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The Kansas City Daily Sun from Kansas City, Kansas • 3

The Kansas City Daily Sun from Kansas City, Kansas • 3

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THE KANSAS CITY DAILY SUN. FARMERS' ALLIANCE. bizness with and so we only had huff as much munny to do our bizness with, and then biz SERVICE BY PUBLICATION In the District Court of Wyandotte County, Kansas. Horatio B. Hand, plaintiff, vs.

Almond N. Noble, Juliet Noble and Joseph N. Holferty, defendant. The said defendants, Almond N. Noble and Jul It Noble are hereby notllled that they bare been sued by ald plaintiff inthe above named court In which plaintiff died ht petition In an action tu which the above named plaintiff and defendants are parties, and that they must answer said petition on or before PUBLICATION NOTICE.

State of Kansas, Wyandotte county In the District Cejirt within and for said county and state. The Inter-State Water Electric Powor Company, a corporation, pluintiff, vs. The Metropolis tind Company, a corporation, David Adams, et at, defendants. I No, 8000. Notice of condemnation proceedings.

T6 James Momie. Louis Eunau minor ft IIMCQUUMTEDWITHTHKIOeUPHlOrTHIIOOUNTinWIUOnMI nuoh VALIUM information fkoh truot or this maf of thc CMQap, Eoct Island Pacific Ry.i tkt Dlrwt Rout to and from Chlonga, JoUt, Ottawa, Ptorlt, La Salle, Moltue, Rook Iilaiid, In ILLINOIS DavMiport, Mincatlne, Ottwnwa, Oikalooaa, Df Molaw, Wintrtt, Auitiboo, Cwncl Blufft, In IOWA i kiiuuuiftjli uii Paul, iu MINNESOTA: Watcrtown and Sioux Fall, In DAKOTA; Cameron, St. Joiepta and Kansai City, In MISSOURI: Omaha, Lincoln, Fairbury and Ntlien, in N5SRA3KA Atchison, Leavuiworta, Horton, Toptka, Hutchlnlon Wichita, DcUtrillt, Abllnir, Dodgo City, Caldwell, In KANSAS: Klngnihgr. SI Sena and Ulnco, In INDIAN TERRITORY Denver, Colorado Springe and Pueblo, In COLORADO. Traverses nw artat of rich farming and inning lands, affording tbe best faellltlea of later-comuunicaUon to all towns and cities east and west, northwest and southwest of Cblcago and to Faclnc and trans-ooeanlo seaports.

MAGNIFICENT VESTIBULE EXPRESS TRAMS Leading all competitors In splendor of equipment, between CHICAGO and DBS MOINES, COUNCIL and OMAHA, and between CHICAGO and ness wusn't only haff as good as it had bin. Then old Sherman cummensed a tukin in 'Lincoln dirty shin wurth-less lying 'rag baby' and 'flat trash' and burning it up till the hole cap-oodle wus gone, about, and then the bizness bi that time wus abdut all gone to, thats whets the matter with the times." Then Bil went to talkin statisticks, which he sais iz the only way to look at general ishoos, and between you and I statisticks iz good argument, But i sea i must quit an go out an gether up sum 'bark around the saw mill to bile the soop bone. Smith sells the biggest soop bon fur a nickel; it does us fur too messes uf sop an then there is enuff meat on the bone tu make bash fur breakfast, so you see, we kin git along fust rate on a hickel a day, fur our meals, bi addln a little salt end pepper, sum flour and a fu taters. If nickels wusn't so bard to git, times woodn't beio aff ul hard after all. Good bi.

i Your beloved 4 Polly Ticks. P. S. i'lekshun time is cummin round again and Bil thinks he'l git a jok a skraping mud onto thk streets. You kno the polly-tisheners alters hires hole passel uv men jist before votin time.

