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The Great Bend Morning News from Great Bend, Kansas • 1

The Great Bend Morning News du lieu suivant : Great Bend, Kansas • 1

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Great Bend, Kansas
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THE GREAT BEND MORNIHG NEWS Number 205 Volume 1 Great Bend, Kansas, Wednesday Morning, September 21 1910 in the South and it will teach our Senators FORGED CHECKS SNUBBED LINDSEY and Congressman as they have Curtis Playing for Peace? Topeka, Sept. 19. There are many persons conversant with political affairs in Kansas who believe that Harry J. others in the deal saying he didn't write the checks but passed them. Anyway he is liable to pay the penalty a serious offlen.se after the next term ot court.

appreciated before, that they are to Congress to serve the people and to be their servants and not their By But Five Votes New York Sept. 26. For Theo dore Roa-evelt for temporary chairman of the republican state convention 480; for Vice President That was the status of the fight between Roosevelt, heading the New York state contingent of the new nationalists, and the republican organiza- Bone is to serve only a few months more The fact of it is, the House and Then Teddy Turned the Tables on as United States district attorney. It And it Was Not One But Many That Were Cashed ia ronnrtoH that Sunritnr f'nrtia orpnt tn are full of corporation lawyers and hers of the boards of directors of Liic nuinc ui irauiia xuil ian -iii companies, but it looks as if the with the avowed intention of asking the today when the struggle was carried President to withdraw the appointment Congress would have clean Democrats and Republicans to pass laws and govern our country. of Harry Bone and name some mun rec HE'S IN THE CITY BASTILE WAS NOT POLITE PERHAPS ommended by Senator Bristow for the place There is a good deal of speculi-tion into the very heart of the old guards territory with primary elections lor delegates to the state convention in over twenty up-state counties.

The suffragettes, who invaded the primary election in New York county last night when a delegation was elected to the going the rounds just now as to why Mr. Curtis went to Beverly. Some insist To Await his preliminary-Implicates Others in Deal But Altogether Rooseveltian was the Denver Situation. Our Washington Letter. Washington, C.

Sept. Political Rumblings. The political overturning of thestate tf Maine which has always voted the' rame for more than fifty years without a substantial break, has created untold astonishment and set many minds to thinking of what it all means. it has always been the endeavor of a few to ride upon the backs of the many and this country is no exception to the rule. We have the railroads, the Beef Trust, ohe Sugar Trust, the Coal Trust, the Steel Trust, the Coffee Trust, and a lumber of other corporations who are crying to impose on the public and enrich chemstlves unjustly.

that he went East at the call of tht siate convention pledged for Roosevelt, Fresident to talk about some Indian affairs, especially relating to the in- Lo rimer on Trial Chicago, Sept. 20. The sub-committee of the committee on privileges and elections of the senate, here to investigate the election of Senator Lorimer, will begin its session in Chicago in the president's suite at the Congress hotel, at 3 o'clock today. The firstses-sion will be executive to map out procedure and the hearing of evidence will not begin until tomorrow. were crestfallen today.

The women declared that the men were so busily vestieation into the Mc Murray lar.d con When ThpnHnro Rnnspvlpt. rnnrVipH engaged in controversy over the chair-1 Elmer Reynolds, well known in Great ra mISi imers insist ini.t vurtis wtno manship now that the question ol em- Bend and for some years a resident here Denver he was met by a reception East on his own motion to try to cxr km committee, says LaFollette's Maga- the President lnw it hannened in ancipating women did not have a urHi ith nn zine. That was made up Kansas when Curtis and his friends had mnlnn. 1 a. mam I County Chairman Lloyd C.

Gris- result ol tne miscamage 01 ms plans t0 OI Some OI tne Dest people OI tne the Prpnrinnt that the QloTirl-nnt. com will head New York county's Urw rich quick. city, cut wnen nooseveit looicea arouna congressmen would all be renominated for Denver's most distinguished citizen without trouble and Bristow and Mur- delegation, although all of the delegates I His method was an old one and one he did not find hin there, La Follette's jocfc wouid bbe tied down under a com are not instructed for Roosevelt. A-1 that has never been especially success- The American Woman's League will have a regular meeting at Commercial Club rooms, Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock All members requested to be present. 205 St.

