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Wilsey Bulletin from Wilsey, Kansas • 2

Wilsey Bulletin from Wilsey, Kansas • 2

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Wilsey Bulletini
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Wilsey, Kansas
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2
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TELEGRAPHIC ha lnalVal in favorable to im- ru TJnnifln pnnitt haS bad WHfiEY BULLETIN. and provision is made for fifteen additional employees. In the patent office the salaries of she thirty princl- 7Vain and TELEGRAPHIC NEWS. LEVELED BY WIND. ATrtinn bill was defeated ln snow which has delayed seeding and the Iowa house oy a vow o- al examiners is Increasea from 3.4uu 82.500.

and nine employes are added. KANSAS NEWS. A farmer near Cherryvale had his nose put out of joint and was otherwise badly disfigured by coming in violent contact with a calf as he was opening his barn door. 0 OOTTIS, 9t Editor. A Cyclone Near Akron, Devastates By a vote ot 88 to 9, Tj lesday itahba n.ouut the Australian ballot bllL injurea tne eariy wu ri averages of condition of principal rt n11stara Mile of Country, In the department of justice provision la made for an assistant attorney gen KANSAS TO6BT, v.

i.y,.i hi. book. "Darkest. JNew lOrK BH, rennsyivauui Btanwj New York 88, Pennsylvania yaw eral at $5,000 and an assistant kttorney Akron. April 11.

Two clouds 87, Michigan 67, Indiana 75, Illinois Africa," and will vwu mo iv4- The mavor of Miltonvale was ar rested and fined $50 in Kaneas City for iuiaovui uu Amuimuu uuj Tho rannrr nf tinn nf farm animals Recent rains have put the 'soil In the- hipping hogs and cattle in the same came together Thursday evening about two miles northwest Of Sharon, Medina county. People who watched it some two minutes say they began to re7olve and bore down on the village when the tornado appeared. The tornado in ten Twelve or tne rormer were makes the averages as follows: Horses 97.4, cattle 04.1, sheep 93.7, swine d.6. Thn narnonfnoa nf louses of farm for the department or agriculture at $4,000, and five additional employes. Incident to the admission of the four new states and the establishment of a court in the Indian territory, provision is made for five district judges at two United States attorneys at $2,000, and two United States marshals at $2,000.

trampled to death by the steers en transit. Northwest in fine condition for spring work. China Is strengthening her northern frontier against anticipated attack by tni animals by disease, winter exposure or Governor Humphry has appointed otnerwise as estimated average i.o ui horses, 3.64 for cattle, 7.3 for sheep and 7 A fnr nnrlnn Thn rpnnrtS indicate the Russians. A TTanl thA Iintlld COnVlCt minutes hua leveiea everyining in us track, over six miles of farm land for a width of thirty rods, demolished dozens of buildings, killed one man, fatally injured a man and woman and seriously injured several others. Forests were R.

W. Finley, of Decatur county, a regent of the' state university to fill the vacancy caused by the expirntion of the term of Thomas Henshaw, of Wyandotte county. was not allowed to attend the funeral of THE ARCHBISHOP SPEAKS. loss by exposure throughout the coun rrv ot more tnnn miuiuu vaiiuo aim hlS Wife. nf Rnnerior.

He Want No Trifling With CathoUo still larger losses of sheep. Education. Last Thursday the city street car cut down as if they had been bean stalks. Matthew Brewley was caught has been appointed lumber inspector stables, together with twenty-three Lieutenant Steel'i Reprimand. Gov.

