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Stevens County Tribune from Woodsdale, Kansas • 3

Stevens County Tribune from Woodsdale, Kansas • 3

Location:
Woodsdale, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

KANSAS NEWS. without any specie basis. The bank; was established to lend the state two million ducats, which was paid all in sj Albert Zable and others all the way from twenty to forty. It is stated that on a little patch of ground two miles square, northeast town, upwards of lump, and all the bank took in return 20,000 bushels of wheat will be pro was so-called credits, or paper money based on the government credit whalj we should call greenbacks. During its, existence the business of the bank in duced.

Tbe south half of Smith county is one vast wheat field, and enough wheat is now in the stack to pay every dollar the farmers in this part of the A Draam or Happiness May be followed by morning of "la Orippe." Easily, and why? llicauso the displacement of oovurlnir in bed, a neg-leotad draught from a partly closed window, an open transom oonnncted with a windy entry in a hotel, may convoy to your nostrils and lungs the blast. Terrible and swift are tho Inroads mads by this new destroyer. The medicated ai-coholio principle in UostoUcr's Stomaoh 11 it tors will chuck llio dire oomplaint A persistence in this preventive of its further development will absolutely checkmate the dangerous malady. Unniedioatod aloohnlio stimulant are of little or no value. The Just medium is the Hitter.

Not less efiloaclous Is It in oases o( malaria, biliousness, constipation, rheumatism, dyspepsia and kidney trouble. The weak are usually those upon whom disease fastens first Invigorate with tho bitters. Beasle: Aren't the breakers lovely! Milli-cent: Yes, but I'd ratlior they were brokers. creased 700 per cent. In 1423 there was a large premium on the credits, bo) county owe if applied to that purpose.

Not bo mnch wheat is raised in tbe north half of the county, but the corn crop is simply enormous, STOCK AND FARM. to perpetuate the old method of machine manipulation of politics they cry down the honest efforts of the masses to secure to themselves the rights and liberties so dearly bought by the bloodstained Declaration of Independence and meant to forever be perpetuated by the constitution of the United States. The alliance has a noble work to do and is succeeding in its mission. The mighty, invinoible politican who a few years ago would not deign to touch an ordinary farmer with a ten foot pole, nows bows profoundly low to the honest tiller of the soil, and sometimes even goes so far as to give up his seat in congress to some sockless old farmer with instuctions that be attend to business while said politician goes home to get acquainted with the people he was sent to congress to represent. AMUS1N0.

From the Pennsylvania Farmer, It is amusing to compare the editorials of the democratio-republioan gold bug national bank newspapers when speaking of Kansas at the preaent time with the remarks of the self-same papers made last tall and winter. Then they 'Were cursing the farmers' alliance for very ill and prophesying the direst calamities from the acts of the farmer legislature of that state. They pre- dieted the 'withdrawal of all eastern capital invested there Bud the speedy ruin and downfall of every interest. Now they are boasting of the good crops of the state, telling of the rapid cancelling of mortgages and predicting a glorious future for Kansas farmers. And the funniest thing about all this talk of these political bunco steerers is the causes they give for this change in the state of things.

When Kansas was suffering from a failure of crops and her A ringing noitt in tho ears, headache, deafness, eyea weak; obstruction of nose, dis-l the per cent interest was abolished and the state was thereafter saved mil-lions, and at the same time holders of the credits were saved taxation. A. law) was enaoted after awhile fixing the premium of the credits over gold at 20 per cent, which represented the superiority of the government fiat over preoious metal. When Napoleon ransaoked this great bank he found not a ducat in its vaults. 4 1 A borrower of books ia generally a thorough book-keeper.

The Only One Ever Printed Can Ton Find the Word? There Is a 3-inch display advertisement in this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. Tbe same is true of each new one appearing each week, from the Dr. Hnrtcr Medicine Co. This house places a Crescent" on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word.nnd they will return you Book, Beautiful Lithographs or Samples Free.

