under the guise of militia laws." and plump; there Is safety in plumpness Summer has tried your fo^^rprks; winter is coming to try your breath*mill. Fall is the time to bfiee yourself. But weather is tricky; look out! Look out for colds -espec ially. . Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil is the subtlest of helps. It is food, the easiest food in the world; it is more than food, it helps you digest your food, and get more nutri ment from it Don't get thin, there is safety In plumpness. Man woman and child. --- Chtnbu, <»» Pwrt«r,et, Ntt# VMfc, 50c. end fi.oo; *11 druggist. P R O B A T E N E W S REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Emmet Corel! & w to trustees of Bap* tlst church of Hebron, lot 1, blk It Covell's 2nd addition to KlalinM...| MM John C Gal Tin to RtotonlCiwi- tnings, nw« of swH sec U, sec 31, Hart land, nex of MM MC SB, Dunham Esther B Conant & h to Joseph Still, pt lot 19 of Assrs plat of sec 25, Dorr..... 4000 00 Ora H. Stewart to Henry Sterenberg, land in sec 1, Oitentttng-- Mrs Delia Wallace to William H Wal lace, »H lot ?, blk 3, Aides..• •• Eugene E Morgan & w to Alice MoiftA s3£ of wH oTse ̂ WOO* WOO from se cor 11, ail Of eH of sw of nwk Sj»4see A eK of e$| of ifseM sec 11, ahm K^aere jW _ ̂ X of SW1-4& e% of nwl-4 sec 11, He bron, also vH of sel-4 of swl-4 sec S, * t Hebron .......... 1# Maggie Chapln & h to Patrick J Brick- ley, lots 1,2, 3 and 4 in blk t, Chemung 4000# Wm J Overton A w et al to Jamee 8 Overton, eH of swl-4 sec 28, Ex E B land & part lying on e Side of R R, Richmond ttWW Herbert D Crump A w et al to Bridget A Crowley, lot 27 of H D Crumb's sub division of swl-4 of swl-4 sec 95, Otie- Ifittt ' M 1 following Dr.A.« p-'J ,"1* Dr A v r Lr di Stilling owe ALr I*A r liitwJttobr G.B.* MSlameheeeSarr S 7 WjWbsrn O Tel Co lit M^Hem^onraal » ̂heSer*S 8 „ aWMcOmberFL SO Whiting WE* ̂ M* TOIA W t̂OMS. 4 Ir ĵ2S^S%toTlSyinK I ̂ 4 4 rings! 8otoa/wlj Pavlgt 10c toll J 4 5 rings, 8priag Otove, A Neish, M5c to|l m Cltlaras* Telephone. Thefetkming are the nsm«s uftglxm of the McHenry and West Mc- Telephone oft Hennr'exchangM of the Citisens Co. Besideatces only are specified others * " " GBOKOSFTBLETHEN, Manage?! 13 Aurlnger Dr 13 Aurlnger Br, SOBuchJ J V Bacon Wm r 48 BucklaadJ V, • Wl • AE M JasfesaJake . A B r 43 Jensen H N All 1 18 McOmber F L 11 Meyer Geo r -SB Mertes Joseph, Pis? takee Bay K Mineral Spring, ' takee Bay tt McHenry Laundry IS Magueson GLRose- Miller Johv. . IB Nell George, Jblms- Ghapau Owen By Co88 «BmlthWlllr 48 .Smith E. A. r Bununer gorge and Frank alia A aglmfls, 48 Smith t.D. * 'f gVSl£§ | r-» 3 wells DrDr U C, Wtot 7 Wilbur LamMr 00. ft Wightman W&tf vifk • THE LATE JOHN SHERMAN. John Sherman was prominent fig ure in American politics for forty-five yeaw#vBfe«WiiiiA:'0Q%res8 on the anti- slaver ̂isine aayi. from the time that he wrote the majority report on the Kansas- Nebraska troubles he held a leading place in the councils of the Republican party. He was a leader in the House of Rep resentatives before Disraeli was a leader in tk# British House of Commons, be fore Gladstone had any record as Min ister of Finance, before Bismark had made his mark as a Cabinet Minister, before uortchakof was a power iu HUO eda. He was the friend, supporter and adviser of Lincoln, and thirty-five years later was chief of the Cabinet of McKin- ley. a. In forty-five years of political activity, Sherman was Congressman, Senator, Cabinet Minister and candidate for President. In all these years he wielded great influence in the councils of his par ty, and on til old age unfitted him for the responsftilitieB and burdens of public service he remained a central figure on the stage of political activity . He was of the new school of politics in 1855, standing with men like Abraham Lincoln, William H. Seward, Charles Sumner and others who became the bul warks of Republicanism in the war pe All of his great contemporaries of it day are gone. Seward lived