P. T. P. 8. Bil sais he wud go to Cansas if their was more whiskey or les kalamity out their.

P. T. If you have a wife take her along with yon to the meeting of the People's party club. This a campaign for Nancy and the children." PETITION. To the Honorable, the Board of County Commissioners of the County of Wyandotte and the State of Kansas: The, undersigned, being electors and inhabitants of tbe town or village of Bonner Springs, in the County of Wyandotte, in the State of Kansas, and included in the boundaries thereof as hereinafter specifically sot out and described, respectfully represent to your Honorable Body, that said town or village, including its commons is wholly in eluded within the metes and bounds following, to-wit: Commencing where the east line of Warner averue, in Oak Ridge Addittion to Bonner Springs, intersects the northwest line of the Union Pacific Railway company's ri'ht of way; thence running north along Warner avenue One Thousand and Seventy (107(M feet, to the nortlunrst corner of Oak Ridge Addition to Bonner Springs; thence west One Thousand Three Hundred and Twenty-Two and one-half (1323 1-2) feet along north line of Spring avenue in Oak Ridge addition, to the northwest corner of said Oak Ridge addition; thence north Two Thousand Five Hundred and Sixty (2560) ieet along the east line ot Hheidley avenue, in Bonner Springs, to the center line of Highland avenue in Bonner Springs and Saratoga Fart; thence west on the center line of said Highland avenue, Three Thousand, Nine Hundred and Sixty Five (3965) feet, to tha center line of Cleveland in Saratoga Park, an addition to Bonner Springs; thence south along the center line of Cleveland avenue, Six Thousand and Fifty (6050) feet, more or less, to the intersection oi said center line of said Cleveland avenue with tbe southwest bank of Wolf Creek; thence south-easterly along said southwest bank of Wolf Creek, with the meanders thereof, to its junction with the Kansas River; thence along the last meander line, on the right bank of Wolf Creek, produced to the center of the channel of the Kansas River, thence down said center line of the Kansas River, to its intersection with the northeast line of the Leavenworth, Northern Southern R.

R. Company's right of way produced from the jhorthwest; thence northwesterly along said line of right of way to its Intersection with the production of the northeast line of Block Sixty Four (04), in Saratoga Park; thence northwesterly along said line of Block Sixty-Four (04), to its intersection with the southeast line of Net-tleton avenue, in Saratoga Park, thence northerly along said southeast line to its intersection with the southwest line of Elm street, in the old town of Tiblow; thence southeasterly along said line of Elm street, to its intersection with the center line of the channel of the Kansas river: thence down said center line to a point due south of beginning; thence north to beginning: Thut the total number of inhabitants, included within said described territory, is Four Hundred and Thirty-Six (430); that the total number of said inhabitants exceeds Two Hundred and Fifty and is less than Two Thousand. Your petitioners, therefore, pray that said town or village of Bonner Springs, may be incorporated as a City of the Third Class, under the name and style of the City of Bonner Springs. Thomas Curry James Baker George Cole WS Twist PhiloM Clark Thos Ellmaker I Jewett James Etchingham, Hartley, Hector Walker, A McGarvin, Waters, James Whorton, Maxwell, David Anderson, Charles Hammond, Oscar Hyoort, Hyoort, Carl Hohnquist, Milstead, Smith, Smith, A fcharpe, Whorton, Brawner, Johnson, Weigelmesser, Aloysius McCollutn, Lincoln Hartley, A A Heath, Plotner, John Plotner, Jewett, Stinson, Nicol, Jamea Seary, Dr Kestler Hugh McDanield Jackson George Lee Thompson Clark Morrison, Harry Everott, Moses Martin, Wm McGarvin, Henry Martin, Martin Everett, A Dornon, Stotts, Charles Plumb, William Plumb, Paul Roes, 8 A Dunham, A Walker, Clarence Johnson, Jacob Pontzing, Frame, Ike Millstead, Herman Kohlts, Bob Ballard, 8 Ballard, John Council, William Crosman, I Paul, DC Huff, A Benson, Pete Johnson, John Snell, A Petterson, Carl Schmitter, Chas Enochs. Hall Insurance.

