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The Atchison Daily Globe from Atchison, Kansas • 9

The Atchison Daily Globe from Atchison, Kansas • 9

Location:
Atchison, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

fHE ATCHISON DAILY GLOBE, SATURDAY, JULY 10, 1915. HARLEY-DAVIDSON MADE NEW WORLD'S RECORD. For coal, phone it, C. A. Chandler.

Robert Brown has gone to work at the Logeman meat market. A college student wrote that she recently rode In a "Catylack." This sticky weather will not seem so sticky If you patronize John Kaff'a soda fountuin. Don't fall to get one of Kean ft Tucker's Florida melons, Ask your grocer or butcher. M. Martin, stationary engineer at the Central Branch shops, has a lame back and isn't working.

When Otto Walker finished first at Dodge City. Average speed 76.56 miles an hour, breaking previous record by nine miles an hour. Every Harley Entered Finished the 300 Mile Run. Ed Clark, yardmaster, Is quite sick, About 25 per cent of the paper mills In this country are Idle. Mis Helen Reeves has become organist In the Baptist church.

Petroleum coke, the Ideal fuel, for summer, fall, winter and spring. Barry Coal Co. Fine gingham dresses for children, 48 cents; 2 to 6 years, worth 75 cents, tonight Lake's department store. The men's gospel team of the Methodist church will conduct services in the Iatan Methodist church tomorrow. Vudor porch shades and a nice line of porch furniture at the right kind of prices at Shifflett's, opposite Ger I 1 1 111 111! II TQC nil ill hi "I 1' mil I I ka Robinson voted 73 for electric light bonds and only three against.

Robinson, It seems, Is one progressive town. Hekelnkaemper Their summer drinks will so refresh and Invigorate you that you'll forget all about the MONEY QUESTION IP ll'S A LOAN, WJ; COUNT OH AN iNi rESIMENI. THE NAT; VVJL PLACE TO CO fOR GUIDANCE IS roun vankehs JET THIS HANK HE YOUR HANK ITAHT YOUR. tttA NESS OR PRIVATE ACCOUNT TOVAt. "CC0UNT heat At last the Leavenworth Western branch Is open.

It had been out of commission nearly three on I 3 ffi account of floods. man-American bank. The T. M. C.

A. will have open house for intermediate and senior members this evening. T. A. punch will be "on tap." Chas.

Henderson, of Effingham, was In Atchison this morning on his way to St. Joe and Maryville, Mo. He will visit his son at Maryville. C. J.

Conlon began smoking again today, after having abstained for six months. "My doctor advised me to begin again," he said. Probably Dr. George Frame has resigned his position in St. Joe for the Postal Five machines of the same make among the winners.

Harry Crandall, Harley-Davidson, second; Carl Goudy, Excelsior, third; Joe Wolters, Harley-Davidson, fourth; Red Parkhurst, Harley-Davidson, fifth; Alva Stratton, Harley-Davidson, sixth; Ralph Cooper, Harley-Davidson, seventh. STAUFFER KNIGHT, Distributors. 721 Kansas Avenue. The Santa Fe is the only line to both California Expositions, at San Diego and San Francisco. Ton ean the ner East and the far Wat St th.

great world'! fairs. Go this year and set acquainted with California. Th. Panama-Pacific Exposition at San Francisco Is an exposition of progress the Panama-California Exposition of San Diego is one of processes shows Just how things are done. Santa Fe exposition tickets offer you a free Telegraph company.

He probably will become a farmer. Mrs. S. L. Gregory, one of the county teachers taking manual training work at the high school, is making an unusually fine cedar chest.

Some $1.60 tool grlnuers on special sale for 99 cents, while they last. Every housewife, mechunlc and farmer should have one. Klostermeier's Around us this time of year the wind storms and cyclones have caused great damage and loss. Storm insurance is cheap. See or telephone Jos.