Hoard. Livingston. April 14. Arch- bishob Cleary has issued a circular letter to the clergymen in his diocese Washington, April ioiiow- Tho California pronimuon oonTonwoa ing is the text of the reprimand issued nommated Gen. John BIdwell ot Chloo 4n ha jtaaa nf T.Iaii 1 in orders in the case of Lieu The California prohibition convenuoa head of horses, four cars and a lot of feed was destroyed by fire in Arkansas City, entailing a loss to the company of about $18,000, on which there was an general respecting the relation or uoman uara- lor governor.

i. jAAuiir AAflMAd wednesdar tenant ateele: "The proceedings, findings and sen fonoA in tho fnrpomincr cftHfl of Lieuten insurance of it is tnougnt to have been the work of an incen lb WHO uouuiiv' that the Iowa Legislature shall adjourn olics to separate schools, which has created a decided sensation. The archbishop charges the priests to call upon every rate paper who deliberately chooses to decide with the enemy for diary. ent Mathew F. Steele, Eighth cavalrv, Lawrence Journal-Tribune: The Judge Allen, of Denver, aeoiaea was Wolfe Londoner was not legally elected annrovefl.

Tne sentence win oe amy oYBPiiprl A t.Amnnrnrv lnss of self the gradual destruction of Catholic mayor of that city. control in dealing with the mutinous education in this province and an a nf AArt.nnnaKe. conuuuiuK cot: duct or a soldier nas aireaay resulted in Lieutenant Steele to eral seconds, was felt early Friday morning at Dover, Me. nounce to him in the name and authority of the bishop that his action is rebellion acrainst the church, and that tho TuinialimBtit nf nuhlin And official i oiont.T-foni ntnrm Bti'atereon. only editorial association in the Btate, the Northwestern Kansas, will meet in May at Mankato.

CM. Dunn, of the Minneapolis Messenger, is the capable president, and expects a successful meeting. The usual excursion to Colorado, New Mexico and Galveston is on the program. Some day some railroad will tell some newspaper crowd to go somewhere and the jig will be up. censure and to which little can now be the archbishop reserves to himself ISUllUg N.

a quantity of ashes and potato bogs fell from the clouds. added by a formal reprimand. The les ann tmnrlit. hv this incident, is instruct alone all power of absolving such rebellious Catholic from his sins, un-les he shall receive such a written decla ivn fn nil vnnnor nffltwft of.thfl armv bv rk nnmni'i Hptfit. including mayor.

showing them the absolute necessity of Judge, and councllmen, was elected Mon ration that he heartily repents of having injured the church, that he scandalized his neighbors by withdrawal of his taxes from Catholic education, day at Edgerton, nan. Thn otjiampr Anrora. with OOftl from William Schrader, a farmer living sell command as a quaiincauuu lur me command of men. Abuse of subordinates by words or blows connot be tolerated urder any circumstances." The HIT Unliiftnlt up and deposited several rods away badly crushed under the timbers. He was unconscious and cannot recover.

His son landed on the contents of a haymow. The house of Franklin Comley, a quarter of a mile on, was blown from its foundation, and taking fire was burnd up with all its contents. The family escaped by taking refuge in the cellar. An apple orchard of fifty trees was swept clean. Hughes Pranks lived just a quarter of a mile below Comley.

The destruction of his house was complete. Not a stick of timber of any kind was left. About 1,500 feet from the foundation of the house Mr. Frank's dead body was found, with the brains oozing trom a hole made from a ilat iron. An ear was torn off and both arms broken.

In a clover field near the house lay Mrs. Franks unconscious, with her collar bone broken and serious internal injuries. She is not expected to live. At the end of its six mile sweep through Sharon the tornado rose high in the air and jumping over the southern part of the city, dropped down upon Springfield township, just southeast of Akron. The house of Scott Sweitzerwas whisked from its foundation and scattered over a ten acre field.