A GREAT REVOLUTION. Read and study for yourself and you will have few nods of appoval for the partisan press. ENCOURAGING NOTES. charges falling into throat, some-j times profuse, watery and acrid, atl others, thick, tenacious, bloody and! putrid offensive breath smell and taste impaired, and general debility. Not all of these symptoms at once.

Probably only a few of them. That's Catarrh. i A medicine that by its soothing, cleansing and healing' properties has cured the most hopeless cases. One that will cure you, no matter how bad your case or of how long standing. A medicine that doesn't simply palliate for a time, but produces perfect and per-1 mancnt cures.

That's Dr. Sage's Catarrh A cash payment of $500, not oy, you, as you might expect, but to you, if you can't be cured. It's an, offer that's made in good faith, to' Gove City Echo: Those of our farmers, who have a crop of broom corn this year, are bappy. The brush is excellent and the market good for prices that will pay a handsome profit for the labor on their crop. Pratt Times: Every farmer we meet, whether alliance, republican, democratic or prohibition, has tbe same story to tell of the wonderful abundance of all kinds of crops, and the consequent prosperity of the farmers.

Meade Republican: R. W. Campbell left a sample of Jerusalom corn at this office, of which he will have 100 bushels of heads from two pounds of seed. He will put in more of it next year as it proves a sure grower and very productive. McPherson Republican We have on exhibition in thm office a cluster of apples of the geniten variety, that beats anything in the apple line we ever saw.

There are twenty large nice apples in less than a foot splice on the limb. They were grown on the farm of John almgren on seotion two in McPherson township. Such clusters are no uncommon thing in his orchard. Independence Tribune: John Dun bard working farmers with blighted hopes saw forsaken homes staring them in the face; when they felt the cold grip of the mortgage closing tighter and tighter, and wife and children were trembling and hoping almost against hope, they said farmers were to blame The "balance of the season" is what troubles paterfamilias. A I.ady writes "My doit Is healthy thanks to fc'pratt's Patent Dog Cakes." When a man begins to blow you may know he is trying to take tilings by storm.

ALBERT BTJRCH, West Toledo, Ohio, leys: "Hall's Catarrh Cum saved my life." Write him for particulars. Sold by Druggists, 760. for all this themselves; that they did Three hundred and seventy-three sub-alliances have been organized in Alabama since the last state meeting. The active membership reported at the last meeting of the North Carolina alliance was 100,000. Eva McDonold saya our Jerry is the most powerful and magnetic speaker the people's party has produced.

National Secretary J. H. Turner organized Delaware state alliance Tues not properly plant their crops nor take care of them after they were planted, Drove their medicine, bv responsible and that if they would pay more atten. tion to their farms and let politics alone men, the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Kennedy, From the Tarboro, N.

Advocate. The alliance has done more to educate tbe people than any other organization in this country. Men who took but little interest in the affairs of the country in the past, are manifesting greatj interest in them now. Then again, to show its power as an educator, yon will find more men who were entirely ignorant on important questions, who now comprehend them. The masses are reading, writing and studying, and surely there will be a wise solution of the momentous questions that are presented.

This alliance movement is nothing short of a great revolution. It is composed of some of the best, wisest and most upright people in this country, and those who are opposing the movement might as well come forward and recognize its importance and fall into line. It is going to sweep this country like a cyclone. The people who contribute liberally of their support to this government are restless and determined upon a change in its policy, and though we are not a prophet we feel sate in saying that there will be a radical change. And the day is not far they would be better off.

But now, when the prairies of Kansas are rich Howells should go to Russia to live. His stories have no plots. Learn Shorthand by mall and get good position. Write Chaffee's College, Oswego, N. X.

What is monopoly? A corporation in which other fellows hold all the stock. U-TTS Epilepsy permanently cured by new system of treatment. TWO IEUI BOTTLES FREE. Send for Eplleptlo Hernwly 6 BrOBd.St-.Ilew York. lildbfl iiiu Ainu vi luvuivwiv Doesn't it 6eem so with a golden harvest planted and be can, a Liberty farmer, brought us some corn samples that would be hard to ing gathered by the alliance farmers of day, September 8.

