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Savonburg Progress from Savonburg, Kansas • 4

Savonburg Progress from Savonburg, Kansas • 4

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

G. C. Legislature candidates are expected to BARBER, President. R. B.

McCDTCHAN, Cashier. W. B. CLARKSOX Ass't. Cashier.

Savonburg Progress. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BY make this sort of a canvass, but to de are Bank of Savonburg, H.B.MORRISON. Subscription, per year $1.00. Savonburg Knsas. Topeka politicians are drifting about on the sea of uncertainty while Helmsman Humphrey gives them no chance to even glance at the political compass to see which way the land lies.

K. C. Times J. liberately gather about one man, and that one man the Governor of the State, and in person or by proxy, din their demands into his ear, is an outrage upon decency and a reflection upon the good sence and integrity of the chief executive. It so struck the Governor, who so suddenly appeared among them in his hotel last night, and it is recorded to his credit that he rebuked them and notified them that he was the Governor of Kansas and would appoint the Senator without any outside influence and regardless of any plans that may have been mapped out for him.

K. C. Star. at A General Banking Business Transacted. We solicit accounts, large or small, from merchants, individuals and others.

Interest allowed on Time Deposits. Exchange on Kansas City and New York. The twenty-ninteth annual session of the Kansas State Teachers' Association convened in Topeka on Tuesday and was to last three days. An unusually good program was prepared and an interesting and profitable session was anticipated. A bank has been opened up in Chicago by members of the W.

C. T. If a man has a corn, says the India Rubber World, it can be removed, but Olson Swanson, if he is suffering from rubber foot fever, no chiropodist can help him, and the only thing to prescribe is liberal -Dealers in- with a capital -of. 8250,000. None but women will be employed.

They will Nm $3.50 bathing of the feet and removal of the cause. Rubbers should only be worn nd accept deposits from men and loan their money to men. The chances are that to keep wet out, ana tney should be removed the moment the wearer gets in Groceries Provisions. borrowers will be more numerous than depositors. doorse.

Failure to note this gives a man wet feet in a far worse sense than if he Wc carry a very fine line of all kinds on canned goods, dried fruits, and in fact everything usually kept in a first-class Grocery Store. had waded through mud ankle deep. It was the trouble resulting from forcing the perspiration to soak the stockings and keep the feet perpetually damp that drove rubber-soled boots out ofthe The average Kansan ought to be as happy as the "little nig from The grain crops are moving at good prices and the political crops are beginning to sprout in the livelyest manner. With good grain and politics nothing is wanting to complete the sunflower joy. ---Kansas City Times.

marKet. hven loose rubbers are a source of danger and the cause of many more serious colds than they avert. We carry a very fine line of Preston B. Plumb, whose death is now recognized as a public loss, entered the Etc. Queensware United States senate only fourteen years The reduction of the farm indebtedness in fifty-live counties in Kansas in the month of November is one-half million dollars.

The net reduction in fifty-seven counties in six and one-half months was $2,778,594. The gross reduction was about eleven million dollars; This is a pretty good showing. ago, obscure, with little apparent training for his duties, without anybody to care or to know what he had done or to Highest price paid for country produce. prophesy what he might be capable of doing. With little training of the i I- A' schools, formerly deemed essential to a public career, without leisure for study except as he made it in the hard struggle for life, Preston B.

Plumb is one the most conspicuous instances of the triumph of character. Here was a man The Lawrence Journal suggests this as a winning ticket next year: For governor, Farmer Smith, of McPherson; for lieutenant Capt. John for auditor, Capt. Ed. R.

Smith, Mound City; for secretary of state, Smith, Bourbon; for treasurer, W. H. Smith, at large; attorney general, C. W. Smith, of Rooks; for associate justice, Blood Smith, of Topeka; for superintendent, Geo.

W. Jones sturdy, rugged, honest, capable of mar velous industry, kind and humane, who simply made a place for himself among the great senators of the United States r1 CQ' 0 by the use of strong common sense and l. 01 CD 05' in I 1 Ul Ul CD -i CD Ul of Mound There is only fault to be found with this ticket which is that the famous Brown family was' en by the exercise of that industry with which he was so well endowed. His career is a signal tribute to our American institutions, and illustrates quite as well as any the possibilities of the American boy. New York Press.

tirely ignored. The Kansas City Times of the 20th, ore? Yesterday the long negotiations were concluded and the strip belongs to the people of the United States and no other nation, pretty tribe or aggrega 'I tion of private individuals retains the least color of right to interfere withset- tlement. Nearly 7,009,000 acres two thirds immediately available for agri HARRY BRAGG, culture, are to be opened to settlers at $1.25 per acre. A large population will -DEALEU IN- 4 inware, Builders arawaie, Stoves This space belongs to F. E.

Kinne, dealers in Drugs, Patent Medicines, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Wall Paper, etc. etc. pour in and the effect upon business in the southwest' will be great. The privilege of cheap homes and rapid accumulations of competence will be offered to the The tempting opportunities of fortune in new towns will come to the-beld and enterprising. Opening the Cherokee strip will be a more effectual breaking up of the barriers to settlement than was the rush to Oklahoma.

Kansas City and all the southwest will rejoice. Kansas has always been famous for original political methods, but the eoun- Hardware, Nails, Locks, Hinges, Barb wire, Cutlery, and a fall line of All Kinds of Farm Impliments. -1-J nry was hardly prepared for the dis- graceful scramble which the death of Senator Plumb has caused It is not only an unheard of proceedings, but it is scandalous for men to establish head quarters at a state capital and deliber We also carry, in connection with our hardware store, a large stock of Furniture Undertakers, GOODS, ately lay siege and make a canvass for first- an office depending upon the Govern- H. G. CKAVE3STS Is local agent for the American, Davis and other leading Sewing Machines.

Money saved by calling on him. Savonburg, Kansas. or's appointment. But this is what if number of the aspirants for the Kansas Li i 1 A ovu-awiauiy nave uuue, auu w.tuugt) say some newspapers in the state look upon it as the proper thing to do. In an ordinary senatorial election by a We buy direct and we buy in quanta Our stock of Furniture is complet in every detail.

ties. Hy singer Rosenthal..

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About Savonburg Progress Archive

Pages Available:
454
Years Available:
1891-1892