Daniel Brown owned rive acres of timber on which not a single tree was left standing. The houses of Robert Callahan, John Robinson, Elias Mutts and Eli Fum were riddled and barns blown away. The storm trailed along into Stark county, leaving debris scattered over a stretch of fifteen miles. The loss amounts to tens of thousands of dollars. Buffalo for Chicago passed throuah the Straits Tuesday morning.

ten miles east of Lincoln, was killed last week in a damp well on his farm. He was fixing a pump fifteen feet below the surface and was overcome by damp and fell to the bottom. Mr. Taiinant Adams of the Union Pacific and shall have promised to become a supporter of the separate school at the earliest" opportunity. On receipt of such written declaration any priest of mainr general, commander division of Road, Ignores the report that the Vandei Missouri.

bilts had secured control oi nis line. inews started aown to assist mm ana TA Rnnrinlnh (Ihnrchlll DredlctS an the diocese may grant absolution. BURNING STARS. Ex- Mr. Randall's Death Momentarily riir dissnlntion of nnrliament, followed peeted.

was also over come ana leu to tne bottom, thirty feet below. Thews may recover, Schrader was dead when taken out. A lamp burned freely at bv the success of the Gladstone party. Washington. April 12.

At 2 o'clock Thn 10.000 emnlovea of the government A Philadelphia clergyman has married 14,000 couples in his time. He is a good man, does not believe that marriage is a failure, and votes the John Wannamaker ticket. The Kansas dairymen have by resolution demanded that a part of the given the state agricultural college, by the general government be set aside for the establishment of an experimental dairy school. Besides teaching the art of butter making the students could have the best creamery butter on their pancakes. A Cleveland judge refused to naturalize a foreign born applicant because he had never read the Constitution and could not tell how and for what length of time a United States senator was elected.

Said the judge: "Can a man be supposed to be attached to the principles of our Constitution if he has never read it?" Some one has figured that there are in Denver, thirty-one millionaires, whose aggregate wealth is $46,500,000, and thirty-five semi-millionaires whose wealth aggregates $17,500,000, making in all $64,000,000 owned by sixty-six men. They made all this wealt hout of holes in the ground, and still they are seriously in need of "protection." T. K. Smith, of Leavenworth, has been awarded the contract for disin-tering, boxing and transporting to the cars the remains of 119 United States soldiers, at present burried in the cemetery of the abandoned post of Port Lyon, CoL They are to be shipped to Fort Leavenworth, where their remains will be burried in the National ceme-etery. "Wesley Monumental church, erected at Savannah, as a monument to the founder of Methodism, was dedicated recently by Bishop A.

W. Wilson, of Baltimore. The erection of the church grew out of the fact that Wesley was a resident of Savannah during all his ministry, and from the fact that it was there that he experienced a change of faith that led him from the church of England to found a new denomination. The dependent pension bill in the senate received the vote of every Republican senator and of every Northern Democratic senator. Senators Call, of Florida; Faulkner, of West Virginia, George, of Mississippi; Gibson, of Louisiana, and Walthrall, of Mississippiall Democrats and nearly all ex-Confederates, did themselves the honor of voting for the bill.

Its majority of thirty in the senate stamps it as non-partisan. April brings us a quantity of big thn haws from Mr. liandall's bedside History of the Kiowa County Meteorites. Lawrence. April 15.

Prof. nnrirn At Woolwich. England, threaten the bottom of the. well but at fifteen indi nates that riflftth at anv moment to strike if their wages are not raised. feet down would go out instantly.

would not surprise those watching tha Mnnanrhnsetts house of representa The Purcell Register furnishes the around his bedside. At 10 o'clock he was sinking very Robert Hav of Junction City, the well known geologist, was in the city last evening for the purpose of securing from Prof. Snow specimens of the meteorites reeentlv found in Kiowa coun tives has passed a bill making eight hours a dav'a work in all nubile employment. rapidly and his physicians then ex A bill Moviding for the execution of following encouraging item concerning the wheat prospects: "It is estimated that over one hundred thousand bushels of wheat will he raised in the Chickasaw country alone this year, which is pressed the fear that he wouia not live AnnrittmnAd criminals by electricity was the night through. TTia rwiriit.inn this morninor was un defeated in the Iowa Senate Wednesday.

ty. Prof. Hay first reached the field where the meteorites were found and secured one specimen weighing 500 pounds, which ne sold to New York tnhn divided in ODlniOB changed from yesterday save that he a very low estimate; placing tne average vield at twenty bushels. We are a tn wtiathsv t.TiA rzar wafl DOlsoned Ot gradually grew weaicer anu weaner. confident that the yield will be much dangerously ill during his late lnaiBpoBi- It was then thought tnat ne wouia last thA Aav nnt his crrAat, nnduranee greater than tnat.

