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The Dodger from Belvue, Kansas • 1

The Dodger du lieu suivant : Belvue, Kansas • 1

Publication:
The Dodgeri
Lieu:
Belvue, Kansas
Date de parution:
Page:
1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

BELIE BO Volume I. BELVUE, POTTOWATOMIE CO. KANSAS, TUESDAY JULY 2, 1889. Number 27 THE RAILROADS. LOCAL MATTER.

THE Diamond dyes for sale at Watt's. Died On Monday evening 24th inst infant daughter of John Kramer. The Dodger joins the community in sympathy for the bereaved parents. During ihe past month there has been shipped from this place two car loads of walnut logs; thirty-one car loads of corn; five of cattle and three of hogs. TIM TAILS VMON PACIFIC HAILHOAD.

KA8T. Time. Passenger I 3.31 a. ni I Daily. Paaeuuer 0.12 a.

in 1 Daily except Sunlay Freight I7.U0 a. in Daily except Suuday No. 204 2)G 216 215 I 5 33 p. 2'5 Paafeugef I 8.15 p. in 20! Pnssenuerl 12.50 a.

in WKST, Daily exceptSunday Daily exoept Sunday iauy. Ticket office will be open 2 minutes before trains leave- Chas, T. Mann, Anout. C1WRC11 DIREC TOR K. CHURCH Anderson Avenue, be-tweeu Fifth ami Sixth street.

Services on alternate Sunday at 11 o'clock, llev. C. Higgle, pastor. M. V.

CHURCH Anderson Avenue and Second street. Services every other Sunday at 11 o'clock. 1'ev. L. C.

Oiiyette. pastor. HOTELS-BEL VUE. BELVUE HOUSE. Sample rooms, Livery accommodations.

B. F. Everett, proprietor. MEAT MARKET-BELVUE. ELVUE MEAT Market.

Fresh meats. Good cuts. Down weights. Cash paid for hides." F. F.

Fish, Proprietor. PR OFESSIONA L- BEL VUE. "ITvR WATT. Calls answered promptly, JL day and night. niO TOORA PHY ST.

MARYS. PAUrOT, Artistic Photographer, St. Kansas. AH work strictly First Clasu. Enlarging in crayon, past'ei.

India ink, water cplors. etc- AH work'guar-anteed satisfactory in all cases. REAL EST A TE-BEL VUE. EAL ESTATE. Choice Lots, Location -eligible.

Addres the Dodger, Belvue, Kansas. MISCELLANEOUS. TO FflRfi I shall thresh at the following prices, hands furnished, viz: 3 rents per bushel foi; oats and 5 cents foi Entire satisfaction Joel M. Oldham. CARRIAGES.

tr will give away a fine. Bah Carriage on JULY 4th. Send names of your friend need' in BaUy Carriage and receive free a number entitling you to a chance for this fine carriage. M'e manufacture to sell to and Deliver Free at catalogue Send 2c. stavi) for NewSp-page Catalogue, Address, Poiroiro Pn 1:125 Mat''1 st- LU.UQllldpUU., Kas AND Ss CATALOGUE CREAMERY PACKAGE MANF'G CO.

E. R. Kimball, Mgr. KANSAS CITYJWO. Abbott Buggy Co.

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. THE STEEL GEAR BUGGY. SUILDERS OF 100 DIFFERENT STYLES OF VEHICLES. LARGEST ASSORTMENT IN THE WORLD. for Catalogue tad learn nearest Ajjss ERS nPFMFR SUPPLIES PracalllBidestrnctible.

Weather very warm. Advertise In the Dodger. Lunch goods, fresh rhubarb at Watt. Frank Hooper has a fine new carriage. Where are you going to spend the Fourth Mrs.

Cobine visited friends in Ross-ville last week. Get your spectacles accurately fitted at Dr. Watt's. J. S.

Peddicord shipped a cai load of hogs Saturday. Mr. Harvey Shoemaker was in town Thursday night. II. D.

Huston has Millet Seed for sale at 50 cents per bushel. Subscribers are wanted to read the Dodgek advertisement. P. J. Monaghan, of Topeka, spent Sunday with his parents.