to the of 71. Abraham Lincoln died at 56, |arles Sumner died at the age of 63, ' " John Sherman, with forty-five years active public service to hia credit at the age of 78. Seward retired (lie life before he was 70; Sher- red McKinley's Cabinet as of State when he was 75. iHouse John Sherman was a ^nti-slavery man when Jeffer- Robert Toombs were a ©ate on the other side, herrnan achieved# to that of no man etaary of the | of EurX* ^Clis <as ckr- There have hem variations in the tune from time to time, but the song of De mocracy always has been practically the same. Everything the Bepnblicans nave accomplished for the advancement of the nation has been objected to and opposed as unconstitutional, in the Cucago platform of 1896 the Democrats again sang a dirge over the destruction of liberty. That platform predicted the ruin and downfall of the nation if the free coinage of silver was not restored immediately, and its platform of this year repeats the same old cries of former years. It proclaims new dangers that do not exist, and it revamps the old myths about militarism and revolution. How can the Democratic managers expect to frighten the people with such ancient devices V The voters are familiar with all their bugaboos, and they cannot be used successfully to distract the at tention of intelligent Americans from the DroKeii promises, f«*ls6 prophecies, constant calamity wailing and generally disgraceful record of the Democratic party. mung Edmond F Haven ftttoSW# pt WH lot 1, in nel-4sec3, Coral...... 100 06 Frederick Hoyland to Flavel K Gran ger, nH of sel-4 seel, Nunda 100000 William A Brown Aw to Chas Wttttus, of sel-4 sec 8* iKofivM sec SB, ' •, also swi-4of sel̂ see&, Chemung.... 900000 Ashley Anderson * w to hhamas J Stall et a! wH of nwl-4 sec 21, A swl-4 of swl-4 & sH of nwl-5 of swl-4 sec 10, Greenwood MOO AO John Weltsien A w to James Brennen, lot 4, blk 2, John Weltzlen's addn to , Huntley.. PROBATE NEWS, j Estate of Ellen W. Dnnn, insane. Letters issued. Estate of Excy D. Shufeldt Motion to set aside appraisement MIL Ap praisement bill returned to allow award to Flora May Shnfeldt Estate of Richard Irving Overton, minor. Request of minor for appoint ment of Fannie K. Overton guardian filed. Estate of James J5. Graham. Petition for order to assign judgment fitedi - Estate of Charles Radloff. Sale hill filed. Estate of George Conn. Proof of death. Petition for {novate of Will and letters testamentary filed. Hearing' set for November 19, 1900. Estate of Jane Hance. final report filed. Estate of John P. Sehaefer. Final re port filed. MARRIAGE LICBWSia. * John Birk ..Woodstock Lena Walle'....... .:<•>> . .Woodstock Henry G. Fishef. Harmony Clara Friedemeier............Harmony Harry Page...... .Milton Junction, Wis. Mary Oakley.... .Milton Junction, Wis. Hale Teller............Janesville, Wis. Emma Ashley Haryard Mathias D. Weber. * .McHenry Lizzie Engeln ....McHenry George H. Francisco. Hebron Delia Durke .............Hebron Clarence R. Fleming..........Marengo Ida Belle Wiest Seneca Wilson A. Davis........ .Delavan, Wis. Mrs. Frona D. Hier. .̂ -y.Delavan, Wis. -Geo. Meyers- , fv GENERAL tEAWNQ :'.«3 • - if all kinds. - •--••• *•'/' ̂ Excavating Qrading1. DON'T BE FOOLEDI Take ths (aaalas* sHglaal ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA Q £f tariff Mi MM* ACTIP tat*. Aak ftmr McHenry, ?? ̂rA Illinois dealer in ,j n « . ulre m Illinois McHenry P. WATTLES (Successor to B. R. Howard) All kinds of Fresh and salt Meats always on hand Vegetables and Canned Goods. Bakery Goods a Specialty All Kinds of Salt Pish. Highest market Prices paid for Hogs, Gattle, Sheep, rates and Tallow Fat Cattle a specialty Fresh Vegetables and Fruits received fresh daily. Orders from Pistakee Bay will* receive prompt and careful attention, ;-v Call on me 1 the right thing With f6u. F* WATTLES, West McHenry, I1L LOB« dtoteao. Mephoa*, M CitfaeoB' Ml«pl>oael7 Kodol Digests what you eat. It artificial If dlgeats the