Liast year tne wneat parties tor There is an interesting story connect ed with the discovery of these meteor tlon. can hardly sustain him more than a ThA Tlnlnth Board of Trade has de- raised in this nation averaged forty bushels to the acre, and surely it will SCALPED. itfis. The man who owned the eighty maa nnt. fn Hva chlcaso Quotations un very lew days at tne most, ne rested easily and slept a good part of the time.

A Kansas Man Wants Fay foe His Hair acre farm on which they were found had the place mortgaged for $400. The less she can get them in return from that citv. be as good this year, xne new roner mill at this place will get the greater part of the crops." ins rest was natural ui ins Biaiu ui Taken by Indians. health and there is no need to give him mortgage was about to be foreclosed, District Attorney Fellows, ot New York anvthing to induce sleep. lie takes Topeka Journal: Sheriff Wilkerson nit.

a urinnai ill. and General John nnnrishmpnt. rporularlv. furnishes the following description of Washington. D.

C. April 14. Senator Plumb has introduced a bill to pay S5.000 to a man who was scalped. Charles Fremont is reported in a similar and the man was in desperate straits on that account. He accidentally plowed up pieces of a peculiar stone which proved to be meteorites.

He sold the specimens for $800 and was So far as possible perfect quiet is the property found in the possession of UlalULitHlcU auuut tile uuninui niiu nnt. oven nil mnrnhprs of the family are The Manhattan (Kan) Bank closed lt Annn TnAndav mornlne and simply posted Accompanying the affidavits and other papers in the case is a realistic piece of evidence in the form of a recent pho- tne man orougnt down irom iioiton, Saturday, on suspicion of being a horse thief: One bay mare, 10 or 12 years old, weight about 950 pounds; nllnwprl tn rpp. him. as the presence of thus enabled to pay the mortgage. TURKS VERSUS CHRISTIANS.

any one he has not grown accustomed the notice. "John W. Wodd, temporary toerranh. This picture shows tne head ett front root crooised and snouiaers aAsIcrnee." to see during ins uiness mignt excite him nnri inrhiPA him t.O talk. Dr.

Mai- Bt fiomnal Ttnlrar HATH that thS ValUO OI Tfio Elements Hostilities nrnAnrta frfim CnnatOrial AMCA IB Between the Resumed. lan, at 2 o'clock, said that he had not seen Mr. Randall since noon; but he knew that there had been no recurrence badly scared from collar sores; four lap robes, one of which is a handsome wolf robe lined with ied flannel, and the others are common robes or blankets, one set of buggy harness almost new, in as it looks now, twenty-six years after the knife was applied. The claimant is Robert McGee. His home is at Easton, in Leavenworth county, Kansas.

In 1864 McGee was only 14 years old, but he was rather large of his age and thoueht he could induce the offi nnl ahnnt one-tentn tne cobs London. April 15. Dispatches re nnrtatinn. of the diarrhoea. ceived here, via Constantinople, say George H.

Stuart died Friday at nua sack in tne Duggy; a ricnety top that fighting continued recently he buggy and a well worn set of buggy Kansas Corn Shipped by the Gulf tween the Turks and Christians at Crete. At the last eccount ten Turks delphia at the age oi i. no wo many years prominent in financial, ana religions circles. harness on the mare when captured. Oat.vfstov.

