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The Topeka Daily Press from Topeka, Kansas • 4

The Topeka Daily Press from Topeka, Kansas • 4

Location:
Topeka, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE KANSAS iJVn FRIDAY EVENING JANUARY 20. 1893. jDcmflflrat. VULTURES ARE H0VERIMG OVER FRANCE. 1 Office- In Western Union Telegraph Building 621 hansan avenae.

Teiepaone, Sale Bankrupt BATES OF SUBSCRIPTION: Pelivered by CuTiw ia the Tiry, per month .25 Oiie lear.l'o age hix nths. I'vJH age pra-paid. i-jfj tlmw konti.3, Peetace unil ib riptioawill be tak for iesa hii two and the money must accom-pauy tbe oidcr. Money lor renewal rnusr re kWa oMttm expirutio-i of eaosetiption or iDer be Ktopj ed. Address tLAiNSS 1'UBLISHIXG Tupeka, KansHS.

OK HOES. Nonot to City Sttuscbiberb: -Each carrier of tke DkMockat is tha circulator of the papar withiu niBtlis'rict, baying hiy papers direct fom tha vu lifter fnd ranktcg nla coll-xtion fortne Muio 'lid tirnt ot iach month. As the bmonnt ia Mall, pioiupt payment should be mid, thus vnirw the earner ny cnneoessry calls and in-urtu a careful dedv ry of i he papsw. Ow r. the rouiea it will be evident to ht 'emuvinsi from ou p-it of the city to fi he ikaa ne eeci'a ing a change of carrier, tlia' uyifa'nce Oue the old must pnid frethe i-ew carrier Will deliver the paper to the more convenient, pay- mcu can to made it IM 'tti e.

Habhy (i arvey, Pi bl.Bher. Two large Bankrupt Stocks of Fine Custom Made Footwear, from Darling, Jones of Boston, and Howard, Detweiler of Haverhill, have been consigned to the BOSTON SHOE COMPANY, at 516 Kansas avenue, to be sold and the cash realized on them at once, for the benefit of the creditors. There is in these two immense JANUARY 20, 1823. INDICATIONS. stocks, the.

finest brands and styles of patterns in the Unite WAsnijtcraN. Jan. 20 For Kansas Fair; confer Saturday colder in the east States, which will be sold regardless of cost to manufacture em portion to night; southerly, shifting Vo westerly winds. or value. Below we quote a few of the many Bargains THE COAL MINE ACCIDDNT.

LADIES. MEN'S. Additional Particulars Concerning tlie ulh of Elijah HardUon-The Burial. Hardison, the colored miner, an $2.85 Fine Hand Sewed, French Calf and Cordovan Shoes, in Lace and Congress, Plain and Tip Toe, worth $6.00 and $7.00, go at account of whose detth in a mine was $335 given yesterday, was in the employ of Fine Hand Turned and Welt Shoes in Kid and Cloth Tops, Patent Tips and Plain Toe, of the best brands made, worth $6 and $7, go at Paris Satin Kid, Turn and Pump Sole, Square Toe, Tips and Plain, worth 5, go at Fine Hand Welt, Square Toe, Straight Goat Shoe, and widths, worth $4.50 and $5.00, go at 2. Frank Carpenter, nnd not Frank South Fine Welt, Calf, $5 Shoes, any style, go at 290 ern, as reported by ihe Capital this Additional particulars concerning the accident arte bs follows: He was working 2.50 1.85 US on his side at the time the rock fell, and other men were working near him.

They French Dongola $3.00 and $3.50, Patent Tips, Cloth and Kid Top Shoes, any style toe, go at. Dongola Patent Tips and Plain, Opera and Common Sense last, any width; a shoes worth $2.50, go at Fine Dress Shoe, worth $4 and $4.50, go at 250 Fine Calf $3 and $3.50 Shoes, go at 200 Fine Calf, regular price $2.25 and $2.50, go at. Work Shoe3, worth $1.50, go at rj jjn heard him groan tnd went to his assist anc immediately, thinking that they Dongola, Silk Hand Worked Button Holes, fin 9 1 regular $1.75 Shoe, go at UU III 1 UU Warm Felt Shoes and Fancy Slippers, Button and Lace, less than factory price. High Cut, Fieese Lined, Button Overshoes, go at Christmas Slippers, 50c, 75o and $1, finest assortment ever 1.00 TIGER HUNTING. THE RUMP HOUSE.

"Rubhers as low as 20 cents. snown in ue city. Boys' Dress and School Shoes, in Laoe and( Coagress, regular price of these goods is $1.50 and $2. ,1 1 1.50 Mipses' Fine Dress and School Shoes, in Dongola 1 0 Kid, Straight Grain Goat, Calf and Kangaroo I $2.00 Shoe go at IiUU It Has a Precedent in the English Parliament of Cromwellian 'limes. borne wao ere not up in may Remember this Sale is between Fifth and Sixth Streets.

eotdd save Ml life. After much time Nftl Kbor had ben expended the stone wan displaced, but th- man was fouEdto 1m dead. Meanwhiie Dr. Bailey had ben sent for, but whan he arrived he found a cose for a coroner instead of one for a physician. Dr.