The people's party central commit' tee of Thomas county has issued a chal lenge to any man in the state of Kan-sas to take the negative side and dis SIHADAGI1EI beat any year. The six corn stalks are thirteen feet high and bear six large the state, these all-wise prophets and reasoners are willing to credit these Positively eureti by ears, seven to eieut feet Irom tne (CARTERS ibi uctie ruts. They also nlltvt Dla rest from DvtDesila.In Topeka Journal: The Trades Assembly will clear about 8275 from the Lubor day celebration. St. John Capital: Stafford county farmers are now harvesting the largest srop of broom corn ever raised in this oounty.

Junction City Tribune: Corn-cutters hereabouts are making from $2.50 to 84.00 per day. The crop is turning out ib well as expected. Huron Graphic Over 300,000 bush-els of grain werosliijiped from this point last year. From present indications the output this year will exceed 500,000 bushels. Peabody Gazette: Large quantities of peaches and grapes, in baskets, are being shipped by Peabody fruit growers.

The recent rain3 materially helped tbe late fruit. Hiawatha. A large number of excursionists from AVaterloo, are in the county trying to buy land. They wish to settle all in a bunch, and will buy a large number of acres. Russell Journal: It is certainly encouraging to see the "strings" of wagons loaded with wheat coming to our city every day and selling readily at such good prices.

Atchison. A foot-bridge broke at the fair grounds and several women and children were thrown into the oreek and hurt. Miss Mary Koehner had her left leg broken and was seriously inured internally. Chicago Times: Kansas can boast a greater diffusion of popular education and a smaller percentage of illiteracy and crime than any other organized community on the faoe of the globe; and for all that pertains to a strong and vigorous state the history of oivil society furnishes no parallel. Leavenworth.

Business men of Leavenworth are taking active steps to secure the location of a linen manufactory at this place. Mr. Ingram, a gentleman with plenty of capital and look-ieg for a suitable location, is in the city, and they propose to offer him good inducements to stop here. Olathe. The Thompson-Houston electrio light plant in this city is completed, and in tbe presence of a big crowd little Josephine Ogg, daughter of Hon.

F. R. Ogg, of this city, touched the button and the current was complete in every part of the city, and for the first time in the history of Olathe she was beautifully lighted by electricity. Minneapolis Messenger: Peaches 1 Peaches! Why yes, we raise 'em in this county, and they are so plentiful that one lady we know of has canned, preserved, made into marmalade, pickled and "done up" in every way fourteen bushels, besides giving her neighbors all they want She has a large cellar almost filled with the fruit ready for winter use. Leavenworth.

A horse belonging to William Means, living near this city, met a singular death. The animal was tied by a long rope close to some bee-hivos, which he overturned, when the bees swarmed all over him and literally stung him to death. After the bees lit upon the horse nothing oould be done to relieve him from his plunging until he died in about halt an hour. In Shawnee county the chairman of the oounty board was requested to oorrespond with county boards in Kan-las and with proper authorities in other itates where county work houses are maintained, and procure all information sbtainable as to the details of methods ind results of tbe system of working prisoners while under jail sentence and report to the board at the October meeting. bright prospects to anything else than the efforts of the farmers.

cuss the pert platform with their IdlgflstlonandTooHMrtT Eatina. A nerfeot rem tJlTTLE speakers. The trouble with the crank is that he will turn only one way. Mrs. Gray: Mrs.

Giddiun is applying for a divorce. Mrs. Keene: Indeed! I didn know she was stage struck. We Bhould think such reasoning as 11 urn edy for DIiiiiian.Nauieaj People's party meetings in Iowa airowslDftH, Haa luUi In th Month. Ooatedl 1 Jig this was enough to convince any farmer that all the politician cared for him was ground.

The two samples yellow and white of ear corn are magnificent ten to twelve inohes long and large around in proportion. He thinks some acres will yield 75 bushels. Ashland Journal: E. B. Wright threshed his wheat and secured very nearly 600 bushels from forty acres.

