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Osborne County News from Osborne, Kansas • 2

Osborne County News du lieu suivant : Osborne, Kansas • 2

Lieu:
Osborne, Kansas
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Page:
2
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Dr. Fred Smith, i- Ucterinary Surgeon and Dentist mc BooK and Stationery Company 77 ca atkent'on public to onr stock of Books, Stationery, Office Supplies, No-ill tions, Cigars, Candies, School Supplies, Box Paper, Etc, We handle all the late Periodicals and daily papers and will take subscriptions in many cases at less price than the publishers. We have many souvenirs and presents suitable for any occasion, including Cut Glass, Fine China. Ladies Hand Bigs, Dressing Cases, Brush and Comb Sets, PC Statuary, Fountain Pens, Etc. We are sole agents for the Eastman Kodaks and always have supplies on hand.

We will appreciate a call from you at any time and will assure you courteous gjf in met half-way. The seizure, will be hose of integrity, industry, cleai rains ond clean minds; those do -fraid to work with heads or haaili-nore than eight hours a day or twicv tight hours if necessary; who can be rusted to do their best without watching, who will always give full measure, more without asking. On the other and, there ia little promise for tin me who studies least and strives little; vho ia afraid of doing too much or ol vorkiog overtime; for tbe youth who hinks it is manly to be a barroom patron; to tax bis brain fur tbe coloring a meersobaum pipe or who decorates tiis fingers cigarette stains; whi gives his evenings to pool halls, oi irgues that the world owes bim living. Such as these may exist, but tbey will not be living in an age thai, bile having much to give, will aU demand much. One of the songs sung on the vaude villa stage bears tbe title: "I Don't Know Where I'm Going, But I'm Ou My Way." Thousands have listened to it and laughed at it.

It was intended to amuse, and it has served its purpose. Perbaps of the many who have beard tbe soLg, a few here and there have been suffiuiently philosophical to recognize in its title, suggestion of a sori ous thought. How ninny of us among the eighty millions of Americans know where we are going? We are on tbe way, unquestionably, but where are we found? In the vast majority of oases 'fa question is unanswerable People on every side of us are striving and laboring for the moans to mako tbe journey pleasant, but without definite ideas a8 to where cr what the destination will be, They have no specifio aims, no purpose in life beyond satisfying the needs of the treatment and entire satisfaction. One Door east of ibe Postoffice Osborne, Kansas Osborne County Common School Grid uatcs. The first class to graduate from thou in mo scbooln of Osborne oounty w-io 1889.

Tbia was during the incum-ancy cf Miss Mattie Morris as oountx uperintendent, who took tbia step i luce the educational system of the oounty on a systematic basis, thus ng the pupils an idea of what might pec ted of them in tbeir oommti cbool work. There baa been 034 pu. ih to graduate from the common sobool the oounty, of wLich 531 were girl md 403 were boys. Of the 531 girls graduate 187 of them have been marriei Ve didn't take the trouble to find ou how many of tbe boys were married, but then the boys will no doubt look after their matrimonial matters themselves. Of the 40) boys to graduate 105 of 'hem are farmers.

They are engaged in tbe various avooations pt life. Some are merchants, lawyers, physicians, bookkeepers, pbarn aciats, etc Twelve members of the Alumni have passed to the Great Beyond. Tbey are as follows: Chas. Bitter, class of 1890: Lizzie White Wineland, class of 1891; Lewis T. Dutton, class of 1893: Fannie Peach, class of U03; Cora Harvey, clas-s of 1893; Linda Anderson, class of 1894.

Mary E. Tindal, class of 1894; Myrtle Lundy Graybill, class of 1S95; Efli-Earnest, class of 1896; Flora DeMos', clans of 1897: Alton Martin, class ol 1900; Verne Eastmau, class of 1900, Tbe following are those who have graduated and tbeir class by years: cr ass of 1889 Benway Dirstine, Helen Brolst Ganoung, Maud; Oraft Quincy Cress Andrews, Etta; Kinnear, Luella. class cf 1893 Boenne Gilson, Anna: Stephenson, B. Hamacher, Levi; Akens, Ida, Aikens James; Andrm Pall, Delilah; Bell, W. Bisbeo, Charles Bradley Bacon, Elsie; Brumbaugh, Wm Brown, C.