The Continental Insurance Company of New York insure fanners against damage to growing crops by hail. For particulars call on, or address Campbell Twiss, general Insurance agents, 509 Minnesota avenue. Kansas City, Kansas. May 9 4t ALLIANCE NOTES. Every county In the state of Missouri will have a people's party ticket in the field in the state election.

There have been organized 873 Farmers' Alliances within 100 days in low. They all will be found with the people's party in November. New Nation. -rThe free and unlimited coinage of silver will instantaneously obtain the much talked of parity between gold and silver. No matter what the ratio established by law might be the result would be the same.

Alliance Gazette. The people's party in Maine has just held its state nominating convention. It stands squarely on the St Louis platform, and also declares for equal suffrage, regardless of sex, and for fedital prohibition of the liquor traffic. Germany's railroads, operated by the government, put $25,000,000 into the publio treasury every year. They work four times as many laborers to the same length of road as in America, and give the people a much superior accommodation.

Ben Tillman says that unless the democratic party at Chicago adopts the alliance demands, South Carolina will vote with the party that does. This is enough to tell where South- Carolina will go after the Chicago convention. Southern Alliance Farmer. In Texas 839 people's party clubs have already beenformed.over 200 since the middle of April These club3 cover 143 counties of the state. movement is spreading everywhere.

Nothing like it has ever been known in the state. The people will rule. National Advocate. Query: What would become of the democratic party if Grover Cleveland should die? When jaou have answered the above here's another: If Grandpa Hat and the Artful Dodger should "be called beyond" what would become of the republican party? Butler (Mo.) Weekly Union. ffhe universality of public alarm at the coal situation and prospects ought to convince the last doubter that it was a big mistake not to put a coal nationalization plank' in the St.

Louis platform, and that it would be a bigger one not to add a coal resolution to the platform at the Omaha convention. New Nation. Gen. J. B.

Weaver declares the democratic party will not carry three southern states owing to the perfidy of the party on the silver question. "The Atlanta Constitution says there Is only one way to hold the south and that is to pass the free silver bill; if it. is not done the party goes to limbo" the people's party. National Advance. President Roberts, of the Pennsyl vania railroad, says that railroad combinations tend to promote legislation which will end in disaster to all corporate interests.

that, may be, the end will be for the, benefit, of the people, who are bent upon taking these roads out the field of speculation, and restoring them, through public conduct, to their legitimate function of cheap and equitable transportation. New Nation. Notwithstanding all our talk in favor of silver don't let it slip your mind that we do not believe in using a commodity as money, and that we believe government fiat makes all money, and it makes no difference what material the government fiat is placed upon, and the cheaper that material the better. We simply advocate giving silver an equal show with gold nothing more; and that while we have gold money we should have silver. Chicago Free Trader.

High tariff protects foreign investment in American industries. All these foreign investors want is high rates of interest on money, which they cannot obtain at home. This country being new and productive offers them a splen did field to operate in, and we, in our blindness, tempt them to come and bleed us by our financial and tariff legislation. We impoverish ourselves by contracting our medium of exchange and increasing our cost of living, and thus invite foreign syndicates to purchase our industries, control our business and dictate our legislation. It is high time for the people to wake up and call a halt to this suicidal policy.

Topeka New Age. FROM PRESIDENT POLK. A Letter Showing That the Order lias Never lieen More United Nor More Deter mined. S. McLallin, Topeka.

Kan. Dear Sin asdUuotheu: Replying to your favor of recent date in regard to the Birmingham conference, I beg to say that at the time the circular letter calling the conference was issued a copy was furnished to each of the alii ance presidents of the northern states with satisfactory explanation forcon- fining the call to the southern states, and they were assured that they would be promptly informed as to the action of the conference. This has bsen done. After a full and rfee interchange of views as to the condition of the order and its environments in the south, three important facts are developed: M. AS.C1W 1 1 (I Ull UiliLt ill.

