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The Atchison Tribune from Atchison, Kansas • 2

The Atchison Tribune du lieu suivant : Atchison, Kansas • 2

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

He loves, rW see them go naked Railroad Time Card. SENATOR TELLER'S POSITION. In the minute Senator Teller of Colorado recency ninde the follow luded to, to howl again for tariff and each time howl louder and loudeif, and by that means drown the voice i his enemies who point out his glarifag in M. M. nnd trop.

in Atchison Jit THE TRIBUNE ATOH HON, TOI'EKa HANTA KK, lllSl'ABT, Hi'iivtir and I tulj Oxp dally 8 Wu ui 1UT minus St Tuxits Kxp lu AHBIVK. No. No, No. No. No.

No, No, No, No. 100 St, Joe AtclilHou illy 0 05 1US LINES EAST Or MO. WVER UKPAKT. 108 St. Sou AU'lilsoii illy 9 45 a ra 10(1 St.

Joe Express, daily 6 05 ux AHRIVE. 10A Denver ('tub dally 8 40 a in 107 Kansas Texas 10 LEAVENWORTH EXTKNSION DEPART, IS? Accuiumcxlatluti. ex. Sunday 0 30 a lu AltUIVE. 15s Accommodation, ex.

Sunday 7 S5 BUKUNOTON Si MO, KVEK, DEPABT. 81 Lincoln und Den v. Exp. dly 11 iW a ARRIVE. S3 Lincoln dully ti JO uj VIA ST.

JOE DEPART. 15 Denver Express, dally 11115 am IHSOUKI PACIFIC. EAST DEPART. No. St I.ouls and Texas dly 4 35 a 1 45 a ui 4 8 St i.ouls dally I.ouls dlv 5 05 In 0 35 3 30 8 05 a 11 00 9 30 a tt 05 a 13 10 8 35 in tt :5 ui 11 10 10 352 Kansus Neb.

Limited, dly St Louis und Lex. dly ntj.oc ft.u. Affmu. ARIIIVE. Omaha Lincoln Exp.

dally St Louis Atchison Kxp. Kansas Neb. Limited, dly and St Joe Exp. dly K. C.

and Ht Joe Aceoui. dly K. and Hiawatha Ac. dly TRAINS NIIHTH DEPART. Omaha Lincoln Exp, dly Kansas and Neb, Llm dally and Hiawatha Ac.

dly. ARRIVE. No. 1 li I) 1113 351 353 No. 1 353 big statement When tjhe Hnpsjfte drawn our- ing the coming wfi when the political oi'ganilr sleeplD ll arrange themselves forffji.

car Sir' ue that one of Wre political parties which llents i i existence for many the champ- iou of silver. sll0'ilu be the ML '11 case, then evenly'111 wul have an opportunity tout; 111111 llver ques tion where 1 11 V-longs. or in rresidtiiit i1P longs in the front of everything that we can desire. here is no, ing which this nation can do in judgment, that would bring pros perity to the country so quickly and so surely as to open our mints to the free coinage of silver; there is nothing in my judgment, that this great nation can do which will bring upon it such great disasters as to adhere to the gold standard. "I look with fear and trembling to see what that great political or ganiatiou with which I have acted tor forty years will do.

Will it take the side of the masses. Will it take the side which I believe leads to prosperity. Will it take the side which will save to- the thousands and tens of thousands of struggling men the homes they are bound to lose if we continue on the gold standard, or will it yield to tins seductive, laise and lying idea of 'sound money' and declare for gold standard. "If the Republican party becomes the party of the gold stand ard people, from the day that it so declares, in my judgment, its disintegration will begin. "I am often asked, Air.