Another farmer, whose name we have Tongne.Pais In the Slda.i TORPID LITER. Thj la uowali iPurel; Vegetable. to use him for his epecial purpose. If drouths and floods and insects de prieo zs centsi castes mcicnrs mvmz Fits stopped free by OR. ELIKK'B GREAT Nerve Kesturer.

Nof'ltafter Hrstday Mar-vVhou. cures. Treatise and 12.1)0 'trial bottle free i to Fit cases. Bend to Dr. Kllne.931 Arch Pa The poachers in the Bearing sea are all scrambling to get out.

Fashion Note. There is nothing like "hav- Small Pill: Small Dose. Small Price. stroy crops, the farmer is negligent and is to blame for the failure; yet, let there come a season of prosperity, with rain or sunshine jiiflt as needed, he gets no credit, but is told that Providence is exceedingly kind to him, and that if he ine a pull." Pull the ballet dress down tar K.ill itmafl. LAND LOANS.

forgotton, has 870 bushels from fifty acres. Some of this ran over twenty-two bushels to the acre. Part of Wm. MoDaniel's wheat made twenty-four bushels to the acre, and it is believed would have made thirty if tbe stack hadn't blown down and considerable grain scattered. eiiOUgll ttSU UU UQio uuo -''J'J An American girl has married a Bavarian count who owns a little brewery.

It was her hnr'l nrohablv that attracted this small-beer aristocrat. Concordia Daylight: A farmer liv are being attended by the voters, who display an enthusiasm that is very suggestive to the old parties. Westfall, their candidote for governor, is a tireless worker, and the result of his canvass will be fruitful to the cause. John H. Powers, president of the northern alliance, and a host of other good speakers are also having an active canvass.

Brother Turner, national secretary, has received notice that consolidation with the national farmers' alliance and industrial union has been ratified by the sub-alliances of Wisconsin and a state charter has been issued. Welcome to Wisconsin. Mr. M. E.

Matthews, of the Topeka bar, who was chairman for five years of the democratic central committee of the city of Topeka, has come out in support of the people's party. Mr. Matthews' accession to our ranks is a valuable gain. He will, we understand, organize clubs of former democrats in support of our ticket. Advocate.

People's patty clubs are being organized in every ward in Cincinnati, ing near Qlasco recently sold his eighty-acre farm for $20 per acre. After disposing of his farm he sold his wheat, and when his check for the same was cashed he received over 8800. This wheat be raised on 88 acres, the balance AND IS 14 A WINNER WITH HORNS." TRT IT. The drunken man thinks with Longfellow "Life is reel." Malor's Omen Repairs Broken Articles 16c and 25o. Major Leather and Rubber Cement loo.

i We have hair-dressing parlors and why not dental drawing-rooms. "Oh, mamma," exclaimed little Johnnie, will only tend to his farm she will continue to bless him. Such talk is indeed amusing, and intelligent farmer should make the moat of it as a club of ridicule for the scheming politician who is always working his own advancement, and as means of accomplishing this end is constantly trying to keep the farmer in the background by preaching to him that he should be satisfied with his present social and political position and privileges, and that Providence had never intended him for further "the trees in our yard are getting utuu-uuau he had in other crops which he relinquished to tbe purohaser. He has undoubtedly found out what a blankety blank darn fool trade he made ere this. If you have a farm, hold on to it.

It beats a national bank every day in' the year. ed." wtmf nnrt nf unoBch is "woman? Papa: Woman is no part of speech at all, my son. She is the whole ot it. Nickerson Argosy: We had the plea Experience is a teacher who gives you information you cannot impart to yoar son for fear of shattering nis nnai veuorauuu. II KV CCVCD CURE0 T0 STAY cured.

1 fill I IbV til We want the name and ad. dress of every sufferer in the OTUMli U.S. and Canada. Address, Ad I II III I a P.Iar.ldHjei,.D.,Btlfil.,I.I. PONDER THIS.