AdhI 12. Four cers to accept him as a recruit. He went to Fort Leavenworth and enlisted When the mustering came on McGee was rejected, but was given a place as The property was brought to the city and five Christians were killed, while a teen cars of corn were received here Martin A. Jameson, OI last night by a Holton party, and, not being claimed by anyone, was turned number were wounded in various en counters. nnnnv nViln vna acanltted Fri a teamster by a contractor, who was yesterday from southern Kansas, being principally from Wichita.

Seventy pnra mnrA nrA on the wav from the dav at Lebanon of the charge of embes- over to captain j. a. jonnson, tne about to take a wasron train of jrovern- clinir nnhlic. fnnds- accused's attorney, by his order. ment supplies from Fort Leavenworth A Prominent Bank Failure.

onmA nlim.A whinh will arrivfl tomorrow. The Reading board of managers mes as An aiAvarnr has nAAn nniir, ann a r.nnre From the Trade and Traffic: The Manhattan. April 11. E. DmioiAir.v.io Wndneadav.

and efxectea Kansas crop report for 1889 exhibits the run to the dock for loading directly into the vessel, which will arrive on the Purcell, of this city, proprietor of the Manhattan bank, made an assignment largest and best crop ever raised in the changes which, it is said, leave Mr. Cor-bln stronger than ever. to Fort nion, in jn ew Mexico. Mcuee was an orphan. He had no home to which he could return, and no friend with whom he could advise.

He took the position of teamster under the impression that he was still in the govern- 25th. state, the acreage Demg h.uu.uuu, ana ProAn Hammond the eX-ftttOmeV Of the the value of the product $105,655,000. yesterday morning with John Webb, cashier, to assignees. Liabilities, assets will not be known for One thousand tons of corn will be inarl Ail thA varsa! taken outside the bar Rnnt Wn Parifln Railroad, it is Said, lfl a This is S29.uou.uoo trreater tnan tne val days. Beginning with Easter, April 6, we have the twenty-fifth anniversary of candidate for United States senator, to several days.

The assignment was and 1,000 tons of oil cake be lightered i. it. TAt V. nnniltA. cWTvt will succeed Senator Sanford.

Lee's surrender on the 9th; twenty precipitated by the action of the ue of the crop of 1888, and more than double that of 1880, showing that the product of Kansas farms has increased over 100 per cent, in the decade, which ho loaded entirely with Kansas corn. Mamri.p. Pftpt of Milwaukee, has ment service, aitnougn ne naa Deen rejected as a soldier. Near what is now the flourishing city of Lamed, the wagon train was wiped out by Little Turtle's band of Indians. McGee was the only survivor.

He was scalped and left on the ground for dead. This takinor nhniit. 2 SflO tons. Althontrh the publicly outlined his policy and declares ninth anniversary of the firing of Fort Sumpter, on the 12th; the death of Abraham Lincoln on the 15; the JUand iV Mortgage comyany, oi this city, which yesterday advertised a public sale of collateral given by Mr. Purcell to secure his obligations to the freight is more from here than from is at the rate of 10 per cent, a year.

that hia flrafc nblect snail DO TO no clean and keen clean that city. New Orleans, Mr. Keymersnoner, tne shinner. believes he can make it nay to company for. due April dmw uavn-iaAn aant tn the Senate This certainly does not look as if the west were going to ruin.

Farms are continually multiplying, and the product of them is constantly increasing. the in ship Kansas corn to Europe from this and which Purcell failed to pay, seventy-first anniversary of founding of Odd Fellowship America on the 26th, and the on Wednesday the nomination of Samuel point. happened on the 11th of July, 18b4. The terrible ordeal left the boy shattered and in bad health. For many years he made a living by exhibiting one Stringency of times and exceeding difficulty in making collections are M.

Harper as United States Attorney the Western District of Wisconsin. In Honor of Lincoln. Ins scarred crown, and now he appeals Tn Tennessee Congressmen Honk ana Hundred and hrst anniversary 'of the first inauguration of George Washington as president of the United SpnniirTP.r.T. T1V. Anril 13.

