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The Meade Republican from Meade, Kansas • 2

The Meade Republican from Meade, Kansas • 2

Location:
Meade, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

EDUCATIONAL COLUMN, PER80NAL AND IMPERSONAL Thanksgiving: Day. Highest of all in Leavening Power. TJ. S. Gov't Report, Aug.

17, Ing at the house and every one Was shouting. Soon the settlers in the neighborhood beyan to appear, armed N. H. Mbndenhaix, County Supebditeitdbjjt. When the grain is gathered into the with axes, pitchforks, shovels, clnbs rear its young in the same'fieid where it will be hunted later In the season.

But in the Platte valley In Nebraska it makes Its nests on the Islands. These islands are low, fringed with brush and covered with luxuriant grasses that are not cut until late in the autumn. Here there is granary and the fall's work on the farm any thing that could serve as a weapon. T. J.

PALMER, Editor and Proprietor. Program of the Teachers Associa tion to be held at Meade, Saturday, They came running np the slope shouting and yelling at the bear to frighten him away, while tbe horns sounded dismally below. But the bear was too WEDNESDAY. NOV. 26, 1890.

November 29, 1890: absolutely no danger of molestation completed, the summer's work ended, the cellar stored with vegetables and fruit for the winter, the sleek cattle brought in from their pastures, the pigs transferred from the sty to the barrel or their hams hung on the walls Responses by members Give an in busy to pay any attention to them. Ha correct sentence of common usage and Powder IS POVERTY A BAR TO OFFICE. seemed to be getting really Interested in the chase, and was growling and from man, and prairie fires are comparatively unknown. Late fires cook probably one-third of the eggs that are laid on the uplands. The "booming" by the river has Stopped.

The male birds are already on the uplands. Amid the carex and wild grass, under plum brush and beside the snarling furiously. HoWi the Republic is Being Under- of the meat house and big, fat turkeys roosting low, then it i3 that the far mer can give thanks to Him Who hath sent "I watched my chance and then made ABSOLUTELY PURE a dash for the rescuing party, Mr. Bear close upon my heels. Occasionally I cir the rain and warm rays of the sun to make glad the hearts of mankind cled a stump, the bear following suit, and then there was a din in my ears.

Publication Notice. Publication Notice. Pitchforks and axes went into the bear correct the same. Recitation Miss Nina Bodle. Class exercise in division of common fractions Miss Mabel White.

Advantages of analysis in grammar Mrs. Rhoda Judd. Recitation Miss Nellie Sencenich. How to prevent tardiness Miss S. Damie Ellis.

How and when to teach penmanship J. A. Porterfield. Select reading U. G.

Park. Map drawing Miss Grace Huds n. Explanation of Longitude and Time Women are longer lived taan men; woman of twenty may expeot forty-two years more of life, a man of the sane age only thirty-nlme years. Mrs. Jacob Benton, of Lancaster, N.

has learned five languages while an invalid in the last five years. Sfet speaks and writes Volapuk fluently. It is sa that the postmen of London walk, together, something like 48, 300 miles per day, a distance equal to twice the circumference of the globe. The Archduchess Valerie received a dowry of 3,000,000 florins from her parents on her marriage, and she is entitled to an Income from the state of about 80,000 florins a year as a daughter of the Austrian Emperor. Mr.

Spurgeon, the famous London preacher, is noth.ng if not eccentric la his pulpit efforts His last bit of orig-inalilty is a sermon extolling illness as a blessing. He contends that every fresh twist of rheumatism chastens the spirit Colonel LebeL the inventor of the French magazine rifle now in use by the army, has retired from active service in consequence of bad health. He is fifty-two years of age, has served in the army thirty-five years, and has been through eight campaigns. The gold pen with which Oliver Wendell Holmes ha3 written for twenty- Though these bounties of the Creator's munificence may not be the portion of all His creatures, have not enough of from all sides. He made a good fight, The State of Kansas, Meade county, ss out numbers conquered him.

To Sherman P. Lester. Yon will take notiVo "I had an unusually good appetite for supper that night and those bear steaks them or other favors been conferred upon us for which to be thankful? Look about us as we will, and there are some less fortunate than we. The waif were delicioua I don't think I eve en In the District Court, within and for the County of Meade, in the State of Kansas. Ellen A.

Mason, Plaintiff. William W. Whitaker, Matilda Whitaker, Charles Roland, Edward G. Kobertson and the Hartford Investment Company, Defendants. To Charles Koland.

that yon have been sued, toother with Clarence P. Bliss and Katharine A. Bliss, in the District Court in and for Meade county, Kansas, by The American Mortgage Trtfst Company and that unless yon answer to the petition filled in said suit on or before the 7th day of January, 1891, said petition will be taken as true and judgment rendered against you accordingly, foreclosing a mort joyed a meal more. Tbe steaks were so juicy and tender, you know. And then as I ate I couldn't help congratulating myself that it was I who was doing the Miss Bertha Campbell.

gage executea ana Delivered ty Clarance P. Bliss and Katharine A. Bliss to The American Mo-t- Four years in the schools of Meade eating. It came very near being differ county N. II.

