Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
The Prolocutor from Garden City, Kansas • 2

The Prolocutor from Garden City, Kansas • 2

Publication:
The Prolocutori
Location:
Garden City, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

rof essiona Dr. P. Rowe OPENED US iSEli FOUR SCORE 'HIE' dent In 1892. In 1894-he was made governor of New York. Since his' retirement from the governorship in 1896 Mr.

Morton devoted himself' to the direction of his iarge financial interest and extensive travels While in this cotmrfy and Surgeon Special attention to country calls. House Where Keats and Shelley Levi P. Morton Dsm of Living Ex-Vics-Presidsnts. BpenOs most of his time in New Tork Lived in Rome. I 1 Orn.2;i Garden Citv, Kas.

or Washington. SAWBUCK FOR "SAWING POLES Has Just Celebrated Eighty-Fifth Birth-cay, and Is Still Hale and Hearty Acs'jmaJzted Fortune in Banking Business. Direction for Making One That Re-. quires Little, Moving Whil Cutting the Leg. A for sawing small loss and poles is easy of construction and is a handy contrivance on almost any It made of three pair of two-by-four pieces crossed and spiked together.

These are turned bottom side OFFICE ROOMS 3 AfcP 4 HOLCOMB VLtG. OFI ICF. fi7 Kts. 24 DR T. F.

BLANKE, HOMEOPATH KES- ST. JOHN AND SPENCER SJ-KtETS GARDE CITY KANS. Dr. 'Ronald M. Troup Phvsician Surgeon Oculist.

Classes preecrilwd. City or country calls answered promptly Huff Jo Annex. Phone 3d87. COMTIN JED FROM PAGE 1. imposing city like Garden Citv, was within walking distance.

We prefer to be at headquarters -where the men that own Deer-rield maintain their beautiful residences amid the lofty trees and shaded drives. The PROLOCUTOR has now -tarreu with its own printing plant in its'ow building and we hav a dt-ed the land it sits on. 1 Besides, the whole transaction rs iEJAL so with all, the PR 3LGCUTOI is in much better shn'pe than i in Syracuse, here it wa-started with a capital stock FIFTEEN CENTS r.nd hired it printing done by the week. are iOo percent beiter 0:1 tha we were in Deer led here were compelled t) exorbitai rent for two very rno Now. we are our i boss and own landlord, bosi U-s now edit the lihCOCU' without being diet other words we are by any power or ere sons are at liberty use umns of the Prol tznt-n ress their politic must be strictly anyone who atte his personal polit be suddenly remind living under capita Kansas.

Garden City, Flowers and Vines Make Enchanting BoUer of Little Gallery Where One Can Fancy Two Famous 'j Pcets Chatted Together. I Early in April, in the presence 6t King Victor Kmmanue) of Italy. the Keats-Shelley memorial house! in Rome was opened and con-secraded as? a museum in memory of the tWo English poets who were friend. Henceforth this bouse, situated op the right hand side of the old Spanish 6tafra. in tba Piazza di Spag-ca, will be a new resort for tourists and loves of these poets when In the Eternal city.

Tha bcuse'i has been bought by English and merican lovers of poey. it cost 60,000. It is a modest house, which jin Keats' and Shelley's day was a pension, or boarding house There is a quiet seriousness about ttie pijeraisea. as if the shadow still lingered' where young Keats breathed his last sigh. In the little entrance hang 4ome engravings, which give one idea of the Piazza di Spagna before the Spanish- stairs were built and al'ter their construrrion.

The -house Sbaa been renovated. The een-t'ral room has been transformed into a reading Around the walls run the book shelves made of: dark walnut, the floor is. covered by thick Turkish ruga ir Moses Ezekiers bust-ojf Shelley holds place (In this room. as well as that made of Shelley by Severn. It is rather I hard to put oneself in' touch with tife two poetic spirits who lived in this house, amid the babble of the Kew.Yoru.

Stiii fresh and vigorous ic nd sound in Dody, Levi P. jlorton, the oldest liviEg rice prtsi-ct-ut of the Suited States, recently celebrated bis eigsty tilth kinhuuy anniversary lies. Icb ilr Norton there are now liv.ng ou.y three other Dien wno have held the position of rice-president ot the United States diai cl. Stevenson, Iheooore Rouse volt and Claries VV Fairbanks Not oniy is ilr. Morton by tar the oidast anions au surviving collogues, but.

with one ticepticu. he has already attained a greater age than any other tornar nce-presicnt The only exception vas John Adanid, the first vice-president ot the United States, who died in 1826 at the ige 90 years hiie Mi Stevenson has reached the uge of 74, the other two surviving colleagues ot Mr Morton are stiLI com mrativejy young nen. Mr. being 51. Mr Fairbanks years O' his predecessors wno have joined the silent army uniy John Adams lived to be older Air Morton is now Thomas e.lersou died at the age ot 11, Han-Jibai Hatmin at the age ot 81 and atron Burr at the age of 80 Thj atter holds the record in one respect, 'among the deceased lonuer i'ice-pi esidents; he survived the end his term of oLlce by 31 years, a onger period than shows the record i any other ol the deceased tornier Oiders of that ofrice Mr.