President, what I will do if the political party with which I have been connected and to which I am attached and of whose record, on the whole, I am proud what I will do if that party adopts the gold standard and Dllts itself in line with thn'se! 1 to man are demanding that gold, and Badger, the of the coinage alone shall measure the values as theT existed Prior t0 i873? Be A LOGICAL POSITION. Uknton vn.i.K, May IS, '0(1. Bro. Higoins: In response to your request for expression of ppinions relative td the trimming of the Omaha platform at the coming national convention, I would respectfully submit the following: Wealth belongs to him who creates it, and every dollar taken from industry without an equivalent is robbery. "If any man will not work, neither shall he eat." The interests of rural and civil labor are the same; their enemies are identical.

We believe that the powers of government in other words, of the people should be expanded, as in the case of the postal service, as rapidly and as far as the good sense of aii intelligent people and the teachings of experience shall justify, to the end that oppression, injustice and poverty shall eventually cease in the land. Omaha Platform. The above contains cardinal points of our creed. Upon these two principles hang all the demands of the Peoples party. "The St.

Louis platform must give emphatic expression to these fundamental truths without which the industrial liberties of the people can never be established. Every Populist should stand firm as a rock for the principle that the people have a right at their option to own and operate collectively any or all the means of production, distribution and exchange, The man or woman who thinks this battle of the ages is to be fought upon the issue of financial has but little conception the magnitude of the struggle. 'It is world wide. In the history of every civilization of every age of which we have any record either written or traditional the same crisis as the present has been readied, but under different circumstances. When civilization had reached a certain stage the oppression of the ruling powers and wealthy classes became so great as to result in revolution or rebellion.

If the uprising was successful it was a revolution; if it was suppressed it was a rebellion. If it proved a revolution then civilization made mighty onward strides, tlie country progressed, the intellect broadened the arts and sciences flourished and the noble sentiments of human liberty and progress were cherished. If the uprising proved a rebellion progress turned to retrogression, the fatal blight of industrial slavery settled over the land, the arts and the sciences dwindled, civil wars, religious bigotry and intolerance succeeded, civilization declined and all the nobler sentiments of the human heart and soul were crushed and strangled. Those patriots who escaped the wrath of the ruling powers fled to unknown and unexplored lands, there to found new empires which would grow and flourish, become powerful and oppressive and finally sink to decay. Thus we may trace every civilization of every age from China and Japan to Persia and to Rome, to Greece and Gaul and down to the continents of western Europe.

These too became oppressive and the patriots fled to the shores of the continent which Columbus had discovered. Here too, oppression follows swift upon the wings of civilization's flight. We are called upon today( to solve the problem of the ages. The same problems which our ancestors escaped by flight to shores unknown, you and I must meet and solve. There is no escape.

No worlds remain undiscovered; the effete civilization of the oriental east meets the progressive civilization of the mighty west. We have circumnavigated the globe; we have bound it round with bands of steel o'er which the cars of progress roll. We have chained the lightning to the earth and you may have at your breakfast table tomorrow the happenings of the world today. The material progress of the past fifty years has been as wonderful as the moral retrogression which like a black and threatening cloud seems destined to overwhelm the civilization of this age, turn progress to retrogression and sink all the nobler sentiments of the human heart and soul in the slimy depths of sordid selfishness and greed. To think for a moment of lay; ing aside any of the noble principles of the Omaha platform at such a time as this is more than a crime; it is fiendish.

Such an opportunity for the education of the masses was never before offered. Millions will this year read our platform. Shall the truth be kept from the eyes of the blind just for anticipated temporary success? I say, No! a thousand times, No! The success that might be achieved Under such circumstances would turn to bitterest gall of disappointment. Financial reform can never be achieved under the existing putrid social, political and industrial systems. No party could approach near enough the putrid carcass of the body politic to apply the financial plaster without danger of corruption.

As a delegate to the national convention I shall battle for the inculcation of the broad principles of human, industrial, political and social liberty in our platform. These can only come through co-operation, direct legislation and financial reform. Yours fraternally, Frank W. Elliott. No.