From the National Economist. There is much confusion, which has led to considerable misapprehension in regard to the land loan demand of tbe alliance. The precise language of the demand is as follows: We demand that the government Bhall establish sub-treasuries or depositories in the several states which shall loan money direct to the people at a low rate of interest, not to exceed 2 per cent per annum, on non-perishable farm products, and also upon real estate, with proper limitations upon the quantity of land and amount of money. This does not contemplate the wild, indiscriminate loans that are charged against it, but expressly declares to thf contrary that the amount of both land and loan shall be properly limited. It leaves all the safeguards and limitations to tbe wisdom and discretion of congress, whose proper function is to legislate upon all matters of this charaoter.

There are some differences of opinion as to the details of the measure, but all unite on the one idea that this demand is not made to be used for speculative purposes. It is designed to protect the homestead and preserve the roof-tree to tbe rising generation. It is expected in its operation to save the home from mortgage foreclosure, and keep the family from becoming outcasts or tramps. WEST AND SOUThU "You have forgotten something, the waiter, as the diner was leaving. "Keep it for your honesty," replied the generous "This oircumstance adds weight to the sure of a drive with George MoAttee to his farm west of the city.

It is not often that a railroad engineer is also a first-class farmer. This is the case with Mr. MoAttee. He has been in the employ of the Santa Fe company for more than nineteen years, makes his regular run to Dodge City, yet carries on his farm. He has 160 acres all improved, about ninety acres in corn, has good barn and sheds for all his cattle and horses, and an excellent hog-house for bis hogs.

He is preparing to fonce his corn-field so he can turn in his stock when the corn is gathered, and to fence ion ntn nhnnt to take." remarked the con vict, as be glanced down at his chain and ball. and the 17,000 votes cast in that city for Stevenson, the labor candidate for mayor four years ago, thore is every reason to believe will be oounted this time for honest John Seitz, the farmer, and for members of the legislature who are opposed to the re-election of John She Spoke Without Thinking. Do you know Miss Honeydew-er-Dolly you are the first girl I ever kissed!" "Oh that's just what they all Bay!" I XI Illn.l. f-nrn Kalve." Prints labels, Ac. Clr-f cular ptessgHs, Warranted to cure, or money refunded.

Ask Sherman to the United States senate. off orchard ground and put a picket r-run 1 1 newspa your druKktst lor it. race in cents. per Bixe PRINTING fence around his house and yard. He iio tout own- 'printing.

Mnke From the Charleetown, W. Advocate. How much more of your products will the dollar of to-day buy than the dollar of twenty years ago? How much more of your debts, your taxes, your officers' salaries, your interest, your mortgages, or your doctor and lawyer fees will it pay? That is the way to look at the financial question. Look at the relation what you have to eell, as producers, sustains to what you have to pay, for the items which enter into your daily and yearly expense account. Have salaries decreased? Has interest been reduced? Are taxes lower, have mortgages been curtailed? Eow does the price of land, of wheat and corn, of cotton, of everything you raise, compare with the value of the purchasing agent money? Interest, taxes mortgages, salaries, and professional fees are as high as ever, while wheat, corn, cotton and all agricultural staples The workers in the cities are learning that their interests are identical to the men who till the soil.

Missouri World. "Have you ever read "The Light That Failed?" she asked the stockholder in the Kansas City item: One of the results PEESS money printing for others. TflA RPt.t.illCP has sixteen head of horses, about thirty head of cattle and nearly three hundred head of bogs. He has twelve or fifteen gas company. "flio, tie answerea, ana men the legislation of last winter was the ihange in tbe school laws, by which the easy, printed rule.

HeiiU 2 stamps for eatalORuoof presses, type.curda, Ac, K. KELyKl AVO.t Met-ldtn, Oan. be avoided her for the rest ot the evening, )oard or education of Kansas City, WILL IT? hot sat i am the Sailors are the only class of men known reliable and succe- I DO NOT. I B0 do iU ful. horses for sale.

One pair of grey mares three and four years old, which would have brought $500 a few years ago when horses were high. is left without means to conduct and iut busineuB is who will voluntarily sit down on a tack. public schools until January 1, The Orogon Alliance Herald takes up The dear huntine season has been trans 1892. To overcome as far as possible nlj for public bonuvuit nee. I do I am ucccBHfulfl business at a fair profit on perfectly Bound and honorable methods.

