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<br />to shut down from time to time because of the low stage of water in the Elk River,38 In <br /> <br />1901, the planing mill owned by William Houlton and the flour mill owned by the. Elk River <br /> <br />Milling Company argued over the use of the water power because the water level was too <br /> <br />low for both mills to run at full capacity. ~9 <br /> <br />Wheat shortages and competition from other mills also hampered the flour mills at times, <br /> <br />In 1875, Mills and Houlton were running their flour mill 24 hours a day "notwithstanding <br /> <br />the great depression of the flour tnarket.'>'lO An 1899 article in the Sherburne County Star News <br /> <br />said that "it requires over twelve hundred bushels of wheat per day to keep [the flour mill] <br /> <br />running and the local supply has not yet been large enough to keep it going.''''1 By 1911, the <br /> <br />Elk River Milling Company fldur mill appeared to have been in a desperate economic <br /> <br />situation. An advertisement appeared in the Sherburne Gaun!) Star News that listed the <br /> <br />following six benefits of having the Elk River Milling Company in business: <br /> <br />"First, the Elk River Milling Co. when building a mill in Elk River paid <br />large amounts of money to the people of Elk Rivet;. Second, the Elk River <br />Milling Co. improves the market of Elk River. Third, the Elk River Milling <br />Co. gives work to five men, most of them heads of families. Fourth, the Elk <br />River Milling Co. pays a heavy yearly tax ... [Sixth], The Elk River Milling <br />Co. gives the farmer a chance to receive more for what he raises, [Seventh], <br />the Elk River Milling Co. sells at a lower price than the farmer could buy for, <br />should there be no flour mill." <br /> <br />The advertisement also claimed "If you want [the mill] to remain, we will have to have <br />your support.',42 Ironically, the Milling Company's mortgage was. foreclosed on a week <br />before a flood washed out the dam and undermined the mill, rendering it inoperable, The <br />mill was dismantled in 1913.43 <br />Fire destroyed four of the six known flour mills: the George Albee flour mill burned in <br />1868; the Mills and Houlton mill burned in 1887; the Mills and Sons mill burned in 1902; <br />and the Leslie Hill flour mill burned in 1932. The burning of the Leslie Hill mill in 1932 <br />marked the end of the flour milling industry in Elk River. <br /> <br />18 <br />