food and aids Hature in streagtbeninff sod recon- •traoting the exhausted digestive or» 0uo8. It Is the latest discovered digest- ant and tohic. No other preparation can approach it in efficiency. It in- STausea. SlokHeadache.Gastralgia,Cramps and all otberreaulta of imperfect digestion. Price 80c. agd slae containa SH times aboutdyspepsia mailed free Prsoorsdhy fc C OsWITTSCO. Chioaao. JIJLIA A. 8TOBY. y y S " V - " ' • < • ! * * / - r £ * - ' ! b ' 0 k I have the finest lirie shown in MtHenry. Those beautiful lamps that add to the attractiveness of any home. It would be impossible to tell all about them in this spacer- call and see them. \ '***?• 1- ,̂' ' r V f - r \ % An elegant line to select from. It will do your eyes good to see them whether you wish to buy or not. Order one now for Xmas while the stock is complete Jardintres Finererfumes i d ' X- "•tr;.-' . 'V-4' 4 ̂ l , f b Best stock we ever had. Come and see them. Prices are always right. 1 Sv- ^GEO. W. BESLEY O o <> < > i f 0 i ' f i t i ' f • A i f & & i t i ' f -r"n; - -v ̂ h ̂ s ̂t t * . ; * Z f i We have decided to quit handleing Cloaks and Jackets "s t f . .4 ' f . • ¥ v " » for various reasons, and will dispose of the stock now on * Land at a great reduction in price. Some of these cloak$ ̂ id jackets will be sold at cost and others below cost. * L /. C » V ' * ' j* i » v- ^ * v W'. t is customary for some merchants to make a statement ike the above without really meaning it . "If you se® it; „ ~i"/ _. kjn our ad, it's so," and if you will call and investigate, thf , prices will cocvince yott that we mean just what we sayi:; • ? > ^ ^ 4 ' '• " i v . "4'- wj,*. Y * T V ̂ ? v' 'ft 'j ̂ ' O i > i > i > i > i > O i > O i > i > i > i > m O < > i ' f i > i > i > o i > o o o • * . l * Vf 'V. r> vj" ^ * ' % * % - > mmmm, <\ :i ̂ f c . 4 V Premiums worth; working for I From now on we will give a 10c ticket for every ten cents traded at our store. We will issue 10c, 20c, 30c, 50c and $1.00 tickets, and prem iums will be given for any amount of trade from $5.00 up. You will find, after examining, that our premiums surpass all others in value on any other scheme of this kind, All are on exhibition here and we invite you all to come and see what we are actually giving away. The finest lot of useful household effects and Xmas irifts ' FaU Stock m J j . Never before has our stock been so complete and up to date. Prices as low as the lowest. We add no extra prices for premiums--everything sold at same old prices. Premiums equal to 5 to 8 par cent off for cash* .Tickets will only be given on. cash sales. ' '(••Sv® Anything In the store given as pretn> - lums at 5 cents on the dollar. .. '. 'stiflAR EXEMPT * JS*$£ Tj* «lDcfHnry «Illinois « w v" vv>: ̂ "-V ̂ / - A * i ! > * * r "£• 1 , k«< M goo ̂carpet^the floor usually represents a considerable outlay of money, consequently people hesitate before buying. Before you make any de cision come and look over our samples which consist of about 100 different patterns. These carpets will be sold at a BIG DISCOUNT and guaranteed to be just as we represent them. Call now and get V ̂ • j> }, - ' ?•. ft " " *' 1 Vv'1" - p ̂ .f JACOB JUSTENi ^McHenry, III. •- I { I * I'M.:" «/>. rmtt --yt - • n •• -R' R"S. V U T «W< ^ ' "T V* V^T - J - ,V ,V*- _ 4 'R J E V A N S o N GREAT CLEARING SALE! ' • -s ; «• s ; -I of Shoes, Jackets, Underwear ' ' ;-,y . .. - ;< ifind Blankets ^%-tw ' ins here ̂ r _ ? • W - ̂ ^ fc'f- j,. -v*"? VV'1" , ^*ae and share in the benefits., have bought too many and liiit /vu . , Convert ttiJ * ' c4 ' **-4- »• ̂-tAJ- ** e show 20 new styles in Carpets : , ̂ and fill orders from samples. v » . «C >1 * Look them over if convenient. , vj - < "v*# ' ' h Vest MoHenry, tU : W . C. EvaOSOn Tailor The Crown Tailors Of Chicago have appointed XL' Lawlus, tailor, as their agent to take orders for their fine Sam ple Suitings, as he is No. 1 at measuring and fitting all forms of men. Opposite Riverside. E . L A W L U S