Nend small bottle of urine with history of your rune, I will sond full partieulflrs of your dineaw free. lr. T. N. Crowley, Terre Haute, Iiid, ferred from from the beach to the drawing- From the Falkville, Monitor.

KANSAS (IIIKCIIES. the assertion of a prominent loan agent that one good crop with fair prices will destroy tbe industrial agitation, and The alliance comprises a majority of me loss of time in tbe school year, the icbools are opened to all who will pay 75 cents to $2 a month, according It is the uninstructed delegate that is or Ir Snyder's Kid nor Isnra cured Enurtnia the voters of Alabama. These voters mimm tf vif dinarily the most intelligent. BEQWETTIKG.) grade. asks the following questions: test uiioiiu MiBS Pearl White: I wish you to paint my Belleville: A reaction has set in and We would like to ask if one good crop O.

8 NYOEK, 1 cker's Theatre, Chicago. flL s-For ai by p.ll Druggists. Price $1.00. portrait. Dobbins: I'm sorry, ma'am, but I can't do it.

Miss Pearl White: Why not? with fair prices will destroy railroad ihe members of the Gregg family, who irere poisoned a week ago, are now ilowly improving, although Mrs. Gregg Dobbins: 1 never copy other paintings. have the right to their opinions, to their policies, to their plans and their purposes. They are simply exercising the right of citizenship in all they have undertaken and all they purpose to ao complieh. They have all their material extortion.

Topeka Jonrual: Rev. S. G. Griffis is holding interesting revival services in Lowman Hill M. E.

chapel. Topeka Capital: Work on the Cum-berland Presbyterian church is progressing rapidly. The Edison Electrio company is wiring the building. The day of opening the main audience room is the iiret Sabbath in November. It will be determined by a vote of the UfACUIWCTflU Send to the Stata Board ot flHOnlilU I UN Trads.SEATTLHUoratrus ttatementof tbe State's sources of wealth.

Artistle ind Miss Tinuell, the young lady visit- are from 100 to 200 per cent lower. How can you hope for prosperity while this condition prevails? Are vou so Undoubtedly the Ivory Soap people de OPIUM are exceedingly bad yet. Mr. John-Kin, Mr. Gregg, and two of thechildren, serve credit tor tho best grade ot illustra Will it equalize the burdens of taxation? Will it stop usury extortion? Will it do away with child labor? HOKPHIXR DISEAKB, fl-'AlUNTKK1l CTR trilboul iin.

TKIAIt TltKATMtIiT FKBK. H. L. KIUXFU, m-TRKTAKY, BOX INDIANA MIM.KAL HI'HIN UL. IAD tions now being used for advertising pur interests and the welfare of their chil ire rapidly improving and the probabil- blind that you can't see that the hold-era of mortgages, the drawers of sals- dren involved in the result It is not poses.

The series of full-page drawings which have been appearing on the last page of the Century, represent some of the most If filleted with ore eyes, uf ty now is that all will recover, in which i Thompson's Eyi Water. members of the church as to whether it will be seated with opera chairs or only their right but their duty to do Will it give work to tbe millions of idle men in the country at remunerative iase no legal investigation will be nado. The case is still a mystery. all they are undertaking. They would pews.

wages? be recreant to the demands of man capable book and magazine artists in the country. The series must have coat no small figure. As yet the "way-up" artists do not sign the work they do for advertisers, but I apprehend that it will not be long ere we shall see in the advertising columns such Atchison Champion: There were ries and the receivers of taxes are the ones most benefited by the enhanced value of money and the reduced prices of everything it buys? The drawer of a $5,000 salary can bny three times Kansas City Gazette: There is much Will it (rive the millions of female hood and every obligation incumbent rejoicing among the members of the employes living wages? names as ueorge nharton r-d wards. w. Baptist Sunday school of Rosedale over tbe capture of the prize banner at the upon them if they should do less.

