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The Nortonville Sentinel from Nortonville, Kansas • 1

The Nortonville Sentinel from Nortonville, Kansas • 1

Location:
Nortonville, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

EE NOKTONvILiLM SuNTINhLo NORTON VILLE, JEFFERSON COUNTY, KANSAS, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1903. VOLUME 1. NUMBER 14 plants, to whose united foresight and exertion wo owe it that in wo had craft v.o good, guns so excellent and American seaman of so Selections from Roosevelt's Speeches. SflO pounds begin now (r feed ritflit will have (ho benefit, of the good prices. Present priees will be found entirely mtitfac-tory if cows are liberally ami properly fed.

During- (he year 195, under Jond eons returned a A Most Lljeral Offer All our farmer readers should take advantage of the unprecedented clubbing offer we are making, which includes with The Live Stock Indicator, its Special Farmers' Institute Editions and The Poultry Farmer. These three publications are the her position as clerk in Jeffrey's store. Her resignation took elicit Saturday night. The Old Soldier's dinner which was to have bom at John Weislnar's next Tuesday, May 12th, has been postponed. It will be held at Mr.

Weishaar's Tuesday, May Hero are a few extracts from high a typo in the conning towers, in the gun turrets and in the engine rooms. At Chicago. Ilooscvclt is reported as not being a fluent orator, but his words stir the hearts of the common people He is the People's Ideal, the People's speeches made by President Roosevelt on the trip ho is taking across have failed to come up to the standard we have set, because they did not have the men back of the law. Just as on a battlefield, it is the net profit of $-10 per head; diinup- he year 1S0C they made a nit profit of per bend iift-r deducting the cost of during the year the net profit per cow itmoimled to per head, the average for the three yean- ipfi per head, without tfiv-in? any credit for rklm milk and young titock. man Deinnu trie gun wno counts prcsident.

No other man who most, so in civil life it is the average held tho rc.ins whu.h raided has our government has ever been so near the hearts of the peopi'i of the whole United States, as Theodore Ilooscvclt. U. S. Griffin returned fromGentry, Ark. Thursday morning.

Chas. Kaufman ai.d son John, and Miss race were St. Joseph visitors Thursday. John Goddard was in Kansas City Thursday. Mrs.

C. W. Land's, of Osborne, Kans. is visiting with Miss Maude Babcock and Mrs. L.

F. Randolph, this week. O. F. Mauzcy the Cummings mail HANDY MILKING STOOL.

Illinois Tlalrymnn Ucsor Iben Con-trlvunce- hich Snlts Illm Very Well Indeed. citizen back of the law who counts most. At Newcastle, Wyo. There is no proper plaee in our society either for the rich man who uses the power conferred by his riches to enable him to oppress and wrong his neighbors, nor yet for best of their class and should bo in every farm home. To them we add, for local, county and general news, our own paper, The Nortonville Sentinel, and make the price of the on rone year only ifl.K).

Never before wan so much superior reading matter offered for so small an amount of money. The three named, which we club with our own, are well known throughout the west, and commend themselv es to the reader's favorable attention upon mero mention. The Live Stock Indicator is the great agricultural and livestock paper of the West. The Poultry Farmer is tho mast practical poultry paper for the farmer, while Tho Special Farmers' Institute Editions are tho most practical publications for the promotion of good farming ever published. Take advantage of this great offer, as it will hold good for a short time only.

Samples of these papers may be examined by calling at this office. the United States. From the Mail and Breeze. This country has and this country needs better paid, better educated, better fed and better clothed work-ingmcn, of a higher type, than are to bo found in any foreign country. At Minneapolis.

Still less can we afford to fail to recognize the further fact that changes in the tariff must not be made until the need for them outweighs the disadvantages which may result. At Minneapolis. Fundamentally each man will yet The play giveu Wednesday night by Home Talent in the interest of the demagogic agitator wno, instead the M. W. A.

band, was fine. Fred of attacking abuses as all abuses Satterlee the deacon, and Roscoe saould be attacked wherever found, Roberts, the Irishman, were spell- My milking stool is made of 1 ineh' board. Pieces a are Ixiixia inches; is lxOxS inches; IxCxlS inches nntl il is 1x0x0 inches. The strip is placed as tiphtly and lirm as possible. The milk pail on board across the end of which is a cleat to prevent the pnil Flipping- off.

Notches are also sawed iu pieces and d. so as to form legs. The milker sits on board b. Fred Taylor, in Farm and carrier was visiting relatives and friends in town Saturday night and Sunday. amicus property, -attack's prosperity binders, Miss Maude Murray as attacks men of wealth, as such, MotherMundy" the witch, and Mrs.