M. McCrum. EXPERT KODAK FINISHING. Three weekly prizes for the beat. Leave or mall us your mi JgSjpa aide ride to Pueblo, Colorado Springs and Den-" .1 ver in the Rocky Mountain playground.

Gundy. Try a can of Sunflower baking powder, price 25 cents per pound. We can't make all the baking powder sold, so we make the best of It. The Dolan Mercantile company. Speaking of keen vision, Paul Tons-lng recently testified In court that he knew the contents of a gunny sack, which a colored man was carrying on his back was beer, because he could see the foam on the beer In the bottles in the sack.

I rJ Vnn en also visit Grand Cnvnn of Arl- A I HARNESS Remember our 24 hour service. Byrne's Pharmacy. S. A. Stauffer saw seven cars stuck In the mud in one day during his trip I Specialize on high quality to Dodge City.

Stauffer used to live 31 zona, earth's seenle masterpiece Santa Fe, oldest city In the U. and Petrified Forest on the war-Near Los Angeles la Universal City, where the movies are made. Copies of Santa Fe travel guides and exposi-I tion folders are waiting for you. Ask me I for 'em. 1 Fred Harvey meals, four daily California trains, comfortable tourist sleepers and harness only.

'at Dodge City, and helped build the totA axpositfett on the Santa, Fe. IVrr i- tT. i iamous motorcycle track. You are invited to call and i Charles Chandler, of the Chandler pass your opinion on their qual- Brokerage waa bruised somewhat lty and workmanship. My yesterday when he fell from a pas prices are as low as reliable har- senger train at Hiawatha.

He was ness can be sold. makinS a flying leap to catch the last -n coach. CITY ITEMS. Collection of News Paragraphs and Advertisement. John Levin sells good shoes.

Bathing suits in all the newest tyles, at Klostermeier'a It Is reported that Dick Fenton will tart up a string of jitneys. Perfection oil stoves and ovens. Smokeless and odorless. Arnold furniture store. Miss Dorothy Gaston's class of boys at the English Lutheran church is spending; the day at Sugar lake.

Pat Hayes, who is In a hospital In Kansas City, underwent an operation this morning, and Is doing quite well. People began feeling the heat today, and the flies were very unreasonable about biting through thin silk hose. The board of directors of the Atchison Women's Civic club will W. F. SMITH, M.

D. Physician and Surgeon. Office over Byrne's Drug Store. F. W.

Myers, Gen'l 204 Simpson Atchison, Ks. Tickets on sale at Union Depot. PERSONALS. Mrs. D.

R. Jay and Miss Grace Heald have returned from a visit In Fairview, Neb. Miss Irene Ruse has returned from Osborne. Mrs. Kate Griffin, of Kansas City, is a guest of.

her daughter, Mrs. W. L. Baker, living on South Sixth street Miss Fannie Hanson, who has been visiting Mrs. Bob Rossiter, her daughter, went to Southern Kansas this morning to visit relatives before returning to her home in Lincoln.

aiso carry a une oi uiraseu R. 1 William Cerre, who attempted to Come in and look them over. assault Mrs. Joe Boyle, near Fair-view school house Wednesday, was declared of unsound mind In the pro- Fly nets at bargain prices. xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx First class harness repairing.

bate court thls morning, and will be Vr nafrnnacr. U7i11 9nnr. sent 10 8tat5 asylum. ciated. Xi We are making a specialty of )X AVTO LIVERY SERVICE, Calls Answered Night or Day.

ERICKSON AUTO LIVERY CO. Phone 1260. Ava Martin, age 18, and Harl Tnn no- a o-a 9 1 i NEWS AND COMMENT. Mrs. E.