A majority of them regard the union of Will it destroy speculation in land, Eeiuble, etc. Such men as these bring to as much of your wheat as be conld when association meeting in Kansas City, the heritage of God's children their work, resides mere mechanical skill, strained imagination. and an artistic concen- the west and the south as the easiest, mi his salary was established, and hence it LION this week. Three points were con tion of things. These qualities, when used Will it destroy speculation in the best and safest plan to be pursued, and follows that it will take three times as sidered: the number of scholars and in connection with advertisements, com food products of the world? those who claim to be their leaders maud scarcely less interest thau when used much of your wheat to pay your pro- teachers, number of chnrch members in Sunday school and number of baptisms in the ordinary literary way.

Printer's Ink, Will it prevent the lockout of honest jxirliuu of Liti bulaiy. Is this equaliza AUgUSC IS, iO'JL. lUIIVIM 11 working people, thereby forcing up riuui ike Sunday school during tha yoar, Rosedale got 87 per cent and the near Will Tnrlfy BLOOD, refrolat tion? It strikes us that we farmers are the most patient, long-suffering set should seek that consummation. ALLIANCE TWELVE YEARS OLD, From the Milton, W. Star.

Quite a number of uninformed farm prices by limiting the output? The Latest Young Lady (familiar with museum collections): What are those South Sea Island Slaughter clubs for? est compeitor 15 per cent remove ijviii disorder, build irenptli. renew appetite, reitore health and Will it supply school facilities to the millions of children now crowded out? more country people in Atchison yesterday than any other day during the week. People now have money to spend, and the crowded oondition of the stores and places of business attested that they were spending it. Atchison's retail trade comes from a large scope of country, and the olass of people who come to tbis city to trade sre among the best and most prosperous in the world. Neodeaha Register: A miller in this oounty tells of a man who had some whsat se poor that it would kill a man to eat flour made from it.

He went to a neighbor and purchased two bushels of an excellent quality of wheat, which he took home and distributed over the tops of a number of the sacks of poor wheat, which he brought to tbis town. Opening his sacks be sold his wheat to a grain dealer in tbis city at the best market price on the merit of the good wheat in the top of the sacks. i of foels on the face of the earth to submit to this state of affairs a minute. Dealer inose are parasol handles. viKoroiyoiiiii.

uy pepsin. Indication, that tired feel- KANSAS RAIXBOADS. ers labor under the delusion that the al imr Df ji tiif i eradicated. Mind brightened, brala Will it destroy the jobbery that now vvestpnana Times: rom tbe very just think that the dollar you get for your products buys three times as power mcretisa. bonei.

nerves. mua exists in every branch of the public ser liance movement is of very recent origin and will have but an ephemeral ex- large number of freight trains passing through this place daily it is evident vice, wringing millions out of the peo LIU clei, receive Dew force. SafTerlnx from complaint je culiar to their sex, nftinjrlt, and much of them as it ever did, but when ple to satisfy the greed of a lot of slick fstence. Such is not the case. Texas, the state of its birth, has just held her you come to pay your obligations of that along this line there was a large amount of grain raised.

In the past lose biuoiu ou cheeta, tjeautlAei Complexion. Hold everywhere. All renulne roorti beir "Crescent" eud nascent slaiup ror34-pag pamphlet. When Baby was sick, we gave her Castorts, When the was a Child, she cried for When sh became Hits, the clung to Cattoria, When th hadjhlldrea, the gave them CattorU, schemers? Will it secure an equal and exact ad twelfth annual state alliance, and the ten days tiiere nas averaged one train the above-named characters it does not go any further than it ever did. Think over this question and you must at an hour.

order in Texas is much stronger in 01. HARTER MECICINI St Uufi, Me. ministration of justice to all people Greenleaf letter: The Central Branch numbers and more united in purpose K. M. U.

T. company pays out from (3,000 to 427 -It alike? Will it shorten the hours of toil Will it correct all or any of the dam $4,500 monthly to its employes residing thta annrarlns any of once conclude that the money question the one which overshadows all others nd is the one that must be solved, and that speedily. To simplify the matter, here. Five engineers besides a master tm. plae.