111 its history been more united nor more 'determined in its purpose to adhere to its principles. Second That the morale of the or ganization will not ba impaired or se riously affected by the pending political campaign. Third That it recognizes the force and great importance of a faithful ob-' aefvance of the pledge, to stand loyally by the brotherhood at the ballot box in all states and sections in one com-. mon effort to destroy sectionalism and to secure the blessings of a justly and equitably administered government. The investigation and discussion evolved the additional fact that from the Potomac to the Rio Grande the great common people are rallying to gether as never before for one mighty, concentrated effort at the ballot box on behalf of equity, truth and justice.

Fraternally yours, L. L. Polk. A Washington, May 1,0, 1893. Then and Now.

Polly Tick'. Letter to Cat on The Sltuasliun. Inoknoplis. Aprile Oteentn 1802. DEER CATKj I don't no how to ex-cute myself for not rltlng too yoo suner, but the faekt iz, I taint it too enny one sense I rote too yoo, an hense yoo wus tbe last one I rit too, an that iz the I haint rit too yoo sense.

Things has tuck a change sense yoo heerd frura the old plane, but it has jist came put exacktly like Bill sed wood, before yoo went too Cansas, where the wimin vote an tbe men what slot pollytisbonei don't drink no whisky, an the jints don't pay no lisens ackseptto the pollytisheners too hi votes with. Yoo no, when the war wus jist over an awl thee soljera wuz turned out an paid oph Bill sez, sez he, "Polly," hesez, I want yoo to take notis. "Here iz a millyun uv men, more er less, thats been soljers in thee war, whose tiznes has bin shootin peepel an wairin out klose an eatin "hard-tack" an 'sow-bellyV' an burnin up property an wastln things, an not makin ennything except a fuss, sum smoke, an a few briar-wol pipes. These men has made a market fer clothes an shoes, an bosses an wagons, an guns an powder, an tents an bard tack, an every- boddy in thee hole country that wusn't. in thee war has been busy a raisin hosses an mules, pertaters an beans, wheat an korn, an makin wagens an uniforms, an ponder an guns, an everything thee soljers needed to carry on thee war with, an keep things a goin.

But thee soljers has cum hoam an quit a "soljerin," an got paid oph in what the rebel demicrats colls "Lincoln Scabs." What do yoo spose thair goin tu dewf The uniform factories el bee shet up, the gun shops el close down an the mule biers fur the army el haft to quit biznecs. How Will all these soljers git work?" These questions wuz put to me while Bil's face wus diverted away rum my searchin Gaize. I didn't jist ketch the idee 'that Bil's languidge wus ironickle and so I thoughtfully 'remarked the following thoughts; "It sais "doubtsum, indeed what we'l cum tod. Them soljers has awl bed too eat, "and sum boddy hes hed lo feed em. They needed clothes and sum body has hed to make em, and now they have awl quit an everyboddy el be throwed out uv work, wont they?" Bil smole a si- snt smile an sed: "Polly, what has the sol jers quit a doinf have they quit eatin?" Then after pausin a nrinit fur the idee to soke in my hed, he continued, 'It's troo, the soljers aint eatin as much hard tack an fat pork as: they, youst too but I'll bet a dollar an a half tba are oaten pize an kakes an a drinkin coffee with shugar an kreara info it, and these things take jist as much work to tbe dollers werth as "sow belly" an hard tack did.

Every discharged soljerell eat twiste as many dollers worth ov chicken and beafstake as he did ov fat bacon an that el furnish wurk fur twiste as menny men as it tuck too feed 'em while in the army on hard tack and short sed I "but what about the uni form factories? They'll haft to shet up an an all them men be throwed out uv work fur yoo cant say tha will need enny more uniforms. "No ser-rea," says Bill, "The soljers el shed thair $8 uniforms an put on $35 soots of store klose in place of thair army toggle, hense the uniform factories will quit ma kin $8 uniforms and hire more hands an go to makln 35 soots ov store klose an red neckties an biled shirts. The shoo factories will bi noo mashenery an quit makin army shoos an go to makin "imported'' boots for. these humbel soljers that has been turned into proud sitizens." "Well, raily," sez "that does look kinder proniisin like, an seems as if we aint to be broke up so bad after awl. But what what will the cun an ammunishen makers do?" "Oh," sais Bil, "the sword will be beet into plow sheers, an the speers into prunin hooks" coatin skripter at me.