Bailey, the coroner, considered it unnecessary to hold an ic-i uest. Mr. Hardison lived at the corner of Line and Iiuntoon streets, and leaves ft wifa and two children. The remains were brought to ton last evening. The colored Masonic fraternity will bury him Sunday at 2 p.

m. So far as is known at present the Knights of Tabor have the funeral of Elijah Hardaaon in charge, which will take place from he Shikh Babtist char at 2 oMoc' Sunday afternoon. LOCAL NOTES. BOSTON HOE CO 516 Kansas Avenue. uo luioicbveu iu fcuuwiLg tuo tne word "rump," so often med now in speakitg of the populist house of representatives.

The Kansas rump assembly has a precedent in that period extending from 1648 to 1660, when Cromwell sought to accomplish with the swoid an end that dissolved of itself twelve years later, ciepised and derided. The rump parliament, born of coercion, survived a brief but turbulent career to expire the threes of ignomy and dis credit. In order to bring about the condemna 6" All Mail Orders Prompts Attended to or Money Refunded if Goods not Satisfactory. Indian Sportsmen Near a lKiU" Waiting For Tlieir Prey. The only two methods of tig-er-hunt- ing that are practical really here are and sitting up all night in a tree by a "kill" waiting for the tiger to return for his food.

Almost all sportsmen have tried this latter, and generally been disappointed, as I was in another part of India, and have always solemnly vowed that each occasion should be their very last, only to be found at it again on the very next opportunity. Some really like this solitary watching, but it has veryT many drawbacks to its enjoyment Several Indian sportsmen, who have killed their forty or fifty tig-ers, have told me they had been nearly always unsuceessful wilh it. It is very wearisome work sitting- from about four o'clock in the afternoon until daybreak next day, always on the alert to see something that does not come: and with the darkness mosquitoes come in quantities, and perhaps a scorpion will ferret you out, or, worse than all, you may be visited by the red ant. It is very un TRY KING tion of Charles 1., Oliver Cromwell, on December 6, 1648, sent two regiments, under the command of Colonel Pride, to MANUFACTURED BY GEORGE BURGHART 5233s Kansas Avenne. coerce the house of commons.

Forty-one members of the "long who were favorable to accommodation, were imprisoned in a room of the house, 160 were ordered to go home, and only sixty of the most violent of the in dependents were admitted. The clearance was colled ''Pride's purge," and the privileged members ever afterward passed by the name of "rump," forming, as it were, the fag-end of the "long parlia Bozs.fcr25? certain when a tiger will return! There is a ease of diphtheria in the family of J. J. McFarland, 61G Branner street. M.

A. Odin, co ored, twenty-two years of age, died of pneumonia this morning, at 724 Chandler titt et. It ia said that Louis Hck, will return frem Tt xas soon, to take charge of the Grand opera house orchestra. Mrs. M.

Bittintjer, the woman who WAi recently burned in South Topeka, was removed to Christ's hospital this afternoon. The registration for the high sohcol bind election is very light, only 500 having registered up to date. The books will bs closed on the 31st. Audrew px was up before Justice leaney this Burning, charged with era-Ana 820, which Mrs. Nlo Childsgave him snd to her husbund.

The case tk 4Q under advisHmenn. Absolutely Puke JuotTryIt. rtH Wanamakor Browr 1 All Trrrsl 3ii44- v. fc F.r.jAauci co. Kansas city.

mo. 'AAA UUIV UJO'D lW order. Cneaper thac ment This amenably, in conjunction hand-me-downV. Olotb workmanship guaranteed. nr The Democrat 25c per Month Agent.

1 602 Kansas h. wollf PERSOMALo. frith the army, brought about an arraignment, trial and condemnation of Charles I. Five years later the "rump parliament," forgetting that it was but the cieature of the army, attempted to make a stand egainst certain demands on the part of the soldiers. The result was that Cromwell rilled the house with armed men; the Epeaker was pulled out of the chair, the mace taken from the table.the room cleared, the door locked, and the parliament declared to be dissolved.

Supreme in the three kingdoms, Cromwell convoked an cssembly which assumed the title of parliament, tnd acquired from the name of ere of its most prominent members, a leather seller, called to the "kill." He may do so as early as three or four in the afternoon, or just before daybreak, or not at all, often being frightened away, perhaps by some unforeseen circumstance. The slig-htest rustle will make him stop, and once his suspicions are aroused, he will not venture near. To shoot him on foot by stalking is an impossibility. The sportsmen will occasionally come upon a tiger when after other game, and may then have a chance of a shot. If there are a few men who keep together, a tiger, even if wounded, will think twice before charging into the middle of them, and will always shirk the last ten or fifteen feet.