Hand made bushel baskets can be bought at J. S. Watt's store. Henry Hegner, at St. Marys, Keeps a full line of general merchandise.

Mr. Crossley from the flooded section of Southeastern Kansas is in town. I Tower Brothers shipped a car load of me hogs to Kansas City last week. Miss. Mary Monaghan has a lady friend from Topeka visiting with her.

George Potter intends to spend his Fourth at his home in Oketo, Kansas. Mrs. Jennie Benders and Mrs. Finnty spent Thursday at Mr. J.

E. Barrons. Persons having pigs to sell will do well to cull at the office of the Dodger. Mrs. Collins and daughter, Allie, are spending a week visiting friends in To peka.

Mr. and Mrs. A. Worthing from Ft. Scott, have eome home to spend the Fourth.

Abe Giltner and wife, and daughter Kate spent last Tuesday in Belvue visit ing relatives. Tventy-two new subscribers were added to the Dodger list during the month of Mrs H. E. Shortt and son, Cliff, started for "Illinois last Wednesday to visit a few weeks. The glorious Fourth will be celebrated Thursday.

WTe wish our readers a grand gala day. A festival was held last Saturday evening in the rink under the auspices of the M. P. church. Protect your homes against summer diseases by using disenfectants.

You can pi ocure them at Watt's. Walter Crabtree while on his way to Russell county, last month found his horse which he lost from here last October. All persons knowing themselves to be indebted to me are requested to make immediate settlement, by cash or bankable note. J. S.

Watt, M. D. -v- DODGER INVITES YOU TO Read this Column And become acquainted with its contents. THE -IS A BRIGHT- 1SIPII1CIY rJIEHEIKILlY INEWSPAPERI That should be in the HANDS of everyone. It is patriotically devoted to you interests.

And it Gosts but SEND IN YOUR SUBSCRIPTION, ONE YEAR cents SIX MON THS .25 cents vJor'Jr i i i i CALL ON OR ADDRESS BELVUE, KANSAS, ((T)THe Belvae Doaor.Q) Many farmers in this vicinity hare finished harvesting their wheat and have commenced threshing. II. E. Shortfc has threshed all the wheat on the Martzloff farm. Watt carries a large stock of garden seeds.

Should farmers fail to find any variety they want in stock, they can have anything they want by leaving orders. Louisville, according to tho Indicator is about to enter an era of prosperity. The county surrounding her has a beautiful harvest her citizens are interested in her welfare, her merchants advertise and finally, she is making an effort to become thecapital of our prosperous county. BEL VUE MARKET. Wheat, No.

2. ...........85 cents Oats 17 cents Corn, No. 2 shelled 1920 cents Butter ..1215 cents Eggs 6 cents raham, Ver sack v. v. t.

cents Corn Meal, per sack 20 cent It Makes One Hungry. Usually that means looking at a table covered with elegant "appointments for delutition," as Carlyle would sayj in this case we walked out a little wav from tbo house and behfeld an ellipse of little boards, supported by stakes; on each board was nailed, religiously nailed tho cooks not even let jou mention tacks, brads, or any othex form of fastening, but nails was nailed a fat Potomac River shad. Down through the ellipse roared and smoked a fierce tiro of logs, and a man armed with a pail of butter and some ort of a flap-dasher in his hand, be-dewed the fr zzl ng shad until thev browned down to the mystic point where browning ceased and yet burning could not bo allowed to begin. This is a point harder to understand man any omoi iei oi urowmng, the cooks say. The plank will not re- veal tho slato of the other side of the shad, and yet that side must be cooked thoroughly.

It is harder to read than anything Browning has yet written -yet the wise cook knoweth sshad and ees whon it is proper to take it from the fire wiih unertiug Instinct. And the result is shad, firm and hard from his salt-water life, mitigated slightly by his brief stay in the fresh water oi ihe river, anil then exalted, sanctified by the fire whose treatment he could only sustain from the strength and flavor wh ich au oak back has givei Mm the plank to which he is fastened 'he piece you can get on your plati makes you certain that "wills of oak" wre necessary to a peace-loving natioi 1 ke ours necessary, to the shad at least Washington Cor. of the Iudr 4'.

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À propos de la collection The Dodger

Pages disponibles:
109
Années disponibles:
1889-1889