Mendenhall. ent you see." Boston Advertiser. ASTOR8 INVESTMENTS. General discussion after introduc agage Trust Company, dated July 1st 1887, on tbe following described real estate, In Meade county, Kansas, to-wit: The north half of the northwest quarter of section 2, the east half of the northeast quarter of section 8, in township 33 south, of range 26 west of the 6th P. and for the sale of said real estate, without appraisement, to pay the debt secured by said mortcaee.

in the street, who is worse than picks the crusts from the piles of rubbish cast from homes of plenty, yet looks about him to see those unable from decrepitude to obtain even these. Thanksgiving Day has been observed in New England since the landing of the Pilgrims, who knelt in joyous thanksgiving on the barren rock, with nought but a wilderness before them; tion of all topics presented. Aa Almshouse and Hospital la th.TUlar of Waldorf. Baden. ltness my hand and official seal, this 25th dnv SMELLING OF ICEBERGS.

You wUl take notice that yon have been sned -the said plaintiff Ellen A. Mason in the District Conrt of Meade Oonnty, Kansas, and that unless you answer the petition filed In said action on or Fk ot 1891, said petition will be taken as true and judgment rendered against you accordingly for the foreclosure of a certain mortgage executed and delivered by Wil" ia )V, and Matilda Whltaker to Geo. C. Wrong dated the 1st day of September, 1887, upon the following described real estate Meade County, Kansas, to-wit: The southwest quarter -of section 8 township 34 south, of ranee twent- six west of the 6th P. and for the safe of real estate without appraisement to pay the debt secured by aid mortgage.

tSalA Moore Douglass, Stutsman. Attorneys for Plaintiff. Attest Clerk. By S. D.

Adams, Deputy. i The newest "Astor House" to come to November, 1890. D. B. Stutsman, the attention of New Yorkers is an Clerk District Court.

By S. D. Adams, Deputy. A. T.

Bodle, Attorney for plaintiff. almshouse and hospital, which returned tourists say bears that name in the lit in a strange land where the only known inhabitunts, other than their little five years is in perfect condition, and is highly cherished by its owner. A tattered and torn old note-book, with limp covers, nearly as old as the pen, is another of the poet's treasures, and has tle Tillage of Waldorf, in Baden, where Notice The Meade County National Bank of Meade Peculiar Training? cf Snilors For Detecting Mountains of Ice. The smelling of icebergs at sea, similar to the experience of Seaman August Jorgensen, the outlook on the steamship Thin? valla, on the night of the vessel's running nto the Arctic floe, is nothing unusual to sailora accustomed to northern latitudes, however odd the mi ml ed. 'And Jacob said, Sell me this day thy birthright.

And Esau said, Behold I am at the point to die, and what profit this birthright be to me? And Jacob said Swear to me this day; and he swore unto him; and he sold his birthright unto Jacob. Then Jacob gave Esau bread and pottage of len-tiles; and he did eat and drink, and rose up, and went his way; thus Esau despised his birthright." Genesis xxv, 31:31. In the United States, as in all countries to which foreigners go for residence, we have two classes of citizens, one to the manor born, the other voluntarily taking upon themselves the responsibility of citizenship. In either case the duties of citizenship and the grave responsibilities of good government rest equally; neither can escape his just portion of the weight which rests upon him. The impositions placed upon the subjects of monarchy and unjust demands made upon them caused the founders of the Republic of the United States of America to rise above all personal preferences and emoluments and establish a republic founded upon the patriotism of the people.

This is the chief corner stone of the republic. Remove it and our boasted individual sovereignty becomes an object of barter and sale; our nation, of which we sing and in which we glory enters its decadence. The sale of Esau's birthright to Jacob for a mess of pottage is a fair example of man who at the present day prizes his suffrage so lightly as to barter it away. Like Esau they may deem their condition one that calls for the great sacrifice, or they may so lightly esteem the As tor family first grew, so far as band, were the merciless savages who Center, located at Meade, in the State of Kansas, is long been the repository of his thoughts history records. The present Mr.

Astor Is readily recognized by the Waldorflans as the lord of the manor, the seigneur knew not the One to Whom they gave thanks for their deliverance from a and confidences. N. Y. Ledger. closing np its affairs.

All note-holders and other creditors of said Association are therefore hereby notified to present the notes and other claims The late Judge George William the fief and the mister of the family. expression, 1 smell a berg, may ap againet the Association for payment. tyranny worse than solitude. Tlier-they joined in thank to Almighty God, that they could at least worship Him and their recognition is based, chiefly the substantial foundation of 50,000 pear to landsmen and sea-goers of the Brown, of Baltimore, was the soul of courtesy and kindness. It is related of him that when Chief Judge he one day came out of court to the sidewalk.

middle latitudes. Among the navigators marks, which Mr. Astor sent them not H. IIebek, President. Dated, October Tth, 1890.

ISfNoTicK. The above bank will be succeeded long since to be added to the endow according to the dictates of their own conscience, where none could molest or by The Meade County Bank, with the same officers. where his colored coachman was await- ment fund of the Astor House of Baden. John Jacob Astor, recently deceased. make afraid, where they did -not have "Jim." said the Judge with a bow.

from Scandinaviancountr.es, especially Dan sh seamen, the smell of icebergs is familiar to the nostrils, and voyages in Arctic regions have enabled them to detect the approach or proximity of one of the dangerous visitors even before it DRESS REFORM GARMENTS IN ALL STYLES. BATES WAIST. (Substitute for Corsets.) Chemiletts, Princess Skirts, made to order and in stock. Bridal Trousseau, elaborate or plain, made in the most artistic fashion. Jersey Knit Union Under garments.