He says there is a heap more in the bible than pee-ple that never reads it think it has, but to contue. "Well," sais "what will the waggen and harness makers do, thats bin a makin army waggens fer to holl tents and hard tack fur the soljers?" "Doo." sais Bill, "wont it take more waggens an hosses an harneecs to holl ilonr an corn an lumber an wood an the other things that the citizens needs, than it took to holl hard tack an powder fur the soljers? You no the soljers packed rails fur fuet, an didnt need no coal carts intliein times; so the waggen bizness baint plaid out neather." You remember how wonderful troo all this turned out to be. How tha bought everything tbey wanted till there munney was all spent' how tha all went to work to makin everything they cood think off, an how business went a boomin. Munny wus so plenty in them day that bepgin wusn't bad business, though thay wusn't menny in them times. Bi and bi munney commenced to git skeerse, an times begun to git hard.

"Bil," sais "whaU the matter with the times, what makes em so bard?" Bil remarked takina chaw of terbacker to fresh his mind; "Fust, when tbe war wus goib on, all the munney paid out to the onion soljers an fur army supplies wus gren-backs, and woodn't pass in the south, so we had all the munney in the north, about two billion dollars, counting everything that wus used for money, them times; when the war was over an the sooth got down to bizness, half the munney had to go south to do their June 20th, 1803, lh" wlU btaken Mtrue nd judgment ccordingly the nature of which will be oeri0I1. indKmeut ana nst them on a Dromla. sory note fur four hundred dollars (t400) and four coupon notes attached to said promissory note twenty dollars each (320) and interest thereon, dated November 20tb, 1889, and also the foreclosure of a mortgage executed by them dated November 20, 1889, to secure said note and cou-pous, upon the lot number eight, In block number three (3) In Sylvan Park, an addition to Wyandotte City, Kansas, In Wyandotte county, Kansaa, and for the sale of said property upon execution, to satisfy said judgment, with costs Of till ftvtlQu and I Interest, and ij (axes due Up5a said property, and to foreclose said defendants of any interest tbey may have in said real estate after the same shall be sold on execution herein, and th-reby barring them out of all Interest In said real property. DiNIKL B. Ham.iv, May 1892 Atty for plaintiff.

Firat publiihedMay 6. PUBLICATION NOTICE. State of Kansas, uunty ot yandotte, Iu the District Court in and for the Cowv ty and State aforesaid. B. F.

Healy, plaintiff, vs. James J. Kelly, Hermie Kelly, Robert Mil- ler.Mollie A. Miller and Geo. defendants.

Tbe above named defendants will take notice that they have been sued and must answer the petition filed by the plaintiff on or before June 25th, 1802, or the said petition will be taken as true and judgment rendered against them accordingly. That the said James J. Kelly is sued on account of one certain promissory note dated February 4, 1886, for tbe sum of four hundred dollars $400 at ten per cent per annum from date, together with one hundred and six dollars and four cents ($100.04) taxes and eight dollars $8 insurance premium, paid by the said plaintiff. That said note was given together with a mortgage of same date to secure the same to Erin M. Rice and John P.

Forrington as Rice Forrington; that said note was endorsed by said Rice Forrington to Erin M. Rice; that the said Erin M. Rice transferred and sold the same to the said plaintiff who is now the holder and legal owner: that judgment will be taken against the said James J. Kelly for the sum of fourhundred dollars 1400 together with interest at 10 per cent from February 4th, 1886, and the further sums of one hundred and six dollars and four cents $106.04 taxes paid and eight dollars ($8) insurance paid; that lots twenty -three 23 and twenty-four 241 in block fifty-five in said mortgage fully described be sold according to law to satisfy the same: that the said mortgage will be foreclosed and the said de fendants forever barred and foreclosed of all interest, lien, equity of redemption in or to said mortgaged premises or any part thereof. and such equitable relief as plaintiff j.