Latz, of Falls City, is a leaders to acquire a fund of $5,000, 000. As it appears now either Supreme Court Justice Hughes or former United States Senator Root could get the Republican nomination for president, but Hughes won't have it and guest of her son, Abe Latz. ii2 and U4 North Eighth Street 'j at the 'court house fore. noon by Judge Adams. Mr.

and Mrs. nru'et Monday afternoon at the P. E. 1 XXXXXXXXtX3ttXXXXXXXXXXXX rest room. Miss Clara Pettit went to Huron, Cole county, this morning to spend a week with her sister, Mrs.

ne dollar tonight buys children's 0 xfc C. H. Martin, parents of the bride, were present, and gave their consent to the marriage. Monday W. A.

Blair and his broth- H. A. MILLER xfords and strap sandals, worth $1.25 Alice Schooley. Mrs. Leonard Rentschler will re MISSPELLED WORD CONTEST WINNERS turn from Topeka tomorrow where she has been visiting Mrs.

C. C. Young Root says he is too old. Another thing the Allies are buy, ing up all the American canned sal-, mon they can fat for the commissary needs of their armies. Nearly a million cases have been shipped this year.

and $1.35, sizes 6 to 10, tonight only. Lake's department store. C. W. Jackson, who works at the postoffice, today purchased the residence property at 924 North Tenth street from Rube Clark.

for a week. Mrs. J. H. Brownell.

who has been er, Wesley Blair, will go to Kansas City to buy a new automobile. W. The Merchants' picnic committee A- Blair wants a White car; Wesley met last night and completed some Blair wants a Packard Six, and the more arrangements for the big pic- brother of both men, Elwyn Blair, mc. The P. E.

O. ladies, with Mrs. wants them to buy a Haines. R. G.

Bosanko as chairman of a Everett Daniels, living near Bean committee, will have charge of the lake, brought the first load of new ladies' contests and the baby contest, wheat to Atchison yesterday, at least Liberal prizes have been arranged for the firt wheat from the Missouri all the events. The fireworks were bottoms, and this was out hf visiting at the home of T. M. Walker, has returned to her home in Memphis, Tenn. TwTns were born yesterday to Mr.

and Mrs. Plez King, and not to Mr. and Mrs. Cleve King. Plez Is porter Mrs.

Fred Brink and children will The British admiralty's report shows that from the time the submarine blockade was declared on February 18 until June 20, the Germans were able to sink 73 British mirchant ships. In the last week reported, seven ships were torpedoed. The same week, 1,347 overseas steamers of all nationalities arrived at and departed from British ports. Recent repeated bombardments of Rheims have completed the destruction of the cathedral, and practically nothing is left of the building but tho silhouette. The state has collected all tapestries, fragments of statues and windows broken by the bombardments and deposited them in a place of safety.

For the week ending July 2, twenty-one ships left New York, car spend next week at Farmington. Mrs. Stella Swift, of Indianapolis, The following won prizes In the misspelled word contest in last Wednesday's Globe: Firtst, Miss Henrietta Ege; second, Sadie Katz; third, Anna Burns. The following nine words were misspelled: Take, load, guaranteed, delightful, picture, recognize, wiring, rudder and adversity. The page is in tonight and a good many of the advertisements have been changed and some words are misspelled that you may have to call up the advertiser about.

Watch them closely. at Drury's, and wants the credit. W. P. Keimig.

of 1121 North Sec-end street, returned yesterday from Nebraska where he built a house for his son to replace one that was recently burned. and Miss Emma Sawin, of Ottumwa, both sisters of W. H. Sawin, will arrive next Monday to make an ex ordered, and they are said to be more elaborate than Atchison has seen for Beveral years. Three bands, those from Rushville and Effingham and the Atchison band, comprising 76 A Chemist's Discovery.

B. A. Thomas, a retired chemist of Kentucky, like all Kentuckians, kept 1 some fine horses. His neighbors noticed that his horses were slick and shining in the Spring before other horses began to shed. He told them of some powders that he fed his horses.

He gave them some of it and now B. A. Thomas' Stock Remedy la known all over Kentucky by horsemen and farmers, who take pride in horses or cows or sheep. We sell it on the Money Back basis. H.