Ht Louis and Texas Exp. dly Ht Louis Kansas and Neb, Llm. ST. JOE BRANCH-DEPART. Kansas and Net).

Lim. Lexington Ht Joe Exp. dly V. Ht Joe Accom Ht Joe Accom. ex.

Sunday 4 25 a 11 40 a or 0 (i 05 a ru 12 15 8 40 4 55 No. AH HIVE No. 10 Kansas and Neb. Lim. 1114 Ht Louis and Texas 352 (' and Ht Joe Accom.

35ii Ht Joe Exp. dally ex Sunday CENTRAL BKANCII. DEPART. No. 403 Mail and Express, 421 Accommodation daily ARIIIVE.

No. 404 St Louis Express, dally 423 Accomodation, dully 0 30 3 30 5 40 a 5 40 a 12 30 a 11 20 in 4 50 3 30 a Clubbitig List. Teibunk and Topeka Advocate. Topeka Co-Opera tor 4.00 Kansas 1.50 Topeka Capital (W.) 1.50 V. Tribune 1.25 and 1.75 Leslie's Monthly 3.00 Address all communications to Tue Tuibune, Atchison, Kans.

PROFESSIONAL. J)R. S. E. BAILEY Office over Taylor's Drug-Store, Fifth and Commercial streets.

Entrance on Fifth street. Office hours: 9:30 a. m. to 12 :30 to 5:00 p.m.; to 8:00 p. m.

Nig-ht calls answered at office. JJ M. DOYLE, D. D. ri.

Painless Extraction of Teeth a Specialty. Dental Rooms: Over Stoll's, Cor. 5th and Commercial Atchison, Ks. ALLENSWORTH, Attorney-at-Law. Exchange National Bank Building, Atchison, Kans.

A. P. MARTIN, Attorney-at-Law. Office: 507 Commercial Street, Atchi sou, Kansas. CONLON, Attorney-at-Law.

Practice in State and Federal courts. Exchange Bank Bldg, Atchison. B. P. Waggener.

W. P. Waggener, Albert II. Horton, Janie V. Orr.

WAGUENER, HORTON ORR, Attorneys and Counselors. Second floor of Hetherington Bldg Atchison, Kansas. CLIFTON B. HOLBERT, Attorney-at-Law. Room 200, Atchison National Bank Building, Atchison, Kan.

Telephone No. 31. gOLOMON BLAND, Attorneys-at-Law, and hungry. How do you know? Because he votes to bring that condition on them. What makes you think so? Because he votes the same ticket the bankers, bondholders, corporations trusts, millionaires, theives and thugs do.

Does he pray? Yes, but he lies every time he prays. How is that? He prays that the Lord's will be done on earth as it is in heaven. "No. How do you know? Because if he did he wrould vote lNway; he votes for whiskey, drunkards, gluttons, and political damnation. l- What excuse does he render for doing it? 1 The same as Adam rendered "the other fellows do Will he: go to heaven when he dies.

Not on his own merits, if the door of grace is wide enough he may scrouge in. What does he love best on earth. His party. Would he vote for the devil if his party would nominate him. Yes, on a platform written by the Rothschilds.

Is he ever happy. Yes, when the political boss smiles on him. How does he act. Jike a little dog, when you pat him on the head. Where is his manhood.

lie never had any. Can't he have any. Not while he belongs to a yarty that requires support of the ticket regardless of principle. Buzz Saw. STRmDDLER MCKINLEY.

Why are all the prominent candidates for president, except Morton and Cleveland, afraidto tell the peo ple what their opinions are with re- cause Cleveland and Morton are the only prominent candidates in either of the old parties who are willing' to rely exclusively on goldbug' support. All the others, so far as we have observed, desire to appear to be on both sides of the question of the standards that is, to be g-oldbugs with goldbugs, silver-ites with silver' men, for international agp-eament viuth the tory toadies who repudiate the constitutional right of the United States to coin money and depend upon Europe for legislation. Cleveland likes the English gold standard, for by advocating it he has been twice elected president and become, if reports are true, a multi-millionaire. His faith in the power of gold monopoly is unlimited, and his contempt for the masses of the people and indifference to their sufferings make him happy in the enjoyment of wealth and power, no matter how acquired. Morton belongs to the gold gambling fraternity; he is not a bad man by nature, but, having been engaged for a lifetime as head of two banking establishments one in New York and the other in London it is difficult for him to comprehend what rights the people can have which a banker is bound to respect.