1 1 TT I ponnnups. np nni nrnn nr. inw i.i. mr. i.

mone them are former United States I He wrote other people's namesion iieLe muursemeiiL ui me laii aummi- Then came the revelation that the "kids' ratin nH the Tariff Rill Attorney Herny L. Stimson, Represen-1 bank checks and proceeded to caslf 1 1 juage naa Deen snuoDea. Curtis, it is said, has seen a treat tative Herbert L. Parson, Senator Root, them. Usually he would buy goods rt 1, 1 A 1 1 I Otto Bannard, George Knox Bell and I and pay with a check and take the bal "-uient.

it nas aawnea UDon mm tnat a way to rebuke the detractors of Judge patronage counts for very little in Kansas ather prominent men in the party. I in cash. He passed one on Oscar Lindtey that will meet with the approval postmasters are not so influential Frazier here and passed others in Lamed These corporations dictate the prices they pay for raw material and dictate the prices that the consumer must pay fo the finished articles. For instance, the Beef Trust dictates what the live stock ranchman shall receive for stock and what the consumer shall pay for his beefsteak and porlk chops. This condition of things practically bives the trusts of the country the right to run their hands into tour pockets and Jo as they please, and has become unbearable and the movement that is sweeping over this country is a strike at the bosses of the Republican States of the North and the Democratic States ol all right thinking citizens.

We take as they were in the days of the con Sama-Hans. I ma rawnee kock the story of his rebuke from the Denver Last evening at 7 o'clock, at the home I He beat Oscar Frazier to the tune ol vention and that the turning down by the President of the insurgencsena- Express. Sometimes the London papers? core a "beat" on their American contemporaries. Tit-bits, telling a story about "Uncle Joe" Czannon tells its readers that he is "the late speaker of the American Congress." j. For Sale.

5room cottage.one Forest Ave. Lot 70 by 150. Fred Walker, Pnphe 162. of the brides parents, Mr. and Mrs.

W. J. $8 which was the amount he got in Early in the day when the reception or because he had some ideas of Sams, Rev. Cockerill united in marriage over and above the amount of his committee met the colonel, his first jwn that coindiced with what Kansas Miss Lois Sams and Mr. Fred Hans, both I purchase.

question to the members was, "Where is pfcople thought was quite harmful to of this city. He was caught in Hutchinson and The parlor of the Sams home was fought back to the Bend. He implicates Judge lnndsey? Curtis and President Taft. Ac The committee sidestepped, At noon, cording to the discussion about the beautifully decorated in green and gold. Over an arch at the entrance green leaves jLULeiiuuse aim uuiei currmurs i.iiis when the colonel was resting for a few minutes, there was shoved into his room wants to get rid of some of his patron and golden flowers were artistically inter acopy of Clay's Review, with eight pages age and wants to divide the Kansas bud woven into the name SAMS; and above the marriage bower appeared the name, devoted to slandering Lindsety.

ness with Bristow now. AN HANS. Then the Koosevelt wrath arose and he declared to Gifford Pinchot To the strains of the wedding march and his other friends that he must see Veterans at Atlantic City. Atlantic City, N. Sept.

IS. -Na from Lohengrin, played by Miss Kramer, ARKANSAS VALLEY FARM Lindsey and aksed to have Lindsey the bridal couple walked unattended tional headquarters of the Grand Army of the Republic were opened on the at the entrance to the auditorium as he to the altar underneath the bower and there while the sweet, low tones of Ocean Pier this morning. The weather entered for his speech. Accompanied by Mayor Speer, Chair Jungmann's Nocturne, "By Moonlight" was not all that could be desired. Tiie man Reynolds of the convention league filled the room, Rev.