Morion will to live until he is 1U0 years old surjiss Burr's record Levi Morton is Engiander, md the descendant of a laiiiy of clergymen. Kis family was founded ia Dr. F. Hamer i ci a rge Deutschcr Office: Room i and 2 Holcomb Building-, Garden City, Kansas. Phones, ffice tKes.

41 ,2. A Handy Sawbuck. up and two eight-inch stout boards are nailed in the crotch just as one would cialre a Leg trough. Put the crossed pieces far enough apart so that at one end you caa saw cord wood and place the third far enough away to saw two cuts between. In this way you can saw seven or eight times before moving the leg, either with a bucksaw or cro6s-cut lor two men.

HOW R0A3 LEVELER IS MADE i Hnnt is I HLijJ is plank two by ten inches, six feet long. are two by fours two or three feet long in E. DENTIST. Over Renick Bros. Drug Store, Garden Kansas, Special The Mail and Breeze Weekly Horn; Library Household Ma iy Tot All for In this special club .25 Hop kins Hopkins VV.

II. Hopkins R.J.Hopkins Attorneys at law Practice in all courts. Examination of land titles. Office telephone 12. Rer.

Nol.1 Main and Laurel streets. Road Loveler. Is strip of Iron to which rods and a ring are attached with loop bolts. When using stand on T. The Butt Dental G- Citj Kansas.

WILL TEST THE HOG SERUM. mm DRASTIC TREATMENT OF BORF For Once the Man with the Everlasting "That Reminds Me" Got His Deserts. W. C. Pearce Attorney at Law y-; Room 5 Holcomd Building-, GARDEN CITY, KANSAS.

RRTOCkS, lawyer. Practices in all Courts. 23 "y'e'ars resident in Finney Co. R.C. Stocks Abstracts, Insurance.

Maryland Live Stock Sanitary Board to Investigate Process Said to Immunize Svine. The Maryland' Live Stock Sanitary board proposes to test the serum recommended by national government which is said to immunize hojjs against the aholera and which, if as effective as is claimed, will save the farmers of Maryland millions of dollars, says the Baltimore American. The serum is produced by the United States department of agriculture and has been tried by its officers with splendid results in other portions of the country. This has led Dr. Mackie, the state veterinarian, to believe that -it might prove successful in Maryland, and he has arranged to beJn the inoculation oti a farm "Of all the men who should be forbidden to mix in a general conversation," remarked- the Kicker, are few so bad as the 'that reminds me' man.

"I know one of his ilk. ISTo sooner do I start to tell that chap a story than something I say gives him the 'that reminds me' cue. From that Levi P. Morton. point I-am nothing but an obstacle a delay a red lirht in the path of some story he wants to toll me.

So his eve begins to wander and his fingers to drum impatiently. When I reach tho end of my story. J0SE5III KA'GL 2i GAPy'iiG FCR THE INCUBATOH. VETERINARY PHYSICIAN AND Needs Constant Attention as Temperature Drope3 or Rises; Eggs Also Need Turning, and Wick Trimming. Keats-Shelley Memorial House In Rome.

v- tourists, and the questions with which they ply the; civil Italian gentleman who acts as. curator. I am cfuite sure he muit be almost distracted after his morning's work, for the house only open every day to the publie from ten o'clock until one p. m. One of the little rooms leads out the dearest little terrazionoo, which in these lovely spring days is a display of beautiful flowers and creeping vines.

Here one can easily fancy Keats and Shelley resting and chatting together. In another room book shelves hold 200 editions 'of Keats' and works. Most of these being cent editions, have littje. value except as evidence of the continuing fame if the poets but is not that worth while to show in this way? By far the ijnost interesting room is the little bedchamber tn whieh Keats died, with its two windows, one of whieh looks out over the Piazza di Spagna and the other on the picturesque stairs leading up to the Church Sella Trinita de Monte. From that window one gaze down on the loveliest flower market in the world all the year round, and watch the ever-passing throng goingi "up and down the Spanish steps.

Many of the artists' models group themselves about, or drop off for their open air siestas In the i most natural of poses. In this small bedroom Keats died in the arms of bis faithful friend, Severn. The celling and the little fireplace have been left just as when Keats lived in ihe room." In this little sanctuary is the death mask of Keats, and a small lock of his chestnut-brown nair In a seated vase is a little which Trelawney kept from the heart "cer when the flames reduced all that was once Percy Bysshe Fifteen years; experience Expert training of track horses. Garden City, Kans. tory 'little "ha, and instantly launches into his own story.

"But once I caught' that chap, red-handed. At the very one of my stories, saw the hated 'that reminds me' look come into his eye. Of. C. R.