A. A. Brooks, 'v 'a Attorney for plaintiff. First published fay 13. 4 PUBLICATION NOTICE.

In the District Court of Wyandotte county Kansas. Lydia 8. Searles, plaintiff, 1 vs. Notice of William B. Ingram and Jane Publication, Ingram, defendants.

To William B. Ingram and Jane Ingram: You are hereby notified that the plaintiff above named has brought suit and filed her petition against you in the above entitled court, and that you must answer the petition of said plaintiff filed against you on or before July 8, 1892, or said petition will be taken as true and judg-nientr accordingly rendered against you aa follows; 1st. A personal judgment against William B. Ingram and Jane Ingram upon a promissory note for the sum of one hundred and ten dollars ($110) and Inetrest upon the same at 10 per cent, from April 28, 1M90: said note is one executed by you April 'i8, 1R90 to said plaintiff. Second.

That the mortgage set out in plaintiff's petition be declared a lien upon lots forty-five (45) and forty-six 46 block one hundred and twenty-six 126 city of Wyandotte, now Kansas City, Wyandotte county, state of Kansas, for the amount of the aforesaid judgment, prior and superior to the lien or interest of any of the above named defendants, and that the mortgage set out in the plaintiff's petition be foreclosed, and the aforesaid lands and tenements be sold without appraisement, according to law, and the proceeds of said sale be brought into court and applied: first, to the payment of the costs of said sale and this suit, second to the payment of the aforesaid judgment, together with interest thereon, and the residue, if any, be held subject to the further orders of said court in the premises, and that from and after said sale all the above named defendants and each of them, or any person claiming under, by or through them, or either of them, or any of them, be forever barred and foreclosed from any right title or interest in or to the aforesaid premises or any part of them, J. M. SEARLES, Attorney for plaintiff. First published May 27. Bond-holders and Bread-winners, the new political campaign book by our townsman, S.

S. King, will be supplied by him at 25 cents a copy or $3.00 per dozen. Every peoples party man should get a copy, read it, and get his unconverted neighbor to read it. There is the healing of the nation in it SUJIMONS BY PUBLICATION. No.

9094. John Craig will hereby take notice that he has been sued in the District Court of Wyandotte county, Kansas, by Lizzie L. Craig, and thsthe as defendant must answer the petition Sled by said Lizzie L. Craig as plaintiff on cr before the 18th day of June, 1892, or said petition will be taken as true and judgment rendered as therein prayed for, divorcing said plaintiff from said defendant absolutely and forever and changing the name of said plaintiff to Lizzia L. Stiles, her maiden name.

Luzis L. Craig, Attest: Plaintiff. E. W. Towxer, Clerk District Court of Wyandotte county Kansas.

Seal By E. S. Cable, Deputy. First published May 6. 4t Ton are InWted to Call.

Farmers, patronize those who advertise in your paper. They invite you to call and examine their stocks, even if yon do not choose to make purchase. jili0fLBMIFFS heir of B. F. McDanield deceased, The Inter Btote Loan Trust Comnanv Patrick Gor-or mn fin.

a 1 I ton, H. Rushmore, David Y. Adams, Josephine S. Clark and James S. Clark, her husband, Victoria Bowman and Bowman her husband, (first name unknown) William Mitchem, Lydia Marsh, Martha M.

Long, Alfreda E. Neiswanger and John K. Neiswangbr, her husband, heirs of A. Baldwin, doceased, Martha E. aaiawin, widow, and guardian of Ambrose B.

Baldwin, Scoit L. Baldwin, and Rachel .1. Baldwin, a minor, Benuet Taylor and Rebecca Tajlor, hla wife, Al- mona m. jiamuiin and rederick Ilamblin her husband, heirs of A. H.

Baldwin, de ceased, Louis Townsend. James M. Coburn. v. nusson ana Jessie K.

Husson bis wife, Justin Walker, heir of Maria McAlpine de ceased, John Hannon, Caroline Springer, M. C. Bernard, Thomas A. Bales Eugene S. Connelly, L.