Cockerill said the temperature was pleasant enough, but the heavy clouds that rolled in from the and others who had shone with words that united the lives of two of the reflected glory, Roosevelt approached popular young people of our city. ocean made the air damp and indicated the auditorium. Then he saw Lindsey, After congratulations those present rain. left the party and stretched out his hands betook themselves to the dining room The big crowd already here was swell id where refreshments were served and the with: "I am glad to see you, judge." 1048 bridal cake was cut. Irvin Hans drew the by the inflow of thousands cf veterans from all parts of the country.

The reunion of the Philadelphia Bri Still holding Lindsey by the hand, thimble, Hazel Crilly the money and he turned to the discomfited committee Burt Hans the button. gade and the meeting of Col. Hilary A. and said Immediately after the ceremony Mr. "Here is the man that I have been and Mrs Hans left via auto for the home Herbert, a member of President Cleveland's cabinet and a confederate officer, with Commander-in-Chief Van demanding to see all day." of Mrs.

Hammond to join another bridal couple, preparatory to starting oh the With this rebuke, which left his reception committee in apprehension of honeymoon trip. Sant and General Sickels is still tha talk among the huudreds of veterans who saw the meeting. It is probable that his next move, he turned back to Lindsey The bride is the pretty and accompl- Acres with an invitation to go with him to plished daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.

J. the proposition made by Colonel Herbert We offer for immediate sale this fine farm known as the "Kimsey Ranch" located 2 miles southeast of Cimarron, the County Seat of Gray County, on the main line of the A. T. S. P.

railroad and on the Arkansas River. The improvements consist of a new five-room house, story and half, barn, room for 16 head of horses, good cattle-sheds, board corral, several acres fence, hog tight, fine grove used as a feed yard in winter, 10 and one-half miles new three-wire fence, posts two rods apart. Four wells with pumps, three windmills, 300 acres in excellent state of cultivation, ready for crop, telephone in house with local and long distance connections, a fine road leads direct to Cimarron from this farm. the platform. Lindsey protested that Sams.

The groom, Fred Hans, is the tr Kri ncr nhniir a orrnnt mpptinff nf thr he had not beeninvited by the committee Blue Qray be considered efficient assistant cashier of the First National Bank and one of the popular during the week with the object of car and did not wish to intrude. Then the famous teeth clenched and he turned young business men of our city. Both rying out the suggestion. ThA wrk nf arramrmer for the biff na- towards the committee with this remark: have a host of friends with whom the "Judge Lindsey is my guest on this Wcdnesday is prceeeding splen. News unites in wishing them a long, In platform today.

Will you kindly see happy and prosperous life. that he is provided with a seat. didly, according to those in charge The old soldiers from the Middle Atlantic and New England states are expect Then taking Judge Lindsey by the Hammond- Barricklow arm, he walked with him to the stage. ed to make up the, greater part of the Last night was a busy night for Rev. It happened that Gilson Gardner, big procession.

Cockerill. Immediately following the wedding at Mr. Sams, he hastened to the the washmirton correspondent, was directly in front of him as he finished home of Mrs. E. A.

Hammond, where at Taken Home. eight o'clock there was another wedding. Ed Hotchkiss has had a long hard pray The contracting parties wereMiss Blanche siege of it at the hospital. At times his Hammond and Mr. Claud Barrick.

chances for getting out at all were du low, two of Great Bends popular bious. He would get better and then young people. have a back set and it was a long and speaking. As he finished the speech, Koosevelt stepped to the press box, and calling Gardner, said to him: "I wish that you would tell the gentlemen of the press that in opposition to my wishes, there was no place provided in my reception for Judge Lindsey, whom I so greatly esteem. I wish you would see that they know that his appearance upon this platform was at my request and as my guest, and that I It was a pretty quiet home wedding, discouraging time.

with only the immediate relatives of the But at last he is home. He was taken families present. Miss Hazel Clark played from the hospital and is enjoying the wedding march and alter the cere the comforts of home life again. It is County mony light refreshments were served. sale to say he is appreciating the change The bride is the daughter of Mrs.