Bright Kenyon, ir ie; Byron Snyder, Anna Bradley Mansfield, Bessie; Dillon, J. Davis Huff, Lucetta; Dillon Harrison, Artie; Dillon Garret Clara; Doty Lent, Susie; Dobbin, Hattie May Duffy, William; Eastman McDaniels, Anna; Easterling, Nancy; Farnsworth, Arthur; Fay, Ed. Foster, Thomas. Fuller, Mina; Graybill, Mike; Hamacher Grubb, Myrtle; Hensley Pember, Anna; Hodson Iden, Libby; Huey Dillon, Rhoda; Jenkins Hirst, Addie; Keirns, Olive, Kenyon, Kenyon, Nellie; Knipe Morrison, Dorsa; Lerew, George; Lewis Fay McClellan Kalbfleisch, Ada; McThomas, C. Mowery, Marvin; Murphy GroesbecU, Neva; Murphy, David; Mills VanWormer, Bertha; Pix ley Houghton, Jennie; Porter Metzler, Mary; hathbun Moore, Irene; Bitter, James; Ritter, Charles; Bounds, C.

M. Bi oine Register, Lena; Singleton, Treats all diseases of Domestic Animals. Calls promptly attended to day or night. Can be found at Keeue's Livery Barn, Phone Residence Prion Osborne, Kansas. ROBERT CLARK Funeral Director Embalmer.

4ND FIRST-CLASS and EQUIPMENTS. Up-to-date Practice. Office Telephone, 45 Uesidenoe, 102. The Pleasure of a Bath is greatly increased if your laundr is all that it should be, well washed and ironed linen feel so good after a bath. The Osborne Laundry is the place to patronize if you want to be sure of good work every time.

One time will convince you that our work is all right. -y WALTER. DOANE B. GarrigiRS. Practical Undertaker and Embalmer Licensed No.

187. Phone'115 ljcarse and Attendance Tree. (33) (. fl. EASTMAN.

VETERINARY SURGEON AND DENTIST Bloomington, Kansas. Phone in House '3 OHA8. H. NlOHOLA8-Attorney-at-Law. Office-Over Gillette Brodrick'l K.

MITOHELL Attorney-at-Law and Notary. Osborne, Kanaat, J. T. Bud, E. P.

Sampli REED 8AMPL AttoBNBTs-AT-Law Office In Morton-Paraom Mercantil Company'! Block. SW.8MIT Attoenbv-at-Law, Seal Estate, Loam, Insurance and Notary Public. JL. A 8-LAWIBB. Office Over Farmers' National Bank Farmers' National BEFEIENOBM Exchange National Stat Bank of Downs EO.

HEN8HALL, M. nd Ear and Spectacles a Specialty Office In the Morton-Parsons Eesidence Phone 194, (36) MF. HUDSON, M. D. Office In Besidensa cn L.

Street. All Calls Receive Prompt Attend (39) TB, FELIX, M. D. Office In the Morton-Parso. Block ill Calla Receive Prompt Attention (15 RB.MAY8 M.

uk- geon, Covbbt, Kan 3 0fclOHS lBt doer west of Morton-Parson Ha cantileCo. All calls promptly atten HD. DILLON, D. D. 8.

Gai administered. Office opposite-Post office, Osbome, Eansa. 42 7 A A. THOMPSON, M. 1 HOKBOFATHIO PHTIIOIAir All Calll Promptly Attended (40) sink, and milk a dozen cows and bring in wood to burn, am) stand out in tbe sun all day, and cburn and churn and churn; and wear my brotners oast off clothes, and walk four miles to Bchool, and g' a licking every day for breaking some old rule; and then get horre again at night and do tbe chores once morei and milk the cows and feed the hogs, and curry mules a soore; and then crawl wearily up stairs and seek my little bed and hear dad say "that worthless boy, be duesn't earn bis bread" I'd like to be a boy again, a boy has so much fun; his life is juf-t one round of mirth from rise to set of sun.

I think there's nothing pleasanter than closing stable doors, and herding hens and chasing bees, and duing evening chores." To be cheerful when the world is going well with you is no great virtue. Tbe thing is to be cbe rful under disadvantageous circumstances, if one has lost money, if business prospects fail, if enemies appear triumphant, if there is sickness of self or those dear to one, then it is indeed virtue to be cheerful. When poverty pinohes day after day, month afte- month, or through the years as tbov pass, and one has ever to deny self of every little longed for luxury, and the puzzle of how to make one dollar do the work of two has to be solved, tuen the man who can still be cheerful is a hero. He is a greater hero than the soldier who faces the cannon's mouth. Such cheerfulness is the kind that we need to cultivate.