Ida Stilhnan left Thursday whether Uiey be good or bad, at- Sheldon Babcock, as Mr. Mansfield, morning for Emporia where she expects to attend the State Normal. Mr. and Mrs. Yv.

II. MelJlair re tack-s corporations wneuier iney (io one who was led into dissapation by well or ill, and seeks in a spirit of misrepresentation of his wife's ignorant rancor, to overthrow the affection, showed an unusual amount very foundations upon which rest Df practicing. H. B. Kenncr, as find that the chief factor in determining his own indivual qualities, ho cannot afford to lose his individual initiative, his individual will power.

At Sioux Falls. Our prosperity is deep rooted and stands on a firm basis because it is due to the fact that the average turned from their trip to Barber our national Mr. Reed, an attorney, and Homer county last Saturdry. They report a very enjoyable time while they Goduard as the newsboy, were cer Frozen Good Things. I think I speak for the great majority nf the American neonle when tainly right there.

In fact every American has in him the stuff out of I sa-v that we are not in the Icast ou the program showed an un-aguLnst wealth as such, wi)etLrr amount of interest in making individual or corporate; that we enin8 Vvam a success, merely desire to see any abuse of be duet by Mm Lola Allison, of corporate or combined wealth cor. i Muscotah and Almond Burdick, tv.L- wont a.v 1 gone. Minnie Northrup, the little daughtt of Mr. and Mrs. A.

O. Nurthrup who has been ill is reported as im-provirg rapidly. El Sharp is received iufovrra tion that Rural Route No. of whicn he is to be carrier will be installed August 1st. reeled and remedied; that we deep rich voice took well with the Anything you wish, you may order, and we will en- deavor to put it before you in dainty, frozen form.

Fopeku zz Cream, See Cream Soda and Soda Water. W. C. KOENIG. audience which will be pleased to hear her again.

The vocal solo by Miss Grace Satterlee was given in her usual pleasing manner. The mandolin solo bo V. C. Koenig was appreciated by lovers of good music. Winfrcd A.

Burdick entertained the audience on the piano between acts. The large attendance showed that Nortonville people WUc an int-eroKt in their band, which we hope will be giving concerts before long. not desire the abolition or destruction of big corporations, but, on the contrary, recoginize them as being in many cases efficient economic instruments, the results of an inevitable process of economic revolution, and only desire to see them regulated and controlled so far as may be necessary to subserve the public good. At Milwaukee. The navy which so quickly decided in our favor in the war of 18! 18 had been built and mado eflicient during the preceding 15 years.

The officers and the men did their duty so well because they had always been trained to it by long sea service. All honor to the gallant which victors are made in the great industrial contests of the present day, just as in the great military contests of the Minneapolis. Boasting and blustering are as objectionable among nations as among individuals, and the public men of a great nation owe it to their sense of national self-respect to speak courteously of foreign powers, just as a bravo and self-respecting man treats all around him courteously. At Chicago. Our growth, therefore, is bcnefic-al to human kind in general.

"We do not intend to assume any position which can give just offense to our neighbors. Our adherence to the rule of human right is not merely profession. The history of our dealings with Cuba shows that wc reduce it to Nothing can take the place of honesty, courage, common sense and ipacity for work in the average mm. There are other countries with institutions like those of our great republic which nevertheless Mr. and Mrs.

Geo T. Antlerst well known here, who have been living with Mr. and Mrs. II. W.

Skinner near Lake City, have moved to a farm nearSawycr, Pratt county. They will read the Sentinel. J. C. Smith, of the City Dray firm, had a runaway 'Wednesday.

His tf am were frightened by shelled corn being loaded into a car on the siding. Mr. Smith was run over ar.d slightly bruised but no bones were broken. He will be laid up for a few days. Unclaimed Letters.

Nature i 1 i 1 best I The average merchant who pays out i for advertising per month thinks ho is being robbed by the printer. But read this then say it don't pay to advertise. With the cost of a carton of break-last food only between three and To buy where you can get the goads for the least money. oliicers and gallant men whoactually did the fighting; but remember, too, to honor the public men, the ship wrights, the steel-workers, the lour cents, and tho selling price Ours are the best and our prices the Letters remaining in tho Post-ofiice at Nortonville. Kansas for the month ending April Stith VMKl.

Persons calling for same will please fay advertised. Mr. E. T. Shelly Mr.