Great to the goveynment, not for a pension livery new era openeu io tseiubiuem, is seized and occupied in a few days, even in regions remote from market, and thousands of persons are eager to engage every year in the vocation which croakers tell us is unprofitable. The additional causes or jvir. i-urceus failure. Other enterprises of which he is president are not affected by the assignment. The Manhattan bank Tavlor were renominatea.

air. iywi preparation are being made here for an nnri.it a commemoration of the but for the lump sum of $5,000. The claim comes under the classification of nomination was bolted by a faction which tinminatod ex-Goncressman Butler. States the 30th. was the oldest in the state west of twenty-fifth anniversary of the death Toneka.

Mr. Purcell the wealthiest of Abraham Liincoin, on xuesuay next, It is evident that Henry Stanley has man in the county, one of the wealth The furniture manufacturers or oincro nati have decided to hold a mammoth ex-iwwitinn this summer where their products Indian depredations, although there is nothing like it on the records. The papers are now in the hands of the select committee on Indian depreda facts as presented in official assessments and agricultural states are rapidly increasing in wealth, population and comforts. April 10. ih wm ua uiiuei tun nuBuiiroo of the Grand Army and Sons of Veter iest in the state and a leading business man of Manhattan.

He was supposed to be absolutely safe, with unbounded will be on view from July 8 to Aug 9. ans posts and the Turners societies. been so long isolated from the world that he is not able to take advantage of opportunities as do other prominent men who take the lecture platform. It is renorted that the annual salary Urana Army men ana memoers oi tne American Turner band irom various credit. For several months there had tion claims.

Among the papers filed is one showing that President Lincoln heard of the orphan boy after the scalping, and sent for him to come to Vat. nt tha Atchison Road has been re Lincoln Memorial Anniversary. The twenty-fifth anniversary of the been vague rumors that Mr. Purcell a. duced 1500.000.

and that a cut or ancea aim parts of the country will be parts oi pne couuiry wui ue death of Abraham Lincoln is to be was embarrassed but the public would preseuu i It is suggested that editors each publish 000 has been made in other expenses. Ailinninl AWt Vt1 Vt -V 19 tVlAlW DOTfl I AI IL Outt-lt A1 Washington and see mm. rue pre not believe it. The failure as a nnan- TVWatiiiTnreRentinff the Brotherhood' All the seats have been sold for the first appearance of the traveler before a London audience, the lowest price being $5. The net profits of the single sumption is that the president's heart was touched by the incident, and that ments and that copies be sent to the of Locomotive Engineers, firemen, brake-men, and switchmen met at Elmlra, N.

cial crash was the greatest disaster that ever befell this county, because of Mr. Purcell's immense interests and Lincoln memorial league at Spring he wanted to snow tnat the govern observed by special exercises at the National monument in Springfield, 111., April 15. Governor Humphrey a few days ago received an invitation from the president of the Lincoln Memorial league to attend, but was compelled to decline on account of pressing duties field to be arranged in a book and pre- and adopted a scheme oi federation. lecture will be upward of $5,000, yet long standing business connections. ment recognized McGee's claims to some return for his sufferings by pro servea in a monument.

kt maotinorof the Ottawa (111.) Pres of this Stanley will receive but a beg Everything is quiet the city, although the failure is the chief theme of con viding a place for him. Gens. Blunt bytery, Wednesday the committee on re Cannot Attend the Funeral. garly $500, the balance going to the Polytechnic Institute, under whose versation. There is no run on the in tne executive onice.

lie nas since received a second communication from SncnST-wn Anril 12 Hnnvipt and Curtis evidently thought that McGee was morally, if not legally in the service, for they issued a perpetual vision reported In iavor or moaincauon ot certain chapters, which was agreed to. Ferdinand ATard. who is deenlv affect auspices the lecture will be given. the same source, suggesting mat per other banks. There are a good many small depositors and mostly in small amounts, and the business men will Richard Proctor, aged twenty, only son order that he should be allowed to draw soldier's clothing.

ed over the death of his wife, will not be granted permission to attend bis wife's funeral Ward's sister called at haps Kansas would like to be among the states which will send a floral offering to be placed on the sarcopha not be seriously embarrassed. ot the late famous astronomer, R. A. Proctor, has become Insane, and it has been decided to confine blm in an asylum. purcell's liabilities.