PHYMiAN and SURGEON! merica by Rev George Morton, one the conspicuous members of the colony of England. He was financial agont of the Pilprriras and lispcl ar.d conserved the funds which out the expedition on the although lie was not on the initial voyTgo Me ar-ived in America- in 1623 Levi P. have inherited his tast'i oi finance Irom chat treasurer of he Pilgrim band at the ago ot. 16 years he no hope oi residing ambi- on' to go to Dirtviouth college, Levi Morton entered, a rtore' at' Kfilie.ld. where he -worked anil he has enough money to start a st establishment of his own, at lErover, in 1X19.

at the age he crime Boston and became a artaor in a ymai! dry goods hous-i years later he went to New York, he joined a dry goods ttrra he ailed a few years before the civil war. rat immediately started a banking iiiRiness, appreciating that the rebel- on wouid a great demand for nnr.clers to handle the government nans. Mr. Morton founded the banSt-itg of J.rfii-ton, IMss Co. in v'ew York, and Morton, Rose Co.

London, and dealt largely in government bonds. Just before the close of the war. w-hen he had accumulated i fortune. Mr. Morton gave a dinner the creditors of his former dry inods firm.

Lvery one found under plate a check lor the amount still owing him with interest Mr. Morton's first essay in politics was In 1S7S. when he was elected to congress froi a New York district. He might have been president if his 'oyalty to the wishes of Senator Ros-coe Conkiing had not made him re-mse the nomination for vice-president on the ticket headed by A. LJarfleld in 1880.

President Carfieid made him minister to France in 1881, and Mr. Morton ryade a 'fine record. -Me was elected resident In 18S3 the ticket with President Harrison. vjtlLiJie nrel- 'der. Iy friend, the raconteur, was not listening.

That was evident. "So I stopped my story abruptly, right in the middle of sentence, miles from the point, and looked him expectantly." "Er ha, ha! mighty good!" he said, jerked back to earth. "Say," that is a beaut, isn't it. It reminds me of But then there I up and leaned forward and lit into that chap and smote him, figuratively, hip and thigh, with such a tongue-lashing that I'll bet his 'that reminds me' nerve won't recova for many a moon. This is not like dish washing, a job can be passed from one member of the family to another, as convenience dictates.

To" secure the best results, it is better, if possible, that one person tak-e the entirn. charge of says the Farm Journal. Those who think it can be run lik.i a simply wound and then never thought of until the next time for winding, will find out their error in an expensive manner. While the improved machines require comparative, ly little attention, yet a certain amount is. and this must be given in an intelligent manner.

It does not take many days for tho attendant to be to approximate just about what the machine is doing and needs at a certain time in the day. If the weather is warm and it is influenced either by a stove or tho sun, the lamp may need lowering a littlo during this period. Or if the temperature drops, a corresponding increase of artificial heat will be required. These become intuitive services to the one who has observed tho changes from day to day; yet to another member of the. family, even though instructed on the point, they many be the means of a "bungle." Turning and airing the eggs, too, should be done in a regular way.

Tho trimming of the wick' 5ghtly dirterent may destroy the equilibrium of temperature. Finally, it is not so much skill as reliability which counts. To the one accustomed to its care, duty calls "at regular intervals; others may forget, or remeniboriiig, be over zealous, and "kill with kindness." Dr. E. Smit1 OSTEOPATHIC PHtSICIA NH.W WARDEN BUILDING GARDEN CITY.5 KANSAS Shelley's frame to a handful of clean ashes This little house where the two poets stayed in with them on Rome puts us in touch different lins from in the.

beautiful littis their graves English cemetd ry, under the shadow of the pyramid of Caius Cestius. and Rome. There are sev the walls of old 1 ICE. We have just recti ed a large- 'assignment of and out of the ty Seventh Edition. More tl a million copies of MEN an ULES sold in five months.

11 i W. F. Ri es as covered a large portion of the econom Piling SSards You can play all the old card eames with them at light. But the Kincs are tho Trusts, the Queens the Capitalist Virtues, while the Jacks are Professor, Policeman, Soldier and Judge. Two-spots to ten-spots are worlringmen and workinfij-women, from the Chicago school-teacher down to the Bryan Man.

A bright versfc by Mary E. Marcy on every card; thl picture cards devgtiedby R. H.Chaplif. Fifty cents a dtc! post-paid; three decks for a dollar. ial terms to agents.

Ghzrlos Mm Kopf Gompany 1S3 East Kinxio Chicago eral autograph letters of Keats and Shelley carefully treasured in the little museum, as well as their songs set to music. It ia pleasant to feel that these poetic friends such lovers of Italy lived anil enjoyed all Italy had to offer them In the fulness of her. wondrous beuuty, art and history, and when life's fitful fever ended for them, they rest in her loving bosom. ic netd in a comprehensive, terse, and I-igical manner. Rea it now.

Order today. Supplied by, the PROLOCUTOR Office at iocts. 1, i I.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Prolocutor Archive

Pages Available:
343
Years Available:
1909-1911