E. A. Not that his stay at the hospital was Hammond and the groom is one of the not made as pleasant as possible but, the insisted on his presence here. I deem it an honor to have upon this platform with me a man who has done so much The soil is a deep, dark sandy loam, covered with blue stem and buffalo grass, very productive and fertile and will raise any grain or forage crop usually raised in this climate; water can be had any place on the entire farm at depths of from 6 to 35 feet; most of the land lays level, some a little rolling, but not rough, and every acre can be cultivated. 300 acres of this place is first-class alfalfa land, being Arkansas River First Bottom, with river frontage of one-half mile, does not overflow.

hospital goes with unplesant conditions efficient employees of the A. A. Drug Company. Both are among the most usually and while the sick man may be for humanity and has been so courageous better off at the hospital he would usually Popular of our young people and carry against wrong as has Judge Lindsey. the best wishes of many friends as they be better satisfied at home.

enter lifes journey together. 3 After Them. Kansas At the Hammond home the two bridal GeorgesThacther has started a crusade couples took a cab and made it for No. 8 against juvenile smokers. He arrested Miscellaneous Shower.

Miss Clara Kramer gave a miscellaneous shower part to Mrs. Fred Hans, now, Miss Lois Sams then, on Monday night. The presents were many and varied and two young fellows yesterday who are They drove a block west from the depot, boarded a box car, passed on through and entered No. 8 from the rear platform, under 21 and who were smoking on the street, and took them before Judge Clay the evening was delightfully spe it by only to discover that the car was beaut ifully decorated with mottoes such as" Just I all. Those present were; Married." "Bound for Wichita." "Love Miss Lizzie Komarek, Miss Elsa Gliss- is Blind." "The Girl ho couldn't leave man, Miss Kilva Johnson, Miss Lyre ton, who assessed small fees.

Mr. Thatcher says this is only the beginning; that as truant officer, the law imposes upon him the duty of stopping boys under 21 from smoking on the street or in public places and that he proposes to enforce it. Daily, Miss Lillian Troilette, Miss Florence Lee, Miss Hazel Buckland, behind." etc. And so they got a good start and the "goosebone" presages continued Miss Giace Hayes, Miss Lu.a Sp.uill, Miss My. tie Lindsley and Miss Amelia Maus.

Where? The basement of the M.E. church. When? Next Saturday night. What? Water melon social. To Firemens' Convention Will Stoke and R.

A. Ewalt are at This farm is a money maker and owing to the fact that it lays only two miles from a thriving little city, with a soil that is not surpassed anywhere, with gaod improvements, a fine road to town, we consider it the best bargain in western Kansas, either for a home or investment, at $22.50 per acre, either cash or will give terms on part at 7 per cent. For Further Information and Plat of This Ranch Call on or Address DAWSON 6 ZUTAVERN Great Bend, Kansas tending the State Firemens Convention Pleasant Surprise Ry. and Mrs. Alford of the Christian church were treated to a very pleasant surprise by a number of the 'members of the church who came in with well filled basketj and helped the minister and his lady enjoy a delight- ful evening.

Farms For Sale: 400 acres in Barton Co. all tillable $5000 improvements $75 per acre. Terms. 160 acres 2 miles to town in Barton Co. half in cultivation.

$7500. 800 acres improved 3 1-2 miles of Alexander 160 in cultivation and smooth a snap at $6500. at Eureka. They represent the Great Bend Fire Department at the state meeting. They are among the oldest members of the local fire department having been in the service for better than a quarter of a century.

Naming them as delegates was simply a deserved recognition of their long and faithful service. Stated Communications of Great Bend Lodge No. 15 A. F. A.

M. Friday September 23, 1910 at 7:30 o'clock P. M. Work first degree. W.

Torrey, Sec L203 5t. W. A. Reinecke, Heizer, Kansas..

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À propos de la collection The Great Bend Morning News

Pages disponibles:
818
Années disponibles:
1910-1910