To acquire this self command, we need to think of many things. We need to guard against giving way to irritation about littlo things. If we can maintain self oontrbl in small matters, we shall have less difficulty in maintaining' it when great matters are to be met. If we meet with irrepairable losses we must readjust our lives to fit the new conditions. There is no great evil so bad but that it might have been worse.

Let us congratulation ourselves that the worst is not yet. "Every cloud has a silver lining." There is truth in the saying that "though it may for a time look so dark we can see no glint of the silver, yet we know it is there. Atchison Globe: Nothing looks quite so cheap as a cheap satchel. An amateur gardener's tools usually are superior to the garden he raises. If a woman misses a train she is convinced the conductor is no gentleman.

Love may brighten the eye as the poet says, but it also has a tendency to disarrange the hair. When a woman who lives in a little town is "dressy" she is very dressy. A women can see romanoe as far as a tramp can work, but she doesnt avoid it as carefully. One of the surprises in the life of a boy is to learn how people love him when he gets dangerously Speaking of perfect self oontrol: there is the young man who oan wear "loud" sooks without looking at his feet. Having good judgment and being "a fool for luck" are frequently the story of a single finanoial suocess told by different parties, When it comes to a hopeful and trusting disposition, how about the man who takes a frying pan on a fishing expedition, Men are not so given to having their pictures taken as are the women but the supply of men's piotures alwayb seems equal to the demand.

A woman uses very little judgment jn her love affairs, but Bhe thinks any other woman who makes a bad marriage should have known better, D. Coburn: This is an age of most wonderful opportunities and possibil ities for the young; greater and more wonderful than any gone before. In fact, opportunities are well-nigh reaching out to sieze them, but the oppor tunity and the seizure, if effective, must oannon t-xploded in our bands leiving us begrimed, considerably frightene I but neither better nor wiser boys. How cheerfully we ooulc labor for weeks getting ready fur t'ie Gloriuus," bow early we rise on that morning and how ite the next. The first leisure hour we had on tb it next day it win us to tbe Ked bridge and swimming hole.

We have a mental photograph of time, place and companions. Most of our old "cronies" have passed away but the re collections of tho old Red bridge, will still bring vitality into tbe hearts of tbe l.ving 1 bis old bulk is rnp'dly nenr-ing its last putt. It has been baaly damaged by wind and weather and was manytiints wrecked on tbe shoals of adversity, but "ben tbe call of the past ajunds in our ears we can quickly drop the appearance of decay and live, if on ly in imagination and but for tbe moment, in the memories of Bcenes and icicients associated with a happy childhood. Atchison Globe: There are two women in Coolidge of the same age, and both possessing such widely diverged charao teristics, yet both so well liked, that there is some speculation as to which the years will prove to have been the wiser. One of them saves every oent; if a laugh cos's anything, she cuts out the laugh and ia going though life with her bank account the most important item in it.

The other not only never saves, but ebe never frets. A rainy day would find her not only without an um brell, but without a roof, without clothing and with nothing left to her of the past but a memory of a very happy time There may be a happy medium but the perplexing part about is that no one ever reaches this happy medium, aid since every one swings too far one way, or the other, which of these Coolidge girls has swung the wiser way? A boy, a few matches and some powder generally makes a dangerous combination, and the results are often fatal to the boy experimenter or some one else. The Stockton News tells the the following experience of a boy in that town: Lyman Flint, the 10 year-old son of Charley Flint was badly powder burned Saturday evening. The youngster gouged the powder out of a lot of ohells and then touohed a match to the pile, wita the usual result. One eye was hurt quite severely, but he got it open the first of the week.

His faoe is badly marked, but no lasting damage resulted. A horse tells how to treat a man in the following language: When a man drops from sheer exhaustion of illness promptly seize an end board or cart stake and pound him on the head and on the ribs. If this does not reouperate him, kick him violently in the body. This treatment will restore him if per sistently administered. If a man finds a load too heavy and feels that it will strain him, kick oil a fence board and knock him down and hammer him thoroughly with the board.