Reed, in trying to ride two horses going in different directions, has lost his foothold and finds himself lying on his back with his feet in the air. Last year he proposed a tariff war on Great Britain if she would not give us free coinage, and this year he has proposed to appease the enemies he made in his Don Quixote war on the mother country by advocating legislation to issue bonds to buy British gold for alien gold gamblers. Both sides have, labeled him "extra dangerous" and given him a wide berth. McKinley has been coquetting with the double standard advocates of the coinage laws of Jefferson and Jackson, while he has been swearing allegiance to Wall and Lombard streets; he, wiser flian the generation of Reeds, Allisons, Harrisons and Mortons, has adopted the cuttle fish policy to darken the waters of the financial question by the bubble of another McKinley tariff. He was not dismayed or disheartened by the fact that after the McKinley bill had been in operation two years the panic of 1893 swept over the land and remained sweeping and devasting the country for eighteen months after.

It was inaugurated by such patriots as Harrison, Cleveland and Carlisle. He has the audacity to claim that the panic resulted from tlie repeal of the McKiuley bill and to presume that the people did not know that the McKinley bill was not disturbed for more than eighteen months after the panic wag inaugurated. McKinley and his backers say nothing of the fact that the election in the fall of 1890, after the passage of the McKinley bill, was the condemnation of that bill by an overwhelming Democratic victory, and that in 1892 the unpopularity of the McKinley bill carried the dead weight of the man from Buffalo into the White House in spite of the fact that he had been previously tried and found wanting. The hirelings and claquers who are running the McKinley boom are instructed to howl for tariff; and if financial questions are suggested, to howl again for tariff; and if McKinley 's look-both-ways good Lord good Devil policy on the financial question is al consistences, and thus to bury bt meath an ocean of bluff, sound and wind every question in which the Am erlcan people have an interest Hurrtih for McKinley! He is a blmetalllst and a monometallism He is for a double standard and a single standard. He is faithful to the contributors o' money and hateful to the banknipt victims of monoply.

He is for the Xreatest pod to the greatest number, 'and regards himself as the greatest number. Hurrah for bluff! Hurrah fop noise! Hurrah for confusion! Hurrah for the Napoleon of platitudes! Hurrah for the man who borrows other men's thoughts and is bankrupt in thoughts of his own. Silver Knight. AMONG OUR EXCHANGES. A wife has no business sewing for the heathern when her husband has to wear a long tailed coat in the summer to avoid embarrassment; Ex.

An eastern paper tells of a woman who lived with her husband thirty years without speaking to him. If it is hereditary and she has any daughters of marriageable age we should like to get one for a wife Mail. The Abilene Monitor says: Tillman seems to think the Populists have not accomplished much and asks what they have done. They have made it possible, Mr. Tillman, for you to make the speeches you have and not be hung.

When a Republican tells you the government cannot by act of legislation add one cent to the price of anything, agree with him, and tell him it cannot by tariff legislation add one cent to the wages paid to labor, The above argument will generally straighten the tangles in his brain, Sulina Union. The Atchison Tribune of the 7th inst contains a nice write-up for Dr. Rosea U. Horn of Atchison for auditor of state. Other papers of the state have also spoken very highly of Dr.

Horn. He is a good Populist and an able man. Man-kato Advocate. Dr. II.

15. Horn of Atchison is prominently spoken of for auditor of state on the People's party ticket. We have known Dr. Horn for years, and are assured of his fitness for the office. He will be about the right man in the right place, Seneca News.