Bj.nboa this paper. and more determined in resolution than ever before. The order, however, in many of tbe states is young in years but strong and growing fast. The or-der now in the United States numbers Pittsburg: Tbe tin-plate and payroll city of southern Kansas, that enjoys the distinction of having forty-two coal nable ills that have grown out of the past political administrations of this you can state it thus as a matter of country? IN 15 MINUTES. cause and effect: Because interest, about four million members.

The time has passed when the farm- taxes have not decreased in the shafts, six zinc and one silver smelter of the Chick process, the base of which is brought from Mexico, has, among important improvements, just commenced paving its first street, Broadway, a distance of one mile, with a su era will be satisfied with the mere for THAT 5 PER CENT REDUCTION. mechanio and a large number of railroad boys make this town their home. Many of tbem have built elegant residences, and all are living in comfortable homes. Wichita. A destructive wreck of a freight train occurred on tbe 'Frisco road near Valley Center.

Tbe trucks of one of the cars collapsed and four heavily laden cars and the caboose piled up on one another. A brakeman was thrown into the debris' and probably fatally injured. The track for a couple tune of good erops for a season. What -y upon suffered severely with lace ralgfef but in 15 minutes after cation of St. Jacobs Oil was asleeo From the tamar.

Industrial Union. they demand and, mark you, what they Let ns suppose, for the sake of the sami proportion as the Tallies of agricultural products is the reason of the prosperity of the one class and the poverty of the other. THEV RECOGNIZE US. perior quality of brick mauufactured hare. The secret to tbis young city's are going to have, is the rights of IfelLtfc have not been troubled with it siDce.

prosperity seems to be in three veins of argument, that tbe proposition of tbe democratic party that the nine million mortgages on tbe homes of the people coal, only one four-foot vein of which is now being worked, and apparently American citizenship, and a just distribution of the products of labor. A reform is coming a reform which is too deep-seated in men's minds to be seri No return since 1882. F. B. ADAMS, Perry, Mo.

"ALL P.1SHTI ST. JACOBS OIL BIO IT." bly furnishing sn inexhaustible supply. of hundred yards is torn np. Gay lord Herald: Hundreds of thresh Hutchinson. The preliminary exam are tbe result or the "robber tariff;" the question then is, how many mortgages could be paid by a per cent reduction This is the relief offered by ously injured by the schemes of political intriguers.

ing machines are at work on the bier ination of E. E. Wise has been completed and he has been bound over to the district court in the sum of 825,000. wheat crop ot this section, but as yet have hardly made a showing. In this immediate neighborhood a recent count PIWH REMEDY TOM Katim ts l'hrapMt Ktliof It Imtntan A cm Is certain, for a party that stands and howls that tbe HADN'T A DUCAT.

from the Oakwlale), Alliance. Men nf the alliance, don't let the raillery of the political press bother yon in the least. The very fact that the partisan papers in lbs state, including our ablest dailies, are firing bot shot at the alliance, is evidence that they recognize in the farmers' movement a formidable foe to tbe private interests of political bosses, and of course in their teal Tbe commissioners of lien con nty have Cold In the Head It bu bo equal. instituted proceedings in the United disclosed the fact that tbe Abercrom-bies have sixty big stacks, Ben Hope The Bank of Venice, which flourished country is going to tbe devil through a "robber tariff, and when asked what it proposes to do about it, says: "Oh, we will reduce it 5 per cent Great re States district court for the appointment of a receiver for the road and the from 1171 till 1798, when Napoleon about loriy, V. r.

iielieras many more, It It as Ointment, of whl-h a email particle hi arrtlMd ts lbs captared the city, is said to have done an enormous business all those C27 years (Marti, fries, so. fMJ bj George Zerlein seventy-five, Lyme hearing will be held at the next session Cook and his boys 150, and Webb Mo- of court which meets tha latter part of Kail, Tom Ramsey, August Eeckman, September. form that rural or nt ey rwi. T. aUiervTurm.

Vtarrea. Tx. eejete. J..

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About Stevens County Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
415
Years Available:
1890-1892