Publication Notice. "I never asked you to do many things founded the institution, and Mr. Aa tor's check for 50,000 marks was sent in reply for me, did "No. sah," replied Jim. to give of their scant earnings to sustain a church and state foreign to Clijir ideas of right.

In the District Court, within and for to a letter of coadolence sent him by the "Well, Jim, I'm going to a little party can bo discerned by the eye. In fact. selectmen of Waldorf when his father at Mr. Bonaparte's. Will you be kind enough to dr ve there about nine o'clock This beautiful custom did not be died.

come one of national observance until and take me home?" As the Astor money is rumored to be me uouniy of jieaae, in the State of Kansas. Mary E. Beehler, Plaintiff, vs. William J. Atterbury and Ida B.

Atterbury, Defendants. To the said William J. Atterbnrv and Ida R. At about finding investment in at least The Locomotive Firemen's Maga- 1862, when by a proclamation of the martyred Lincoln the nation was re two new hotels, the gossips are suggest cine estimates the membership of the with them the nose rather than the eye is trained for the d.scovery of the bergs, and acts with unerring judgment. An iceberg has an odor, if it may be so called, to them unlike any other sort of scent The moment it reaches the nostril a sensation is felt which wouid be perhaps peculiar and unac terbury: Yon will take notice that you have been sued by the said plaintiff Marv E.

Reehler. In silk, wool, merino and gauze, for men, women, children and the baby. Perfection of fit, finish and durability. ing that unpleasant complications of precedence and pique might readily be avoided henceforth between the head by in the District Conrt of Meade conntv. Kansas.

quested to give thanks for the preservation of the Union and pray for God's blessings to rest with the people. Since then the fourth Thursday of November and that unless you answer the nelitfon filed in osiers the young birds are getting fat i Their mothers teach them to exercise I their wings, and their eyes are suffl-J oiently bright to detect a or a butterfly many yards away. But this kind of life can not last forever. It is early in July. Tbe click of the mower floats down from the rolling prairies above the river.

Oats are ripening, and the wheat will soon be ready for the reaper. The river grass is drying. It is time for fi ght It seems as though this migration is preconcerted. Early in July the females bring their broods together, and for a couple of days there Is an Incessant flight to the north and south. Then the islands are deserted until the next spring.

Tbe hunting season should not begin before the middle of August and farmers as a rule comply with the regulations of the game law. But every town has a few self-styled sportsmen, who commence to destroy chickens and quail before the young birds have their power of flight fully developed. This makes harder work and longer trips for those who shoot only in the open season. Still such a state of affairs can not be helped until the West makes provisions for the rigid enforcement of the game laws already enacted, but which are practically a dead letter. Were sportsmen's clubs an institution west as well as east of the Mississippi, the matter would soon rectify itself.

W. M. Wolfe, in Outing. THE COMING METAL. Is Aluminum to Supplant Steel In the Immediate Future.

A newly built steel steamer from Italy is exciting some curiousity in this harbor, principally because it is an Italian built vessel, and is considered the forerunner of a fleet of vessels of the same metal to take the place of the modern boats in carrying trade. In all probability, however, the day of steel is almost over. Aluminum will soon take its place. A metal as little liable to tarnish in air or water, as little or less affected by acids than gold, twice as strong as steel and one-third the weight, as malleable and as die tile as gold, aluminum offers advantages to the shipbuilders as it does to the bridgebuilders, to the machinist and to all engaged in mechanical arts in which any metal is employed, that can not be ignored; and as we have had occasion to say previously, the only thing that stands in the way of its substitution for steel And iron, and perhaps for copper, tin, lead and every other metal except sine, which has uses peculiar to itself, is th cost of produc- tion from the ore. Aluminum is the most abundant of all metals contained in the earth's crust being a constituent of all clays, and a slight improvement in the method of reducing it will bring its cost down to such a point that iron and steel at present prices would be dear by comparison, because of the better use that can be made of this lighter and yet stronger metal.

Its cost now is sixty cents a pound. When it falls to ten it will be much cheaper than steel at five cents. It is being manufactured in this country and in England and earnest scientific minds are occupied from day to day in expert-1 mental processes of its reduction from the ore with the view of producing it In such abundance as will enable the substitution of it in all mechanical arts for steeL i Any day the process by which this can be accomplished may be discovered and said action on or before the 2d day of January, 1891, said peiition will be taken as true and countable to those unused to it, but which to the veteran iceberg smeller is position, the head by seniority and the heir apparent or crown prince of the Astor family by the judicious naming of the hotels. One, on Thirty-fourth street, has usually been set aside by President, Governor and Mayor as a day for the Instantly and mean ngly apparent. It passes from the atmosphere to the for Instance, might be called the "Mr.

people to lay aside business cares and this precious right as to barter it nasal membrane and to the sensorinm Astor House." The one on Fifty-ninth street would naturally be called the away indifferently. If we have reached with the speed of an electric message, ment rendered against you accordingly for the foreclosure of a ertain executed and delivered by you to George C. Mrong, dated the 1st day of Decemlr, 1887, upon the following described real estate in Meade county, Kansas, to-wit: The west half of the northwest quarter, the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter and the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 4, in township 34 soulh, of range 26 west of the 6th P. M. beine lot 4 and the south half of the northwest quarter and the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 4, in township 34 south, of range 20 west of the 6th P.

and for the sale of said real estate without appraisement to pay the debt secured by said mort "Mr. William Astor House," inasmuch warning the navigator of the peril ahead. One of the peculiarities is the that era in which men do not prized this sovereign right, it is time for such as fifty-nine is as near Mr. William's age as thirty-four is to that of Mr. change in our laws as will deprive them of the great privilege.