B. Miller and E. B. Sanders Coal Co. tended stay with Mr.

and Mrs. W. H. Sawin. Mrs.

Alma Barr, of Kansas City, Mrs. Hilton, of Chicago, who met a number of Atchison people when most of the Kansas wheat. He received $1.10 a bushel for his load. Ollie Robinson had his thumb nail torn off while playing catch with Walter Dipple, back of the Wood-houBe-ftein Electrical yesterday afternoon. Dipple has been able to utt his hand only a few days, as he broke it in a ball game some time ago.

Jim Purslow received word yesterday afternoon that his cousin, George and Miss Myrtle Jones, of Maryville, she visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Trace Bolman, died the last are visiting Mrs. Guy Sharp. Week In June In Chicago.

pieces, will play. Four Sunday school teams will play a double headed. Walter Bosanko, Henry Logeman and Harry Sharp are in Kansas City today on picnic business. Joe Bohner, years ago an engineer on the Central Branch, Is near death Mr. and Mrs.

John Ulhling, of Falls When you get your pay tonight at rying 100,000 tons of war supplies to six European nations. Eight ships City, are guests at the home of Mr. HALF MINUTE INTERVIEWS once resolve to start a savings ac and Mrs. Vic Shaeffer, on West Com mercial street. count.

We will pay you three and I were loaded for France, five for Eng land, three for Italy, two for Russia The Seven-Ups, a club or seven two for Greece and one for Holland. Ira Sickler makes a demand: "The in a hospital at Fort Madison, i Philip, of Helpre, was seriously as a result of a third stroke of ni and a few hours later a telegram paralysis. His home is also in Fort came that he was dead. Philip was Madison, and his son, Clarence, for- jn g00d health a day before his ill-merly a fireman on the Omaha di- ne8Bi DUt the cause of the death was vision, cannot be located. Mr.

Boh- not. given. He formerly lived at ner received the third stroke of Hiawatha. There are many indications that money wil play an important role in pavement between Seventh and Ninth streets on Commerical is very rough, Have yon a houre to rent, sen. or exchange, or do you want Ji buy or rent a home? Try tuakiug your wants know with a Globe Cheap Ad.

Northwest Atchison young ladies, will camp at Bean lake next week. C. M. Rlpperger and family will camp next week at Bean lake, and the following week Mr. Ripperger and his son, C.

M. Ripperger, will make several trips in their new auto and hard on my banana wagon." the coming presidential campaign. Party committees are already planning to raise huge sums. Even the Prohibitionists expect to rely upon cash to further their cause, and a W. A.

Dilgert to a man with a Bum a half per cent Interest on your savings account. Exchange State bank. Ed Howard leaves this evening for his eastern trip. At Chicago he will spend a week with Kimball Conant, formerly of Atchison, and the second he will visit several large shoe factories at Milwaukee. A lot of farmers are trying to work In both their wheat and corn fields today, and not many farmers are in town, and those who are here have been so busy they haven't paid any attention to their neighbors and do not know any news.

palsy Wednesday night. For many years, since leaving Atchison, he THREE LINES. 1URFE TIMES, 15 Cents. Stomach: "What you need is a year on the farm. You don't get up early 1 mobile.

Both are -employed at the was engineer of a Santa Fe flyer be txxxxj movement has been started by their Bailor Plow company. enough. Seeing the sunrise is a jAXXXliX splendid tonic." tween Kansas City and Fort Madison. He has many friends in Atchison who will be grieved to learn this bad news about him. He suffered the first stroke of palsy two weeks ago.

W. A. Dilgert: "This should put an end to the discussion. I gathered CHAPTER 944 IN THE "TRAGEDY OF MEXICO." ripe tomatoes from my garden June 10. The Town Farmers have nothing on me." Coeyrtgbt: By John T.