None but the most foolhardy or utterly ignorant would venture to follow a wounded tiger into long grass cr very close clover, where it has every advantage, and the hunter may be seized before hehas time to raise his rifle. One of the tiger's greatest aids in his attacks is his voice, the sudden caughing roar of which is paralyzing to the coolest, and of course for a certain shot the nerves must be perfectly steady, with "no R. Caton Wood-ville, in Harper's Magazine. WON FAME BY THEIR PENS. WATCH Jake Ferrer left for Hoyt this morning.

A. M. Fuller returned from St. Louis to day. R.

B. Morris, of Atchison, is at the Throop. Bailey Waggoner loft last night for Ojiahe. P. B.

Maxsoo, of Emporia, is at the This Space, Something New Each Week. PraLegod Barebones, the name of the Barebones parliament. Tr.e Barebones parliament, after subsisting five months, was dissolved, and Cromwell, raised to the dignity of protector, convoked two parliaments, and dissolved them for refusing to sanction his meatures. On Oliver Cromwell's death, and Rich-nrd 's succession to the protectorate, the military malcontents, coalescing with the independents in Richard's parlia ment, declared the expulsion of the rump illegal, and restored that assembly to its functions. With the revival of the rump, its quarrels with the army revived; and the troops, again surrounding Westminster hall, expelied it on October Blankets At Cost.

Men's Grey Mixed Undershirts, Have been 40c, Now 29c. Children's All Wool Hose, Have been 25, Now 15c. JohnUnnon, of Leavenworth, is at the Thrcop. W. E.

Dauoby has returned from the Nebraska lire. C. J. Devlin, of the Santa Fe fuel de partment, is hums from Cnicag o. "Wdliam ard Misa Betha Allen, of Em-pang, are visiting friends in the city.

A. J. Robinson, Decatur, and H. J. Whitley, Minneapolis are registered at the Throop.

C. E. Bascom, night operator at the Rock Islund depot, left for Indiana yes 30, 1659, a provisional government of officers assuming the direction of affairs. Cloaks At Cost, But the general dissatisfaction having Men's Scotch Mixed Undershirts, Have been 50c, JSow 39c. Men's All Wool Half Hose, Our Price 15c Pair.

led to a coalition between the Presby terians and royalists, the army, unable Somersby Rectory, where Lord Tennyson was born and in which are many of the scenes of his earlier poems, is offered for sale. Four women, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Lucy Larcom. Alice Freeman Palmer and Mary B. Clafiin, were among the poet Whittier's honorary pall bearers. Mrs.

Margaret Sunderland Cooper, a member of the London Society of Letters aud Art. it is stated, the only woman to whom the American Humane society has awarded its gold medal. Whittier left an estate worth over $130,000. All our foremost literary men, except Whitman, died well-to-do. Bryant, Emerson, Longfellow and Lowell all had enough of this world's goods.

Dr. Cotton Mather, who died in Boston in 1728, was the author of 3S2 works, some of them being of huge dimensions. The most bulky of his works contained seven large folio volumes. He died at the age of 65. Robert Dodsley, famous as a bookseller and author of much ingenious writing, was a man almost entirely devoid of education.

He was a natural writer, developing into an author of no little renown, from the very small beginning of a livery servant. to carry on the government, was reduced to the necessity of once more restoring the rump, which had terday, to visit relatives. Miss Kitty Jordan, who has been iBiting Miss Ne lie Raub for several days, has returned to her home in Be-JstL William Mathews, who has been away Kansas City for a long time, returned this morning to his old friends in Topeka. John Cornelison snd wife, who live two miles west of town, have returned from a two month trip to the mountains of Kentucky and Tennessee. been twice ignominiously expelled.

The advance of Monk, however, with the army of the Scotland led to a general cry throughout the country for a free Kentucky Cheveronne Dres Goods, Worth 12c, Now 8c Yard. Ladies' Long Sleeve Ribbed Vests, Others charge 25c, Our Price 19c. Jeans at Cost This Will Interest Ion. parliament. A nunber of the members who had been excluded by Pride's purge reappearing in the house, placed the independents in the minority, and March 16.

1660, the despised and derided rump at last solemnly decreed its own dissolution. The most prominent members of the rump parliament were Vane and I am going to make a change in my busiuess the Srst of March and have some special inducements to offer you for the next thirty days. If you want to BJive money on your dry goods drop in see what I haveoffiered and see how 431 Kansas Ave. A Carnegie witness in the Homestead KYLE GOMPANY, much you can save. Shively, 118 East Sixth avenue.

Twenty-five per cent, saved by buying your meat of Farnsworth. poisoning case said he had received check for $600 from the Carnegiea..

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About The Topeka Daily Press Archive

Pages Available:
20,493
Years Available:
1881-1896