Astor. Should there be an Astor hotel at Sixty-first street which is a muoh odor of vegetation, which is supposed to come from the immense quantities of vegetable animalcuiss frozen up in the i floe, and in course of decay by the action of the heat on from the warm climate remoter contingency, it would be appro gage- We have laws by which he who would offer to bribe a fellow man may be punished, but like some other laws various railway orders as follows: Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, IS 000; Switchmen's Mutual Aid Association, Brotherhood of Railway Conductors, 2,000. Of these all but the first named are members of the Federation, thus giving that body a membership of 42,000. The Order of Railway Conductors, before the Rochester convention, estimated its membership at 20,000. "A curious statement," says a London daily, "has recently appeared in a contemporary to the effect that the majority of a nation's painters are born in the country, while the architects spring from the metropolis.

At first sight such an assertion seems plausible enough, and quite in accordance with the nature of things; but, aa a matter of fact the exact contrary is the case-so far, at least as London and Paris are concerned. We believe we do not overstate the case in saying that in England sixty per cent and in Paris seventy-five per cent of the nation's artists were born in the capital, and we are prepared to support our contention with statistics." "A LITTLE NONSENSE." priate to name it on completion the Seal. Moore Douglass fc Bone, D. B. Stutsman.

Attornevs for Plaintiff. C. Bates Winter Boston. 77 West 23d "John Jacob Astor House." And thus 37 through which the berg passes on its way to final dissolution. Attest: Clerk.

all three might be readily distinguished on our statutes public sentiment seems First published Nov. 19, 1890. join in giving thanks for the protec tion and bounties vouchsafed to us as citizens of the republic. Though in Southwest Kansas we may not have as great results from our labor as has fallen to the- lot of some elsewhere, we have that lor which we should rejoice, a climate unequalled under the sun. When we learn of the inroads the dread harvester has made into the families of many of those who have left us for other climes, we should give thanks that to us, through the healthfulness of the couutry, is spared those near and dear to us; for after all what is life and homes of plenty when the great reaper has entered the house hold and taken from us those whom The training for this singular sort of New York City.

Catalogues sent free. from the old original simon-pure Astor not to be sufficiently outraged to en Publication Notice. watching for perils of the deep Is ac force them. This condition is not con House. N.

Y. World. M. Zola's Sensible Wife. quired only by constant voyaging among fined to any locality, but seems univer In the District Court, within and for the ice fields and flows, and some sailors, like Jorgensen.

are better skilled at it than others. Instances are known of the discovering of bergs at distances of vitc i uuiuy uj jueuue, tit iie isiaze ojr Kansas. Mme. Zola, though a very devoted wife, is said to feel so little interest In literature, or In any thing literary, that sal. From east to west and north to south comes the well founded reports that votes are purchased, the right of suffrage has become a marketable pro Sarah J.

Robinson, Plaintiff, vs. he has never read or tried to read on a quarter and a half mile, and even fur Sabinns A. Dnvis and The Meade Investment of her husband's works. She makes no ther, by smell, before the floating mon Company, a corporation, Defendants. To Sabinns A.

Davis. concealment of the fact and declares sters were perceptible to the eye. he Is perfectly willing to believe what duct, is soid to the highest bidder. Perhaps not directly in all cases, but nevertheless indirectly it is done. If not You will take notice that vou have been sued bv While the Danish sailor is trained by their warmest admirers say of them.

the sense of smell in noting them, the in earn yiainiin, ottfau JYU U111HUU, in 1 118 JJIS' trict Court of Meade county, Kansas, and that un Zola himself is not a bit disturbed by less you answer the petition filed in said action soon checked it will undermine our institutions as surely as Home fell from on or Deioie ine ana day 01 January, 1S91. said re her Indifference to his writings. He says he married her not on account of we loved? Better a scant table with all of our loved ones gathered thereto, with vigor and health for what there may be, than a table spread with choicest viands surrounded with emptj tition will be taken as true and judgment rendei-ed airainst yon accoidingly for the oreclosnre of corruption. a certain mortgage executed and de ivered bv vou her Intellect but on account of hei heart and thinks that it is a great mis Through this practice merit and take for any man, especially If literary. principle have no part in our elections; chairs, indicating the absence of dear to George C.

Strong, dated the lBt day of December, 1887, upon the following described rpal estate in Meade county, Kansas, to-wit: Lots 13 and 14 in Block 9 of the Wichita addition Meade Center, Kansas, and for the sale of said real estate without appraisement to Day the debt secured bv to do otherwise. One of his cardinal manner of our coasts north uses the sense of smell and sight with equal facility, and possesses the ability of discerning the Arctic traveler with the eye as unerringly as by the smelL To eyes practiced in observing them they have cumuli or fogs surrounding them different from the haze of the coast of the sea, and these two senses of sight and smell are relied on as much as the charts and the barometers by North Atlantic skippers in sailing among the 'bergs. N. Y. Star.

the lowest and. meanest wretch who disregards society, if he but have the articles of faith is that a literary couple can seldom agree, holding that the ex said mortgage. ceptions are too few fo affect the rule. He says he has known a number of Leai.j juoorb DoutAss, 1). B.

Stutsman, Attorneys for Plaintiff. Clerk. By S. D. Adams, Deputy.