McCutctuon.) W. j. McSirley: "I'm for better roads, but I'm 'agin' gravel roads, for the suction from automobiles tears gravel roads to pieces." I i 7 I ta lv V' i RL Robert Carter: "Wheat around Powhattan is great." Fred Koester: best wheat in the country is around Camp Creek, I believe." That famous mud hole near Wil-liamstown, Jefferson county, which was turned into a gold mine by unscrupulous farmers who refused to repair it but charged excessively for pulling automobiles through it, has been fixed. It took a force of men and five teams three days to fix it, which shows it was some mudhole. The Alita trio, Miss Helen Waggoner, reader; Miss Mildred Yarger, vocalist, and Miss Gladys Hindes, pianist and accompanist, will give two concerts at the Chautauqua In Leavenworth the 23rd of this month; on the 26th the trio will appear in concerts at Emporia, and on the 8th of August will, close the Chautauqua at Concordia.

William Cerre was In trouble when W. S. Sullivan was chief of police. At that time a man terrorized many women by Jumping at tljem in the dark and attempting to lay hands on them, and Cerre was at last captured and Identified as the guilty man, but because he then seemed to be of unsound mind he was not prosecuted. He Is a degenerate, and admits having repulsive habits.

Mrs, Elizabeth Gaston broke a leg yesterday evening when she fell at the home of her son, Ed Gaston, 523 Kearney street. She is 82 years old, and has been an invalid for five years. Mrs. Ed Gaston was helping her from her chair when the elder Mrs. Gaston had a fainting spell, and the fall broke the limb, which was broken once before about 12 years ago.

She has been in very poor health lately, and on account of her age, recovery will be very slow. E. A. Sullivan, of the Morrison Ball Game Tomorrow Famous Atchison Blues vs. St.

Joe Imperials At Forest Park This will he the fastest, cleanest hall game of the season. Game called at 3:30 in afternoon. Link Clem: sister writes from Gray county that this year's wheat crop Is better than last year's, and the crop out there last year was a hummer." Jim Carrico: "The road between here and Topeka is good again." Bob Waterman: "I would rather have a man tell me lies than his troubles." Will it at hard to keep Huerta oat of Mexico a Short Jenks: "I enjoyed seeing the Liberty bell. I had not seen any. thing like it since I was married." Neat way of saying it.

SSI Arthur Eymann: "I've seen several Christmas days so warm that I was comfortable while taking baths in unbelted bath rooms, but July 4, 1915, was the first Fourth on which I appreciated a fire in the heating stove." Let me send you FREE PERFUME Write today for a listing bille of ED. PINAUD'S LILAC Grain who has just been over the territory, makes the following report on wheat conditions: From Topeka to Hutchinson wheat is half harvested. Delayed on account of wet fields, loss fully twenty-live per cent. From Hutchinson to Great Bend, less than half harvested. Wheat down badly.

Difficult to estimate damage. Reports from six hundred correspondents indicate the total yield of the state will not exceed one hundred million. Lee Gunnison: "I wasn't enthusiastic about the Omaha automobile races. The speed was terrific, and all of that, but there were only seven entries, and the big crowd was poorly handled." Hie world's most famous perfume, every IPE Ar drop as tweet ts the living blossom. r- I it I i 1 or ftandnarcniet, atomizer ana bath.

Fine after shaving. AH the value is in the perfume you txiiixiixxxxixxai don tav extra tor a tancv bottle. GLOBE BRANCH OFFICE. Bam Gore's, SOS Commercial Subscriptions and orders for The quality is wonderful The price only 75c (6 Send 4c for the little bottle enough for 50 handkerchiefs. PARFUMERIE ED.

PINAUD Department M. ED. PINAUD BUILDING NEW YORK XXXXXXXX)C XXXXXXX DR. E. P.

PITTS Practice limited to Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Spectacles and Artificial Eyes Adjusted. Simpson Building. want ads. and news Items taken.

it wat to get him Sport bulletins posted..

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About The Atchison Daily Globe Archive

Pages Available:
78,527
Years Available:
1873-1922