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Shockeyville Plainsman from Shockeyville, Kansas • 1

Shockeyville Plainsman du lieu suivant : Shockeyville, Kansas • 1

Lieu:
Shockeyville, Kansas
Date de parution:
Page:
1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

VOL. I. SIIOCKEY, GRANT KANSAS, SATURDAY, MARCH 1G, 1889. NO. U.

G. A. R. Commnnicated. We notice an article in a late ej- O.

IE. COCHKAJSr, ehange giving a "sure euro" for the ment piovidcd for her. As might be imagined, the 70th Indiana, Gen. llavxison's old regi-ment, was the observed of all observers. It was given the post of THE- bitflor the rattlesnake, said euro being bruised grss applied to the 0.

A. at the Inauguration. Despite bad weather the ceremo Harclen Gitw honor as the president's bodyguard nun attending the inauguration of in the parade, and acquitted itself President Harrison were of the most imposing character. Under favora IS OFFERING BARGAINS IN Watclios, OIoclQ andSllverwaro ble circumstances the marching pa geant would have been the moist no With honor. The Washington of March 3, devotes several columns to the doings of tho regiment and the giving of its war history.

From that source we learn that 145 surviving membeisof the regiment were table that ever occurred nnon the American continent, and as it was under the conditions of cold and Brin? or send venr Everything warranted "wv lu uo icpuira present, 13 living in Kansas, among rain and mud, it lacked little of tne number being T. II. Ilornadav. C. E.

COCHRAN. wound. Whether this is an infaN lible remedy or not wo are not pi c-pared to say, as we hare never tried It, but as buffalo grass has not a great amount of juics in we would hardly like to risk it in as serious a matter as the bite of the rattlesnake. Within the last two years we have had some experience in the rattlesnake business, having had a boy bitten once and a favorite dog bitten twice. The dog was bitten the last time by a large snake with eleven rattles.

In each ease I applied pal-Terized alum and soda, binding it on with a cloth and then saturating with turpentine. We used no other remedy, though the doctor recommended whisky for the boy, but after taking one dose he declared it achieving that distinction. One of its principal features was the srrand i i i editor of the Plainsman, who has display made by the G. A. not yet returned home.

From the Pott we make the following extract: Perhaps nerer again will the fading A typical crowd of brawnv west ranks of the veterans of 'Gl appear ern men. a verv lar.Tft nrnnnrtinn so prominently on stroma nf bearing the scars of hurtle I trh tn1 Washington. Gen. Harrison's old from a Da. timnro nnrl nhi 1 1 1 u.iu last nif'ht.

Thev wpra vutamin regiment, the 70th Indiana, formed Gen. Harrison's regiment ur, in the president's body guard, and the FLORAL GUIDE FOR 18ROTTrp WnwrPD enn-rTr, number, and left, rnd ,7 7 bz.u taiAiiUuua ur AiHtAlCA New gh-nA. New Troe cimXTC.r"n'i flT' descriptions and price-. Now I 1 descriptions and prices. vvui uicum nvih-ii ai lmnrntrAH i .1 fourth division was composed of veterans under the command of a- wm i uivvcu.

-oumaii's more var eiies tnan anv nth-r culdto S.tM IX" a Every person wno ownsl fom of o'clock Friday afternoon. They came through without interruption except at Cincinnati, where a collision between one of the four Pullmans thy occupied and another ear mn.fi it Gen. William Warner. We extract for 15 cents worth of Seeds, oulv 01 certificate good iniiiiii, containing a certmcate aoc JAMES VICE SEEDSMAN, EocHenter. S.

tl necessary to secure another car and delayed them three hours. At nearly all the towns ef the following notico of the part they took in the parade from the Washington Post of March 5: Although the fourth division did not compare with the military divisions of the parade in brilliant uniforms, it was as vigorously applauded, for the spectators remembered that these were the men who, in the hey-day of youth, hart not boe-n nhiv along the route erowds-were out to catch a sisrht of th made him sicker than the snake bile did and declined to take any more. Where venomous snakes are so numerous, it is advisable to keep the remedies always at hand during the summer season, as a very little delay in some cases is liable to cost a life. Nor is it necessary to try eves y-thing you have ever read or heard recommended. If you know a sure cure, use it and let experimenting alone for the doctors, A.