Chas. Cbsier Robert D. Kirkratrick, P. M. FEEDING DAIRY COWS.

o.vners of the ship yards and armor uiteon cents, the industry is one 1 that attracts prospectors like a now 'i lowest. emma Emm gold field. But not all get rich who erect food factories. The profit in the sale of cereal foods is large, but a market is not to be had for, simply the asking. It needs just as much business sagacity to make money v.

a It matters not whether you are I Missouri or Kansas or any other state, we I I will be pleased to show you and prove theg Care Knst Ee Kieipcined If Perfectl) SatiNfactory Hi-miKi Arc to Mr Obtr.lucil. out of a food factory as it does oat A by jot a rolling mm or a ran way. ft i market is in existence only ft 3 above statements. publicity that costs. It costs from four hundred to eight hundred dol- Yours Truly, R.

JEFFREY. Optician who has been at the COMMERCIAL HOTEL for the past three weeks, lias gained the confidence of the people and made many friends. She tests the eyes FREE. Eye Glasses accurately fitted and adjusted Satisfaction Guaranteed. Farmers do not realize the heavj losses they suffer from failure feed cows properly.

It is estiuiatec that the average anuual yield of but ter per cow is lj pouu.1.;. livtrj cow must first be furnished will enough food for body maintenance; then whatever she gets over une above that amount goes to iuak milk or meat. If a cow la bret along dairy that is, if her tin is a full-blooded dairy unimul she will not have strong tendency to convert feet into meat and wjll therefore convert it into millc. So if she lars in advertising to sell one thousand dollars' worth of breakfast 6 foods. The man who makes wheat-rji coffee spent last year, eight hund- red and eighty-four thousand dollars in advertising in eight hundred newspapers and thirty magazines, ii this year he is spending a mil- PAffl'T! PAINT! 3 lion dollars.

The maker of shred- ded wheut spends seven hundred thousand dollars a year in publicity. is well fed from the time she drops her calf, is regularly milked und made comfortable quiet and content, ed, the more feed the gets the more milk she will give, says the Michigan Farmer. Under careful feeding-and good man og-ement the yield of butter can easily be raised to 3(K) pounds u. year. We liave about 11,000,000 dairy cows in the OUR BUSINESS We is constantly increasing and our facilities as well country, which are ju hling- about 1,375,000,000 pounds of Lutttr, which, Tho maker of another well-known 'food was recently spending more than one hundred thousand dollars I a month for advertisins.

He paid five thousand dollars for tho privi-j lege of painting the name of hispro-i duct on a big chimney in lower New York that can bo seen from all 'the North River ferry-boats. He i has for months kept before the pub-I lie eye a comic figure ar.d some swinging rhymes about his food, He has made all America and Eng-jland laugh, but the laugh has cost at 15 cents a pound, amount to If the 11,000,000 coWs were properly fed, they would produce 3.300,000,000 pounds cf butter, which, at 15 cents a joiid, would amount to We arc agents for the HAMMAR PAINT, a pure lead and zinc paste paint, the best on the market. It is also the cheapest and carries a five (5) year guarantee with it. We are selling a first class barn paint in gallon lots at 75c ts. and in 5 gallon lots at that is a daisy.

We continue to lea in the WALL PAPER business. Our stock is the largest and best assorted in Jefferson county and our prices are reasonable. All the attractive designs of the season can be seen in it. Come in and select your paper for your Parlor, Dining Room, Bed Room or kitchen. We are always pleased to show you our the ma'nufactor hundreds of thousands of dollars.

are prepared to fill orders on short notice. The best team harness constantly on hands. Quality the best, prices below competition. Be sure you call on us before purchasing goods elsewhere. In Lap Dusters we are in the lead.

Our prices are in keeping with our goods, which are always up-to-date. F. C. BAUR, At the Old Stand on South' Side of Main Street, KANSAS. Headquarters for Alabastine and our line of Varnish, Window Glass and Paint Brushes is the Allowing for the extra cost that good feeding would necessitate, there is an annual Iofs of over $250,000,000 because of poor feeding.

It may be thought by some thatmeh on enormous yield of butr Would bring ruin to the dairy industry. It would to certain countries and localities where feed is expensive, but he farmers of the northwest need liae co fear on this wore, for they could and would in a short time be called upon to furnish European countries with their butter, as wecould furnis-h it and make more money than we do at price that other countries could not possibly meet. In round numbers it costs about twice ns much to produce butter in Denmark an it does io the northwest. It win take many in trine the averse up to evtB Frei Muncy came home Wednesday morning. Fred brought home with him a bow and two arrows which were made by the famous Indian chief, Gerammo.

Glenn Martin is night man at the depot now. Miss Flora Randolph is clerking in Jeffrey's Store. She commenced work Monday. best ever seen in our town. We arc after your business, jj GEO.

A 0 II The Wall Paper end Paint Railroad strat, fcortonviUe, Kansas, rned Mis3 Gertrude We! re.

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About The Nortonville Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
317
Years Available:
1903-1903