R. Smith, M. M- Lempke, John W. Clark, Robert F. Robinson.

John G. Puett, James B. Morrison. William Puett and Mattie Puett his wife, heirs of Sarah Puett, deceased, J. Ferry administrator of Moses Ferry, deceased, Martha Kirby and Henry v.

Kirby, her husband, B. A. Wren, and J. B. Wren, Iter husband, heirs of James Enright, deaeased, B.

W. Enright, single, heir of James Enright, deceased, Katie Horn and John Horn, ber husband, heirs of James Enright, deceased, Jamts Sheehy, minor heir of Mary Sheehy, deceased, and Martin Sheehy her husband, heirs of; James Enright deceased, defecdants in said cause: At the request of said plaintiff, you are hereby notified that the undersigned Com missioners duly appointed in the above entitled cause by the Honorable Judge of the District court of Wyandotte County, Kansas, will meet in room Husted Building, on the northwest corner of Sixth street and Minnesota avenue, in Kansas City, Wyandotte county, Kansas, on Monday, the Twenty-seventh day of June, A. D. 1802, at the hour of Nine o'clock, in the forenoon of said day tor the purpose of examining into the matters contained in said petition, in which plaintiff seeks to condemn certain lands for the erection of a mill-dam and race-ways on the Kansas river in said county and state at the following point or tracts owned by plaintiff to-wit: Commencing at a point at low water mark on the south side of the Kansas river, on the west line of tbe land belonging to and occupied by Bernard Speaker and Elizabeth Speaker, his wife, in the north-west quarter (j)' of section numbered eighteen (18), township numbered eleven (11), range twenty-five (25), in said county and state; thence in a southeasterly direction along the low water mark of said river twenty (20) rods, thence south fifteen (15) rods, thence northwesterly twenty (20) rods, thence north to place of begin-fng Also commencing at a point at low water mark, on the north side of the Kansas river directly north of a point at low water on he west line cf Bernard Speaker's land, above mentioned lying on the south side of the Kansas river in the' northwest quarter ('4) of section numbered eighteeen (18), Township eleven (11), Range twenty-five (25), thence running north twenty (20) rods, thence east twenty (20) rods, thence south twenty (20) rods, thence along low water mark, on north side of the Kansas river, in a northwesterly direction, twenty 20 rods, more or less, to place of beginning That lands, owned by you or, in which you have an interest, are liable to be affected by said condemnation, and shall proceed to ex amine the point at wkich said dam is proposed to be erected and the lands and real estate above and below, which will probably be injured by tbe erection of said dam; and shall hear all allegations and testimony of all parties interested, and shall proceed to make a separate assessment of damages which will result to any person by the erection of said mill-dam and its maintenance forever, and if not completed on said day the hearing will be continued to such further day or days as the Commissioners may then appoint. Dated at Kansas City, Kansas, this and day ot May, A.

D. 1802. Charles A. Ebert, W. Thomsok, Commissioners, S.

F. Bigham, PUBLICATION NOTICE. In the District Court of Wyandotte county, Kansas. Lydia S. Searles, plaintiff, vs.

Leonard Brown, No. 8858. Julia A. Brown, C. T.

Stevenson, defendants. Leonard Brown, Julia A. Brown, and C. T. Stevenson will take notice that the said Lydia 8.

Searles, plaintiff, did on the 20th day of February, A. 1892, file her petition in said District Court, within and for the county of Wyandotte, the State of Kansas, against said defendants, and that the said Leonard Brown, Julia A. Brown and C. T. Stevenson must answer said petition, filed as aforesaid, on or be fore July 8th, 1892, or said petition will be taken as true and a judgment rendered in said action against said Leonard Brown and Julia A.