Frenchmen whose literary consorts made their lives miserable, and enlarges DRS. STAR KEY PALEN'S eloquently on these examples. He names George Sand as a model literary woman, and declares no man could be BAMBOOS EVERYWHERE. TREATMENT BY INHALATION. Id Burmah They Are the Foundation of TRADE JWARIf REGISTCRED.

intimate with her for any length of time without magnificent dissensions. ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant' and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is tha only remedy of its kind ever pro- duced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to tbe Btoniach, prompt in. its action and trulv beneficial in ita ZJ. Y.

Commercial Advertiser. Tkey VTere Honest. lb otner mommer, as a farmer was "Skimble complains that he doesn't sleep well in the mornings now." "Yes, I know; it's his book." "His book? What do you mean?" "He's just published a book, you know, and now he's practicing waking in the morning and finding himself famous." N. Y. Sun.

'Uncle John," said little Emily; "do you know that a baby that was fed on elephant's milk gained twenty pounds in a week?" "Nonsense! Impossible!" exclaimed Uncle John, and then asked: "Whose baby was it?" "It was the elephant's baby," replied little Emily. Toronto Empire. Mother "Johnny, you said you'd been to Sunday-schooL" Johnny (with a ar-a-way look) "Yes'm. Mother "How does it happen that your hands smell fishy?" Johnny "I I carried home th' Sunday-school paper, an' an' th' outside page is all about Jonah an' th whale. N.

Y. Weekly. She "Darling, please tell the grocer to send me up two quarts of nice fresh sponges." He "You can't get sponges at the grocer's, ducky, but I'll stop at the druggist's for them. What kind do you want?" She "I want the kind used for making sponge cake and tall him they must be fresh." Chicago Post. Miss Terriut "When mommer and I were in Yurrup, oh, the awfulest thing happened! There was a Prince and a Count and and they fought a dnel about poor me with pistols." Yabsley coming1 into tbe city by way of tbe Grand Biver road, a oag of oats slid off his load unnoticed.

A citizen stood at 163 8 Aroh Street, PrUlad'a, X. his gate and witnessed the ooourrenoa without saying: a word. Whea ha perfected and the price drop to a few few cents a pound. Then vessels of war and peace will be constructed of it that will be stronger than steel ships and lighter than those of wood. The navigable waters of the globe will be increased very largely some say two-thirds by the lighter draught of the vessels, and the speed produced by engines of the same horse power as are now used in iron and steel steamers will be very much greater.

The engines themselves may be made of aluminum and being stronger, as well as lighter, would give a power which no engine of the day can reach. In short, a metal revolution seems at hand, and thought it safe to do so he ran out to For Consumption, Asthma, Bronchitis, Catarrh Nearly Every Work of Man. There are countries where it seems to supply almost every human require- ment and where the feathery masses of its foliage, drooping, like the weeping willow, over road and river and village, bespeak an ideal of life beyond the reach of less primitive communities. Here man is unspoiled by artificial wants, untouched by the march of i thought or of science, and nature un- Solicited supplies with lavish hand his simple needs. It is an Ideal which it seems almost sacrilege to disturb, and in presence of which the highest aim of the foreign intruder should be to preserve its primary conditions intact.

No better example can be cited of the land of the bamboo than one of those Indo-Chinese provinces, of which Hur- mah is the best known to Europeans. Like tbe fir in northern climates, it Hay Fever, Ilea lache. Debility, Bhenmatism Neuralgia and all chronic and nervous disorders "The Compound Oxveen Treatment." which ones who have fallen a prey to the miasma of more productive climates. Dear readers, as you gather around the cheerful hearth tomorrow or par take of Ihe bounties with which you have been favored, look about you anu see if there be not those less fortunate? whom you can enabl to be thankful foi the gratuities you may be able to bestow. There are those in our midst who, notwithstanding they have labor ed with all their might and strength, are unable to procure many of the nec essaries of life, much less the luxuries Do not consider it too humble to seek them out and share with them the blessings which your good fortune' has enabled you to procure; remember the language of Him Who hath said, "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one ot the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me." Let the day be one of thanksgiving to all so far as it is in our power to make it.

He who has been blessed with plenty can well afforu to share with his less fortunate neigh bor and make once glad the heart now bowed down with trials we know not of. Remember the sick and afflicted. A call, an encouraging word fitly spoken, may be the one thing necessary, to lift the discouraged one into newness of life. Tomorrow, let no selfish trait find lodgement in your being, but with an open hand dispense such charities a you may be able, that all of God's crea tures may have cause to give thanks. May you find that, "It is more blessed to give than to receive." secure the bag, but as ha reached it second man came up.

"I saw it first," said one. "No, you didn't!" "I did!" "You didn't!" Drs. Starkey Palen have dispensed during the last twentv vears. i a scientific arlitistmpnt of th elements of Oxveen ard Nitrogen maCTietized and i bo condensed and made portable that it is wealth, will defeat a saint. A poor man, however worthy, is at such disadvantage as to make his election to an office of trust an absolute impossibility.

While there is a great hue and cry against capital controlling the nation, those who sound the tocsin in many instances are the first to sell the power in their right hand vested to correct the evil of which they cry. This shame and disgrace to American citizenship is not, we regret to say, confined to any one political party. In its use both party lines and party principles are ignored and obliterated. New parties arise with many loud boasts of how they have been called by the demands of the times to reform and correct this with other evils, and in the first campaign fall into the same evil practice. We do not have to go from home to find an example of this.