COMPLETED. gus. To this the governor was com Topeka. Kan- April 13. E.

B. Pur Colonel E. B. Knox, for many years at and he requested her to take a rose and The photographic society of Geneva, Switzerland, have been photographing married couples who have lived together for many years. They.

find that between such husbands and wives there comes to be a pronounced resem Judicial The LeglsIatWe Executive and pelled to reply that the state had no conservatory in connection with the capitol from which an offering for the place it in the nanas or nis aeaa wire. The flower was taken from the conserv Appropriation Bill. cell, proprietor of the Manhattan bank, which failed Tuesday, has filed a schedule of his liabilities which foots up the head of the First Regiment, Chicago, until ill-health caused his retirement last year, died suddenly at his home atory In the prison grounds. Washington, April 12. The house total of $563,000.

His heaviest credit occasion could be selected and that it would be difficult on account of the backwardness of the season, to make a committee on appropriations to-day Valuable Mill Burned. blance of feature and expression. Out of seventy-eight pictures made the ors are the Fourth Street National bank. Philadelphia. American completed the legislative, executive The new steamship Majestic mad her first trip from Liverpool, via Queenstown, AIM "-t V.

Dodge City, April 10. The only JJtMMJK 1 I AU AU. Alio VUIJ collection from private sources which would be a credit to the state on this and judicial appropriation Dill, it Trust and Savings bank, of Chicago, I flour mill In the city burned last night to New York in days, 10 hours, 80 mm ft nlu.V Cnai-lra nm a train I tM ttiA nnlpltAst maiden 01 o'clock. from train tea the quickest maiden passage on carries an aggregate appropriation of American Exchange National bank, of New York, British record. anniversary.

A Baby Killed by Hanging In a Bam resemblance between husband and wife was in twenty-four cases greater than between brother and sister, in thirty cases it was as great, while in at 11 Sparks a on the Rock Island railroad started the rtnv, rrrat inn Tha wind wntt hlrrh And 20,864,326, which is 10,600 more than the last bill, and $762,724 less than the estimates. The number of salaries Land and Mortgage company, aui Midland National bank, of Kansas City, Charles Goodwin, a Creek Indian, who mock. it was with difficulty that the hose S15.000: J. W. Booth Sons.

St. Louis. lived near Tulsa, was chopped to pieces while he lay sleeping Monday provided for is 9,97, which is 240 less than the estimated number, and Wichita Journal: A most heartrending accident happened yesterday morning at the home of Rev. J. C.

the remaining twenty-four there was no marked resemblance. Perhaps companies savea many otner aajacent hniliiinor Thn mill wan thn nronertv 141 more than those provided for in the nlsht. His wile has been aerestea ior Third National bank, St Louis, Douglas County bank, of Lawrence, Kan- A. G. Cattell, of of G.l Hoover.

Loss about Slo.OOO, Stefton, at the corner of Alice and those were the couples that quarreled. the murder. no insurance. last bill. No new" legislation is proposed.

Some of the changes in the governmental service provided for are Central In the morning the family The danebter of Steward O. H. Camp Camden, N. Ames Llevator, prepared for church leaving tne little The summary of business done at Castle Garden since the opening of The Mew Chancellor. Milling and Merchandise company, 818.000: American Land and Cattle 18-montbs-old baby, James, asleep in as follows: salaries oi eight senators and five representatives from the new bell, ot the Continental Hotel at Crestline, Ohio, eloped last week with a negro waiter, the pair being Joined in marriage at Cleveland.

hammock, in the second story, leaving Lawrence, April 13. The com Dan v. 827.000: E. B. Purcell Mort- that eseablishment in 1S47 contain states.

the two older at home, to see that regents of the University of Kansas iraire. Loan and Trust company, $72,000, some statistics that run counter to the Tae salary of the president and sec nothing should harm the babe, or dis the other liabilities are in amounts less Illinois cnal miner demanded an ad- yesterday elected Prof. F. F. II.