This will give renewed tnergy and he will make no more fuss. But do not on any ac count reduce tbe load, that would look too much like common sense If a man refuses to drink when you offer him water don't give him any for two days. That will "teaoh him" to be thirsty at any time you find it convenient to tend bim. It is a good plan to ply the whip frequently on a man who is at work. No matter if he is doing his level best, hit him now and then on general principals, no whip is handy use a club, "I'd like to be a boy again without a woe or care; with freckles soattered o'er my face and hayseed in my hair; I'd like to rise at four o'olook and do a hundred chores, and saw the wood and feed the hogs and look the stable doors; and herd the hens, wbtoh the bees, and take the males to drink; and teaoh the turkey how i to swim so they will never it Kansas Comment, Mack Crecbter: No matter what the game may be, it ia seldom' out until it If an argument pets warm there is a'ways simo one wanting to lie.

or fight. it to vring multitude of sins secrocy bus ohurity Bkinned a city a general proposition the man who never made an enemy never made anything that n-mounted to much. truth of thi matter is we are all out df tor the coin The only differenoe is in the things we will do to got it It will be only a few weeks now until you will rget all about the frosts and will be longing for a rain to cool things There ar times when it is necessary to stand up for your rights. The more favors sonic people receive the more they expect Some men have such a lifeless way of Bhaking hands that you feel like turn ing them around and giving them swift kick just to see if they will wake up. man who is good pay usuallj gets hot if his bill is not presented promptly; while the man who is slow pay generally gets hot no matter when the bill is presented.

Mankato Monitor: The way to loarn to do is to do. Are you a self-eleoted member of the please club. Small men try to get even, great men know better. The right time to do the right thing is right now, The birds of the air are preachers of faith to men, Mau never poses as a hero when there is nobody looking. For the cure of any trouble look to yourself, not to others.

Knowing tbe secret of knowing how to keep a seoret is the rarest secret. Summer is the season of the year when the Creator pours forth the treasures of his blessings in the greatest abundanoe. What is poetry? Ask rather to have defined Love's soft desire, ambition's mad'ning flame, or the fleroe eoBtaoy that beats in manhood's heart of oak when trumpets are blown for war. The verriest tryo can tell you what poetry is not; the world's wisest may well stam-mer when aBked to say what it is. Despite the critics there are no rules by which it can be measured, any more than there be rules by which the charm of woman may be dofined, Some say that poetry is truth.

Perhaps: but all truth is not poetry, else were the law of gravitation the grandest of epics. Many a young woman who deserves a good man for a life companion, has jumped in at a tender age and married a Johnny, and gone through life embarrassed the rest of her days. Johnny is all right as an ioe cream boy and as a Blot machine, with which to get ohew-ing gum and bon bons, but when it comes to measuring up, in after years, with the men who do things, and whose wives make up the buget of satisfied ones, he is down and out before the race starts. Girls, if you must marry, and you must, if you would be happy, be Bure and marry a man, or at least what is going to be a man. Marysville Advooate Democrat: How narrow is the span which bridges past and present.

We feel contented with our advancing years and rather take pride in the increasing girth of body and paucity of hail when suddenly some little thing will make us disoon tented with our lot and long for the soenes and companions of childhood. JuBt now it is the fireworks displayed in the windows that has fired our die- content. The sight has carried us over the bridge and we are consoiom of a desire to have our years fall away from us. It seems but yesterday that a toy present. If making a comtortabl) liv ing from week to week they are content Perhaps that is all most of them, and more than Borne of them, can do.

The future must look out fcr itself, the present is what they are "up against" and it 'n in the present they live, move and have their being. But tbey are all ou the way somewhere. One destination we are all sure of the grave. We are all traveling 24 hours a day and 365 days a year. Millions and millions have made tbe trip and completed it.

Where are they? Truly "we don't know where we are going, but we're on tbu way." Will Palmer: Besides all his other chores a normal man has to breathe 20,000 times every day, and if you miss doing your stunt for one day you can never citch up again An iceberg sometimes lives 200 years. An ioeberg always keeps cool and never allows itself to get exoited about anything If a bug could talk we would like to ask him what he thinks about a lightL any way The way to accomplish any thing is to keep pegging away. The human heart isn't any bigger than your first but it pumps nearly eight tons of blood every day The bugs have eaten seventeen crops of leaves off the box elder ttebs, but the eighteenth crop is coring out. A Kansas paper quotes every dollar in a man's pocket as saying to him; "If you will let me stay in this town I'll oiroulate around and do lots of good. You buy a big beefsteak with me and the butcher will buy groceries, and the grocer will buy dry goods and the dry goods merchant will pay bis doctor bill with me, and the doctor will spend me with the farmer for oats for his horse, and the farmer will pay his subscription and the editor will pay for his last summer trousers and buy a pair of socks.