The Allianace in this county, from which we at one time had some hope in this direction, became a prey to the ame practice and joined hands approvingly with the very parties who flagrantly set at defiance the laws of God and man. Their votes were cast, either blindly or willy, in a manner that confirmed the practice. Bound by partisan obligations they ignored merit and qualification in men, cast aside honor and integrity, and through their zeal for what they may have termed a good cause, became the sponsors of this corrupt practice. Theie must be a general education of the people against this great evil, or our glorious institution will soon be numbered with, those of "the past and remembered only in history. effects, prepared only from the most -healthy and agreeable substances, ita many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known.

Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and SI bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.

LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, N.f. sent an over me worm, it cures as nature cnrs: Gives strength, revives circnlation, provides Say, job!" both called ia cfaoroa te sometning nt to circulate, i ne laie 1 r. Annnr, the farmer, and as he turned about eack well known through his powerfnl works of lie the time coming whez a six-day Euro- lllvAlM I 1 t. I I 11 1 1 ni xioamna fVin affinitftiM lUmil rfvUll UiO YYdY.

A) lUCiV WH lUSlJ I llOll, IlllU 1110 lillO UlUCI Ul IUC I1UUHP, U. pean steamer or the present structure to who should bv Keiiey, 'e Mends compound Will be looked upon as a lumbering Old be a fUSS as to Who Should profit by 0xyg Treatment, and always recommended i toe una, we? uevmea mj utiiu bhi i in addition to tnem urn. tariey it aien are rermiited to refer to other by being honest. Detroit Free is toe Dam boo which here gives an un- itev. ictor l.

jonraa, senior Lntneran Ob Miss Ter server, I'hlladelphla, I'a. mistakable stamp to the rural land- "Ah! were they loaded?" Press. How Much is Twice Ko thine. Rev. Chas.

W. D. Rochester. N. machine, no move to be compared with tbe speedy aluminum vessel than tbe old-time wooden frigate is to a man-of-war of to-day.

Brooklyn Citizen. BOTH GOOD RUNNERS. scape, while it is literally the frame W'm. Penn Nixon, Editor Inter-Ocean, Chicato W. H.

Worthincton. Editor New South. Uir Callno has a dull-headed nephew, whe complains about the distribution of mingnam, a in. prizes in school. Judge H.

Vrooman, tinenemo, Kansas. Mrs. Mary A. Liverraore, Melrone, Mass. Jndge R.

S. Voorhees, New York City. Calino How many prizes have you Mr. E. C.

Knitrht, Philadelphia, Pa. Hon. w. w. Schnyler, Eanton.

Pa. taken? Nephew (despairingly) Not one. Ed. L. Wilson.

831 Broadway. N. Y. And thousands of others in everv nart of the Calino Be consoled and work well. Lrnited Statee.

Dr. Starkey Palen will nend entirely free of my child, and you shall double the nam- SCOTT'S I cnarpe a oook 01 an pages, containing ine nistory ber next year. Texas Siftings. 01 vne "orapouiKi oxygen treatment. llv book also containing names and addrepxea of work and foundation of nearly every of man.

It is no exaggeration to say that the same jungles which piTO cover to wild animal life of every form and tribe, exert a beneficent influence also on every step of life of their human inhabitants. The Burmese child plays with bamboo toys in a house of which roof and walls and floors are for the most part made from the same generous plant. Througn boyhood and manhood and old age this helpful comrade is always by his side. On land or water, in peace or war, in the homes of the rich and the poor, in art and manufacture, in the market and the field, at feast and funeral, this Is the substance of all that man most needs and values for ornament or use. Towns and villages are built from its At dinner the Major asks the men and women who have been restored to health EMULSION CONSUMPTION SCROFULA BRONCHITIS COUGHS COLDS Wasting Diseases by the nse of the treatment.

It is good reading vant: "John, how many bottles of this the elck revitalized men and women do the fine wine have we in the cellar? talking facts! witnesses! evidence! If you want "Three, your honor." After dinner CURES cne dook aaareps, uks. siAKKt 1 jno. Arm street, Philadelphia, Pa. John gets a good dressing down, with The report of another Indian war may come at any-moment or it may be the commaud always when there is company to give a better account of the contents of the wine cellar. Shortly after come more guests and the Majov riut MNo, they weren They were just as sober as could be." Indianapolis Journal.

Sammy Kink (one of two colored pupils, on the opening day of the class) "Joe, did yo heah what dat teacher said 'bout de vacation?" Joe (colored boy No 2) "I done fo'git. What was it, Sam?" Sammy "She said she knowed we had all been away on vacations in de country, 'cause we all looked sunburned." Boston Herald. According to a telegram, "lightning truck a man in Springfield, killed him. burned the sign of a cross on his back, and then dug a hole in the ground behind him the exact size and shape of a grave." It is also rumored that the electric bolt paid all the funeral expenses, ordered a monument for his grave, and offered to marry his widow; but this report lacks confirmation. orris town Herald.