Brown, upon four certain promissory notes, as follows, to wit: for the sum of thirty -one dollars and seventy-eight cents with interest at ten per cent per annum, from the 11th day of March, A. 1890, and for the further sum. of thirty-one dollars and seventy-eiht cents, and interest thereon from March 11th, 1890, at the rate of ten per cent, and for the further sum of thirty-one dollars and seventy-eight cents, and interest thereon from March 11th, 1890, at ten per cent per anpura, and for the further sum of thirty-one dollars and eighty-one cents, and interest thereon at the rate of ten per cent per annum, from March 11th, 1890, and for the costs of suit and a further judgment against said Leonard Brown and ulia A. Brown for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage upon the following described real estate, Lot numlier forty-seven 47, in block 47, Wyandotte city, now Kansas City, Wyandotte county, State of Kansas, and adjudging said plaintiff have the first lien upon said premises and order ing said premises to be sold without appraisement and the proceeds applied to the payment of the amount due plaintiff, and costs of suit, and forever barring and foreclosing said defendants from all title, estate, interest, property and equity of redemption in or to said premises or any part thereof. J.

M. Searles, Attorney for plaintiff. Attest: E. W. Towner, Clerk District Court First published May 27th, 1892.

5t (4) tor all KANSAS CITY and TOPEKA and via ST. JOSEPH. Flrtt-CIus Day Coaches, FREE RECLINING CHAIR CARS, and Palace Sleepers, with Dining Car Service. Close connections at Denver and Colorado Springs wltlj diverging railway lines, now forming the sew si' picturesque STANDARD OAVQK TRANS-ROCKY MOUNTAIN ROUTE Over which superbly-equipped train run dally THROUGH WITHOUT CHANGE to and from Salt Lake City, Ogden and San Francisco. THE ROCK ISLAND Is also the Direct and Favorite Lin to and from Manltou, Pike's Peak and all other sanitary and scenic resorts and cities and mining districts In Colorado.

DAILY FAST-EXPRESS TRAINS From' St Joseph and Kansas City to and from all Important towns, cities and sections In Southern Nebraska, Kansas and the Indian Territory. Also via ALBERT, LEA BOUTE from Kansas City and Chicago to Water town, Sioux Falls, MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL, eennectlong for all points north and northwest between tbe lakes and the Pacific Coast. For Tickets, Maps, Folders, or desired Information apply to any Uoupon Ticket Office In the United State or Canada, or address E. ST.

JOHN, JOHN 8EBASTIAN, Genl Manager, Gml Tkt. Pats. Aft CHICAGO, ILL. TAKE THE MissouriPacific, The Oldest, Safest and Surest, To all points North, South, East or West. TheMissouri Pacific Railway runs more trains out of Kansas City than any other road.

Reclining chair cars on all through trains with NO extra charge. CkMMtMt BaaUak IUmm4 BruJ. Pennyroyal pills sy -K7w vrsiaiaaualrlM. uragmt CHichuttrt Kntffk Dim mond Brand In Hed sad Gold BftellUV rmrm, mtrrmjm inwun, aaaiaa Mai i Iboxw, Haltd with blue ribbon. Take 1 lao thl JiafuMt daamouM Mtthttitu 'tioiu and iwtif lions.

At Druggkati, er mdA 4fl, la lUmp Ibr Mrlleuliri, ustlmoDlmls and "Keller nr iadiee.nmui(r, by retara mil iuiwv iiimDtati, jvamt fmper. Sold by all Drugf 1st. ktZ 23. Gr. 3DU2ST2ST.

DEALERS IN NEW and SECOND-HAND 3 9 COR. FIFTH and CENTRAL KANSAS CITY, KANSAS. Six-Mile Items. YOUjWANT A RED HOT SOUTHERN People's IPart Paper During the campaign then send 50 cents and get the Montezuma Record for six months. It is so hot you can smell it.

Address RECORD, Montezuma, Ga. For Sale Cheap. On account of failing health, I will sell my Universal Cistern Cleaner and 3 extra buckets for this county at a great bargain to anyone wanting a desirable machine that will thoroughly 'clean cisterns without taking out the water. For particulars enquire at Hoerseman's hardware store, 90S N. 5th, K.

C. K. F.jANSEN. I Ml -jj 1.

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About The Kansas City Daily Sun Archive

Pages Available:
8
Years Available:
1892-1892