In the long run, you see, I'll be more useful to you here at home than if you send me away forever." There is an oil in the market which readily sells for $640 a gallon or $5.50 for an ounce bottle at wholesale. It is a "terpeneless" oil made of oranges. An. other oil, worth $60 a gallon, and the best lubricant known, is taken from blaokfish whioh abound in Jamaica bay. Only a minute quantity is taken from each fish, and it is found in the under jaw at the base of the skull, being known to the trade as "head oil." It is used almost exclusively for lubrioating watches and owes its peouliar value to the fact that it is never effected in the degree by changes of atmosphere.

It is also very lasting, one application in five years being enough to keep a watch running smoothly, The state of Indiana has an anti-cigarette law that is surely a blow to the oigarette habit among boys in that state. The bill provides that any person under the age of eighteen years or any minor pupil of any sohool, university or college, who shall be guilty of smoking cigarettes on a road, street, alley or any public place, shall be fined not more than $10. It also provides that any person who shall furnish cigarettes to any minor or permit suoh person to frequent his premises for the purpose of smoking cigarettes, Bhall be fined $50 for the first offenoe, $100 for the second or any offence following, and shall be imprisoned thirty days in jail on third offense. The bill further provides that any person selling or giving away any cigarettes containing adulterated tobaooo and deleterious substances shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and fined $100, Smith, Frank; Smith Spoon, Laura; Stewait, Fred; Stephenson, E. Smith, S.

Sphoon Beatty, Mary; Tallman Hughes, Delia; Thompson Her-ron, Edna; Vining Nutting, Effle; VanWormer Hart, Mercy; Witham Padgett, Cora; Wilson, Walter; Winters, Bert; Woods; Bessie; V. hite, Cass; Zeiger, Lena. class of 1891 Eddie Brown, Mattie Bradley Braden, John Stroup, Delilah Andrews Hall, 3attie Arend Presmer, F. P. Austin, Fred Blauer; Topsy Campbell Wilson, Thomas Corporan, A.

M. Crippin, Eose Corn well Bliss, Maude Farnsworth Butler, Fred Foster, Lillie Freeman, Bertha Gray Babcock, Jennie Hackerott Bine-hart, Lillian Hill Stanley, Bell Hocken-hull, Gertrude Mackley, Pearl Moore Gardner, Carl Moore, G. E. Moore, Isaao Padgett, Flora Bioe Annis, E. L.

Schooler, C. L. Schooler, Satie Taylor St. John, Lizzie White Wineland, May Yoxall. CLASS OF 1892 F.

E. Lindley, Lily Williams Talman, W. F. Bell, Moses Coop, Simeon Grubb, Maggie Huey Sollner, Maggie Hershey Storer, E. H.

Heit, Alma L. Ise, Mattie Matchett, Lenora Motherhead Christmas, Lily Murphy Totten, J. E. North-way, Walter Tallman, Nellie Winslow, W. L.

Zimmerman. CLASS OF 1893 John Fay, Mary Dutton, Anna Beach Bigby, Etta Coop Sellers, Clara.Courter Mary Davis St Lewis T. Dutton, Will Earl, Orville Earl, A. Grantham Lud Foster, Cora Harvey Murphy, Chas. Harding, Cardell Hensley Doo-little, Orian Heskit, Maude Kirkam Paxton, E.

Lindley, Sam Magaw, Fannie Peach, Carrie Hahn Rouse, Guy Whitson, Mary Dutton, Mary Stroup Singleton, Eeotor Mowery, CLASS OF 1894 Ella Botkin McGuire, Delia Cram Boyd, Bertha Cram Allen, Linda Anderson, Edmund Bliss, Walter J. Clark, Leah Clark Magaw, Edith Cronk Jewell, Dallas D. Dillon, Belle Dixon, Elizabeth Doane Prather, D. Walter Doane, Eobert Eastman, Ella Galer Beisner, Bertha Garman Bibbs, Lala Garman, Henrietta Gray, Inez Haviland Eddie Hamacher, Grace Hammond Sohultze, Minnie Hopes Zimmerman, John F. Howard, W.

H. Howell, Bertha Johnson Worden, Viola Kirkendall, Anna Kirkpatrick Saunders, Stella Lane Crippin, Anna Leach Eosegrant, Boy A. MoMillan, John McDaneld, William MoDaneFd, Chas. A. Oliva, Effie Powers Lochard, Edward Powers, Flora Peach Guttery, Chas.

Peach, Fannie Romans, Fannie Boyce Parsons, Vern Eodgers, May C. Smith Garrett, Blanche Smith Joy, John Shoemaker, Lee Shelp, Eva Continued to page 0..

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À propos de la collection Osborne County News

Pages disponibles:
15 042
Années disponibles:
1883-1920