BIBLIOGRAPHY 323 



Farmers' Advocate, Marion, Illinois, 1873-74. 



Farmers' Advocate, Monticello, Illinois, 1874. 



Farmers' Union, Lawrenceville, Illinois, 1873-74. Supported the Granger 

 movement. 



Granger, St. Anne, Illinois, 1873-74. 



Illinois Granger, Macomb, Illinois, w., 1873-76. Name changed to Inde- 

 pendent in 1876. Supported the Greenback party. 



Independent, Kewanee, Illinois, w., 1871-95. Supported the Independent 

 party movement. 



Independent Reformer, Springfield, Illinois, 1874. A campaign paper in the 

 interests of the Independent party. Circulated gratuitously in the fall 

 of 1874. 



Industrial Age, Chicago, w., 1873-77. Established in August, 1873, as the 

 organ of the farmers' movement. Later Greenback in tone. The Prairie 

 Farmer, xliv. 289, 292 (September 13, 1873), said it was supposed to be 

 backed by the McCormick Reaper Company. Circulation reported as 

 five thousand in 1876. File from beginning to February, 1877, in 

 W.H.; file for 1876 in U.I. 



Industrial Press, Galena, Illinois, w., February, 1874-84. Supported the 

 Independent party movement. 



Liberal Reformer, Morris, Illinois, w., 1872-79. Supported the Independent 

 party movement. 



McLean County Anti-Monopolist, Saybrook and Bloomington, Illinois, 



1874-75- 



National Crop Reporter, Jacksonville, 1873. See same title, Jackson, Ten- 

 nessee. 



New Era, Woodstock, Illinois, w., 1873-80. A Grange and later a Green- 

 back paper. 



Northern Granger, St. Charles, Illinois, w., 1873-74. 



Ogle County Granger, Oregon, Illinois, w., 1873-75. 



People's Paper, Chicago, 1873. A Grange paper edited by Edward N. 

 Fuller. Only two numbers, July 26, and August 16, 1873, appear to 

 have been published. The paper was then merged in the Industrial 

 Age. Copies of both numbers are in C.H. 



Prairie Farmer, Chicago, w., i843~date. Early favorable to the Patrons 

 of Husbandry and established a Grange department in December, 1873. 

 Later another department was added for the clubs and the State Far- 

 mers' Association. Favored railroad regulation and looked with approval 

 upon the Independent party movements. Claimed a circulation of 

 twenty thousand in 1876. Files: nearly complete in U.I.; 1869-75 in 

 B.P.; 1875-76 in C.H.; May-December, 1873, in W.H. 



Spirit of the Grange, Bloomington, Illinois, w., 1876. Vol. i. no. 7 (August 

 3, 1876) owned by the McLean County Historical Society. 



State Grange News, Freeport, Illinois, 1877. Published by J. M. Chambers, 

 the secretary of the state grange. 



Western Agriculturist (and Live Stock Journal), Quincy, Illinois, m., 1868- 

 date. Files: February-December, 1874, 1878-1900, in D.A.; 1875-79 

 in Chicago Public Library; 1877-88 in U.I. 