C. H. They are escorted hv Afnrhaiia itary band, ef Topeka. Kansas, oc cupying two additional Pullman cars. The entire nm-tv.

vpf soldiers givua to parade and show in time of peace, but the grizzled and maimed veterans of Gettysburg and the Wilderness. Marshaled by Gen. William Warner, who looked as proud as when he led the Forty-fourth Wisconsin into battle, they marched down the Avenue to the rythmic steps of music of the Union, perhaps not so erect nor sok'jerly as tSiat other great parade in Mav.lS65. when returning tlnslierl An Animal Child. St.

Paul, March 8. A remarkable freak of humanity was unearthed yesterday by Agent Hutchins, of the Belief society. Stories of a child that was kept by its parents in a barn with the cattle and fed and band, are quartered in the enrs sidetracked at New York avenue and the Boundary. Among the veterans are representatives of various states besides Indiana, whence they have drifted since the war. Nebraska, California, Iowa, Kansas, Arkansas, New ork, Pennsylvania, Illinois and Missouri are all represented.

Col. Merrill, successor of Gen. Harrison in command of the regiment, originally its major, is in command. Lieut. Col.

Bartholomew, Col. Burgess, also the original lieutenant celouel ot the regiment now register of deeds of Topeka, Messrs. Moses McLaiu, secretary of the veterans; John L. Brown, the latter once auditor of the state of Iowa, both having lost an arm at Kesaca, J. M.

Eads, who lost a leg in with success, they carried their bat-tie-stained banners review before the president. Yesterday they paid their homage to one of their own number, and although lessoned in numbers, bent by disease and racked with pain, from the "effects of heir campaigns a quarter of a century ago, they marched blithely and briskly as when they left comfortable homes to engage in the greatest contest the world has ever known. The rain did not daunt them; they had seen too much of it for that, and the men who were with JJurnaide at Fredericksburg through the mud. me vm, aie prominent in the party Thanking our customers for their liberal patronage in the past, and hoping to continue with you in the future and cater to the want of one many customers, our motto shall be, "Small profits and quick sales." Yours respectfully, ANDERSON DIVINE, Shockeyville, Kang. Marshall's band, accompanying the veterans, are gorgeously uniformed in white trimmed with gold, and blue trowsera.

Tho veterans have no special pro gram for to-d'iy, which thev will sp3iid in attfading the various churches and resting from the jour Xow Storo ixx SSlioolsLoy-vlll, treated like an animal had been the theme of the simple folks on the farms about Newport and Pigseye for a year past. Agent ILutchins heard the weird tales and resolved upon an Investigation. Accompanied by a mounted officer and armed with a search warrant he drove yesterday morning to the forty acre farm of Pigseye, where the neighbors said the "animal child" was kept. In the barn, sleeping on a pile of straw between two cows, they found a child, apparently about nine years old, tied by a rope around the nock to the same post with the cows. Thoouly garment on the little thing was a piece of gunny sack, fastened about the shoulders and re to the waist.

A pot, which had contained gruel, and the remnants of a black biscuit lay in the straw beside the freak. The child was brought to the city and taken to the hospital, where Doctors Wheaton and Oneker held an examination. Her formation below the waist is peculiar and fote Stock! ney, liiey win lorm a most interesting feature of the parade of Mon day, and it may be safely said that no more substantial looking men will be found in the line. were willing to believe that asphalt pavements compensated for all other ills. With the same devotion to duty that characterized them then, they wheeled into line with uot broken step, that lagged a littk whon some rheumatic veteran felt a twinge that involuntarily reminded him of his swamp experience around Vicksbuig and the CJsickahominy.

There, one saw comrades of t.h fin Immense ariety Stock New and Fresh! grand army of the Potomac exchang ing reminiscences their campaigning with those of that greater army that Sherman led to the sea. The hero of Donelson and Vicks-burg marched side by side with those who unheld the Kai-rv fl no- fin En rel I meat of Old Soldiers. The law providing for an enrolK ment of soldiers, their widows and orphans, by township assessors, was published in the CcpUol on Tuesday morning and is now in full force and effect. It requires county clerirs to furnish blanks for such enrollment, and imposes a fine of not lass than 3S r'C1' -aore than $100 cn any county clerk, township trustee, or other officer, who fails to carry out any of the requirements of the law. Wichita Etgle.