Snow pVianpallnr tt tha nnivAnsitv and Mi. retary is increased from $2,200 to $25,000. turb its rest. general impression about comparitive Vance of 10 to 17) cents per ton and the than $10,000. The schedvie or assets still uncompleted.

The children remained on the first ive additional cierss are provided lor rector of the museum of natural history a 1 mrww immigration from various foreign in the Uivu service commission. Si ty at, salary ui co.uw jrear. counties. Our newcomers from Ger adoption or toe eignt-nonr system, operators bave called a meeting at Ottawa to discuss the situation. five additional employees are provided The Country's Crop Condition.

floor in order that their voices should not disturb the little sleeper. After about an hour, as nothing had been heard, the children wondered that the many numbered nearly 3,500,000, ex for in the Sixth Auditor's office. The Washington, April 12. By a strict! Serions dauiaza in the Illinois winter Washington. April 14.

The condi feeding by 1,000,000 those from Ireland. tion of winter wheat on the 1st of party vote tne ways ana means com- miftPA derided tn renort the tArriff hill wheat belt is reported trom Springfield. and it aaid that nf tha area aaedad last. That England should be next on the force in the United States Treasurer's office is reduced by five clerks. Twenty-two salaries of territorial offices are dropped as a consequence of the admission of the new states.

to the house with a favorable recom- April as reported by the statistician of the department of agriculture is 81 for the entire breadth. The general baby should sleep so long, and stole quietly up the stairs and peeped into the room where baby was. To their horror they saw that by some accident their brother had slipped from the fall folly 25 per cent will have to be plant- list with nearly 1,200,000 immigrants will cause general surprise. Next follows Sweden with 225,000, Italy with ca who omer crops. mendation just as it now stands.

Chairman McKinley desired to make average for rve is 82.8. The salary of $4,500 is provided for The renort sent oat from Columbus that the report to the house ot once, but as In the states of the central valleys an assistant secretary of war. In the hammock and was hung by the neck. Judge Allan G. Thurman is seriously ill 217,001 Norway with 173.000 and Mr.

Carlisle stated that as he had not It seems that the baby had awaken recent frosts have cut down the growing wheat 60 per cent and quite gener Switzerland with 134,000 exceeds Den is without foundation in fact. He in excellent health, much better than ht bat quite completed the report of the mi- ed itself and in climbing from the navy department the same number of employees is provided for, but the list is rearranged to correspond to the ally in wet or submerged areas the hammock had caught its head through nomy ne uesirea lew uajs time; nndpnrtanriinB' was reached that the been for several months. mark, and Austria proper is ahead of on down to for roots have been destroyed. There are secretary's plan for the bureau reform the meshes and slipping sustained its bill should be reported to the house full weight on its neck with its toes lhe ooard or pension appeals is in caking up a grand total of reports of recuperation by Eproutmg and renewed growth in this section. reached by the orgacizatioB commit! of of the St.

Louts. Arkansas and Texas abont fix inches from the floor. In ho have come fcreirners Monday next The committee wul have another meeting on that day and will endeavor to adoct a program for creased by six members at 82,000 each. In the land office eight heads of divisions at ZWQ are provided for, place of eight clerks of class four, at this position the little one had slowly choked to death nnabSe to release rt to homM and here the roots are intact, great improvement will follow with good weather. The fact that the roots are Road, and aasstssment on tkt stock Is to be rednced to 8f per cent the debate in the house.

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About Wilsey Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
332
Years Available:
1889-1891