Miss Dukesmith (in the parlor) "No; mamma never patron. zes the town Stores. Her taste is so delicate and refined that every thing, even to the smallest detail of shopping, is done in New York." Mrs. Dukesmith (at that moment and in the rear of the house) 'F you'll throw in another yard of that tape, an' gimme four packs of hair-pins an' two lamp-wicks, with one 'r them eellerloid collar-buttons for myhusban, you needn't give me no change from that quarter. Judge.

deferred until! spring. The ghost dances continue at Indian quarters in Get the Benefit sure of his ground, again puts the ques Dakota and "the; forts and militar tion: "John, how many bottles of this AriAor wStiA Vsva 4 a aa1 1 a vO" stations are preparing: for the worst. OF- to which John, certain that be is right JN YOril PPlCeS, It is estimated tnatvpyer Indian warriors, are encraffed --in these dances, Wonderful Flesh Producer. Many have gained one pound per day by its use. Scott's Emulsion ia not a secret remedy.

It contains the stimulating properties of the Hypophos-: phites and pure Norwegian Cod Liver Oil, the potency of both being largely increased. It is used by Physicians all over the world. PALATABLE AS MILK. Sold by all Druggists. SCOTT Chemists.

N.Y. and mis ume, promptly answers: in thousand bottles, your honor." Flleg- New York Styles! stems and leaves; tbe fisherman's rod and float, and raft; the hunter's snare; it bridges the torrent, bears water from the well and irrigates the fields. It is food and medicine for cattle and even for men; and there is music, too, not only in the rustle of its leaves, but in its woody heart, from which more than one musical instrument is made. Blackwood's Magazine. ende Blatter.

By sending to us for whatever you may 1 An Unprecedented Ooearrenoe. who are well armjaoarid supplied with amunition. The ghost dances are the result of a belief amongjthe Tnidns that a new chief hascome, to them who is to destroy the "whites and restore the country to the Indians with abundance of game. It seems that "Wasn't that a very big fellow that just got away from you?" asked one fisherman of a fellow angler. need in DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, UPHOLSTERY, Ladies' and Children's Fine Shoes, Gentlkmen's Furnishings, "No," was the reply; it was a measly little chap.

I'd have thrown him back many of the leaders -f of Infants Outfits, Boys' Clothing, this superstitious. movement are. said to be those who have been educat-' if I'd caught him." The Jury. A -Feet's Beeompease. Poet's Wife What are you doing? Hmt the Bear Comld Heat the Boy Covertaff Stralxht Coarse.

General Plaisted, ex-Governor at Maine, tells how he once caught a bear. It was of course a good many years ago, for the General was at that time only fifteen years old, and his father was clearing a farm on the hillside of New Hampshire. "You may be sure," said the General, "that that part of New Hampshire has changed a good deal since those days. At that time our farm consisted of a goodly stretch of land, a lot of stumps where we had been making clearings, a log house which we built ourselves, and a small smoke-house. This was about, all there was to the farm, with the exception of a few sheep which we had.

There were not more than half a dozen families in the neighborhood. "I was called down from the hill one day by a great shouting and noises of confusion. I arrived just in time to see a monstrous bear pulling himself toward the woods and dragging along the quarter of a sheep. He bad gone to the smoke-house, where the quarter hung, had smashed the house and seized the sheep. The cries frightened him away.

"I was young then," continued the General, with a smile, "and more enthusiastic over bears than I should be now. Besides, I and my younger brothers were possessed of good, old-fashioned mountain boys appetites, and, to tell you the truth, mutton was something of a luxury. It made me mad to see that bear taking off our sheep, and, seizing a pitchfork, I started after him. "The bear had a good start on me. and I did not overtake him until he had reached the last stump of the clearing on that hilL As I came panting up to him, brandishing my pitchfork, the big fellow turned and snarled at me.

"The value of that quarter of sheep diminished suddenly, you may be sure. It did not seem worth saving, after all. I did not like that bear, bat I soon discovered that he did not like me. In fact he stood upon no ceremony, but started for me as if he would like to give me a hug of welcome. By one of those strange revolutions of circumstances it was I who was now being chased.

That bear was a better runner than and I gave up a stra ght course. I took to tbe stumps. There weren't half enough stumps to suit me. We went around them, over them, dodged them and played tag around them. I never saw any thing like the agility of that bear.

LADIES' UNDERWEAR, AND ed at; Indian schools andrtaught the Poet I'm writing a poem that will HOUSE FURNlSIIINGSof every kind. The election of Gov. Gordon, of Georgia, tovthe United States Senate calls loudly for the return of Senator Ingalls' from Kansas. In Georgia the Alliance elected to the legislature Alliance as they, have in Kansas Alliance Republicans. The Ieaders-ef the Alliance in Georgia desired the election Pat.

Calhoun to the U. Striate, but the members of the legislature were loyal to the old confederacy and with an almost unan-mous vote elected Gordon, the confederate eulogist and southern orator. If the Alliance Georgia return to their old party should not the Alliance of Kansas learn to guard as well the interests of Union soldiers? No one denies that Senator Ingalls is the acknowledged champion of the interests and rights of Union soldiers, lie has had no equal, much less or, in the halls of Congress in the adyo-cacy of justice to those who by their bravery and sacrifice saved the Union. The honored dead of the Union armies have no more loyal defender of their glorious achievements than Senator Ingalls, for which his defeat is clamored by the very men who send to the Senate such men as Gordon. Republicans, who have been elected by the Alliance to the legislature of Kansas, are surely wise enough to profit by the example set them in Georgia.

live until time shall be no more. umstian, religion for years. They return to the reservations and are made leader, because of their superior endur jroet vviie Ana now much are you Mail orders receive prompt and care going to get fr the product of your ful attention at the same prices as genius charged over our counters. Poet Two dollars, if it is accepted. ance, adopt the Indian dress and return to their old customs.