Virginia's bloody fields, and those his and Gaps, Boots and Shoes, Cloth Tho Haadsiuest Train ia the there is no record in the medical works of anything like it. Many physicians examin the child and All are of the opinion that no similar deformity ever existed. The child Is as intelligent as its seven brothers and sisters are, and talks the Polish language fluently. Surabuska and wife are ignorant, superstitious persons and have regarded their off-Bpringas an evil spirit. The child has always been kept in their barn with the cattle and has never been permitted to associate with its brothers and sisters.

ing and Drugs. PRICES to suit the times! I will not be baten In pricei by any dealer in Grant county. Come and see my new steck and compare Bay prices with priceslsewhere. C7 7 33. HOLM33.

Shockeyville, Kansas. wno iougnt "mit taper' were omnipresent. The man who lost an arm at Chickamauga told his companion who had passed through the horrors of Andersonville and Libby prisons how Thomas had saved the day. Tlie recently elected department commander of the Army ef the Pos tomac, Col. W.

S. Odell, received an ovation as lie led the First Brigade of the division. His escort, the Drake Zouaves, of Elizabeth, N. with Gen. Drake at their head, and carrying the $2,000 silk banner they received in San Francisco three years ago, followed, and their t-tened Hags were in striking contrast to the white silk banner they so proudly displayed.

This command had some memorable flags tattered and torn, but emblems that where the fight had been thickest there they had elusl ed around their standard. Thev riianhivpri th fir Stole? ills Poultry Yarfis. MM WJIUI Shockeyville, Kas. World Leaves Union Depot, Kansas City, every day at 6:35 p- via the Chicago, Santa Fe California railway for Chicago and eastern cities. This train is the Pullman Vestibule Express that has created so much talk among travelers, and is recognized by all as the safest and most comfortable train in the world.

The service in the Dining Cars is remarkably good and constitutes a strong attraction for people who are fond of the good things of life. A select library for the use of passengers, properly appointed smoking accommodations and handsome Sleeping and Reclining Chair Cars are in this train, which is lighted by electricity and heated by steam. A com potent electrician accompanies each train to attend to the lights and signals. I will keep on hand and for sale eggs irom the following Thorough-, breds: flag ever planted on rebel soil, whic.i The Chicago Express Leave Union Depot, Kansas City everyday at 8 30 a. m.

For Fort Madison, G'alesburg, Streator, Joliet, and Chicago. This train is the only day train out of Kansas City that runs through to Chicago without change. Handsome Pullman Vestibule Bleeping Cars and Reclining Chair Cars run through, Kansas City to Chicago. Dining Cars serve meals at convenient hoars on this train. It makes much quicker time than any ther day train out of Kansas City to Chicago.

uen. uraKe carried over the Long Bridge on the night of May 21, 1801, and the brigade flag of dare-devil Phil. Kearney. In their rear came the Second Duryea Zouaves, of New York city, better known to the survivors of tlie war as the gallant One Hundred and Sixty-fifth. This wan Gen.

Ae-niw' LANGSHANS, White and Brown Leghorns, At the reduced price of $1.00 per setting. This Hotel has recently changed hands, has been thoroughly cleaned, is well furnished and be conducted as a old command, and he rode at the head of it as proudly as he did twens ty-four yenrs ago in the grand review. They wore their great coats over the red zouave uniform they would have loved to display had tho weather been favorable, and every I sr. I have spared neither pains nor money to obtain birds from the best strains. L.

R. WHITE, Shockey, Grant Kana. Yards i mile west of Shockeyville. Rates reasonable. one watched with lovinar eves the A BOOK RlTiniT full description and daughter of the regiment, little 11-year-old Maggie Reilly, as she 4 A few choice claims in Bear Valley, for sale cheap right now, Inquire of T.

B. Hornaday. MID. SHOCKEY, Proprietor. marched with noad erect and carrv luiiuni; uiree maps.

Semi Ktairips for clrcularo. A. BASS A AlcHierso.i, Kansas. tlie small silken ilag the rcgi- FINAL PROOF PA PE RS MADE OUT FREE AT THIS OFFICE..

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À propos de la collection Shockeyville Plainsman

Pages disponibles:
190
Années disponibles:
1889-1889