Like the educated foreigner or criminal they are better OLIN P. ELY fan Dora Magazine. Cooling; Off After a Bath. After a warm bath a single brief application of cold water or air to the surface will contract the blood vessels and prevent one from taking cold, while a prolonged application of either will be followed by a relaxed condition of the blood vessels which is depressing and will probably induce a cold. A person very seldom takes cold from falling into the water; but if he gets his feet wet or walks on a damp pavement it is apt to bring on disturbances of some kind it may be catarrh of the nose, or of the bowels or bladder, or a pelvic congestion according to which point is the weakest A single dash of cold water or a brief draught of cold air will have a tonic effect upon the pores of the skin and the reaction is favorable; but a second pourinor of water or a prolonged exposure to cold air is like standing in a shower until the teeth begin to chatter.

From a Lecture by J. H. Kellogg, M. IX 208 210 W. 123th St.

New York City. enabled to carry on the Indian themes. the ghost dances the tallest tree to Publication Xotice. State of Kansas to Martha Goodwillie, Levi Good- Established 1857. willie, her hnsband: Belle Decker, C.

V. Decker, her husband; E. F. Seebereer, Louise B. 8ee-berer, his wife: A.

T. Bodle, Abbie A. be found is cut and transferred into a kind of a liberty pole, near which the Indians form a circle and swing, first one way, then the other, continuing without food or rest until overcome by exhaustion, when they go into an un-concious condition; recovering there his H. Ewart: Jerry Toles, Mrs. Jerry Toles, his wife; Charles Lnnd and S.

Mitchell, partners as Land Mitchell. CHE APE 11 THAN CORN. A third of a century of experience Yon will take notice that yon have been sued and progressive improvement is represented in THE LEADER LINE together with M. Wightraan and Hattie Wjghtman THE PRAIRIE CHICKEN. A Queer, Shy Bird, Yt It Lotm to Bear tha domes of Men.

The pinnated grouse or, as it is commonly called, the prairie chicken, is a queer bird. Shy, and often difficult to approach, it still loves to he In the vicinity of human habitations. It has followed the farmer from the Western Seserve to the prairies of Illinois, across the Mississippi, and it is now beginning to be abundant in the western oounties of Kansas and Nebraska and ia Eastern Colorado. Before it has fled the prairie sharp-tailed grouse that formerly was found in the uplands of Iowa, Nebraska and Dakota. Following it is the quail or Bob White-the bird of the underbrush and timber, as the prairie chioken is of cornfield and stubble.

It has come with the homesteamer and with the meadow lark and welcomes the robins, bluebirds and warblers that arrive only when orchards are set out and timber claims are well under way. In some respects the game bird of the plains changes his habits with his hab- itat Especially is th.s noticeable during the breeding season. The prairie is Illinois will lay itf eggs ajgd OIL CAKE! his wife; Stillman Trnax and Bertbie Anna Truax, his wife, in the District Court in and for from they tell of their visits to the cf STOVES and RANGES. Meade county, Kansas, by William K. Gillett and Christ and his instructions to them.

Whole or ground, manufactured by The line embraces an extensive that nnless yon answer to ine petition niea in said snit on "or before the 7th day or January. 1S91 Con Armed. the old process, for sale to feeders at There come to them as inspirations and are devoutly believed. Many of said petition will be taken as tme and judgment rendered against yon accordingly, foreclosing a export valnes. variety of Ranges, Cook Stoves and Heating Stoves for hard coal, Car lots, per ton 822.00 mortgage executed ana delivered ny Manna Vrooa-willie and Levi Goodwillie, her husband, to William K.

Gillett dated August 1st 18, on the fol- the Indians are dying from the effects of the dances, which i3 the only good soft coal and wood. 2.0C3 pounds S23.C0 1,000 pounds 312.00 They are all models of perfect The fayorable impression produced on the first appearance of the agreeable liquid fruit remedy Syrup of Figs a few years ago has been more than confirmed by tbe pleasant experience of all who have used it, and the success of the proprietors and manufacturers of Cal- feature of the affair. The Indians are very threatening and hostile and may march on the military posts any day or Less quantities, per 103 pounds. .8 1.25 modern stove construction, and meet going to Beaver City and other' points in No Mans Land should remember that there is a regularly established stage line from Meade Center, which carries mail, express and passengers. Buy your tickets over the Rock Island to Meade and from here go by stage.

tf. Kansas, to-wit: Lots 3 and 4, Block 14 Original Surrey of Meade Center, now the City of Meade, Kansas, and for the Rale of said real estate, without appraisement, to pay the debt secured by said morteaee. Witness my band and official seal, this 26th day every known requirement of the uses Sacked f. o. b.

cars, Kansas Ciiy. Address night. The women and children have KANSAS CITl LINSEED OIL been sent to places of safety and the troops preparing for an attack, or ovemoer, vsnu. u. a.

stttshax, Seal. Clerk District Court. By S. D. Adswe, Deputy.

R. W. Griggi, Attorney for Plain US- or which they are intended. 20LUNS 0URGIE, Chicago. if ornia Fig Syrup Company.

'While the bear and I were rivaling 8th and Mill Kansas City, Mo. lhj wind as travelers, JbQTUMjer)l9jr.

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About The Meade Republican Archive

Pages Available:
1,312
Years Available:
1887-1893