The Topeka State Journal argues that views on the money question are not definitely known, and hence he is the most available man for the Republican nomination for the presidency. And it is right. The typical Republican candidate is one who can face both ways on every important question. Mankato Advocate. Merchant, farmer, day laborer, hotel keeper or whatever your pursuit in life, don't you know that unless there is a volume of money in circulation in proportion to the resources of a country its business must of necessity languish.

This nation, and France as well, have found by trial that this is the inevitable result. A man whose system is drained of one-half its blood is not capable of doing business; he is sick. Just so with a nation whose circulating medium is inadequate for the needs of its people. Industrial Advocate. Nothing is more heartrending than to see an honest man who has labored incessantly all along down the path of life vainly seeking employment with which to get food and clothing for himself, wife and babies.

He may be seen every day. But there is one condition more pitiable still and that is to see this same man in his tattered garments with careworn brow going to the polls on election day to vote for a continuance of his deplorable state. He is ignorant therefore to be, pitied. He is lead by unscrupulous party leaders, through prejudice, and can only be convinced of his wrong by being made to see that he is voting against his own interests. All men are more or less selfish.

Ind. Advocate. Senator Teller did one of the most commenditory acts of his life when he chastised the arch traitor, John Sherman in the senate last February. He said; "If the Republican party puts itself under the leadership of the senator from Ohio it will be a party of the past, and the glory of its past will be obliterated by that infamy and Then pausing, and shaking his finger directly in Mr. Sherman's face, which was ghastly white, while his own was livid with rage hissed these truthful prophetic words "infamy will pursue your name even after you are laid in your grave." My God! if it don't anyway no man, no matter how wicked, ever need fear future punishment in the next world.

That man Sherman has caused more starvation, misery and crimes; has sent more women on the down path by his inquitous legislation than any and all other perpetrators of legislative crimes together. "About the worst thing parents can do is to discuss the failings of children before them," says a writer in the Washington Star. "The next worst thing is for one parent to attempt to punish the child and the other protest against it. Either action will damage the respect of the child for one or the other of its parents, and if there is one thing more than another that parents want to preserve, it is their dignity before their children. A child who gets the idea that one parent is at variance with the other on the question of discipline will make both unhappy and render itself decidedly objectionable by playing off one parent against the other.

If you want to have any harmony, in the family, get together on the question of disciplining the Children at least in their presence Bind if you want to quarrel on methods it in the privacy of your own apartments, where you can have it out without lowering yourselves in the- eyes of the children." Ex. 1 I'KU'K. ignsol' TV, ,,7 $1.00 .50 und job printing rates made illi'iilUin. NK is a week I paper (ll'VI)tOll unil political develop-tclilson coiiiily. and the entire i ...,) Ttuil'mlll ull orders therefor should nnd all rliei'Us.

posuimre .,1,1 l.u TU, II 1 1 1 1' ID W. H. I'm i triuiSmisHlon llirnUKll ils us seeonil i-luss matter at. the piislofflcu. Office, ill? t.

over PH'Ui'ies oros, 1 THE OMAH- of silver anil gold lit the 'ree Co ill 'i of itlrt full loirol tender treasury notes. Assuiltlon of the nut onul luiiiK svstin Rrfliltillsliliient ul' Postal Savings Ulililts. Mi: I. Abolition iil'nllen and corporation owner- iip or mini. The exemption ofhonies from taxation I.linll ill Inn nf ownership.

rUANHI'OUTATlON: 1. Government ownership of railroads, telegraph and teiepiiones. J- i THURSDAY, MA 51, 1806, CONGRESSIONAL CONVENTION, A delegate convent Ion of the Populists of the rlrst IHstrict Is hereby called to meet In the city of Leavenworth at Kle.ven o'clock- a. WKDNRSKA AlKiFHT 13, 'till. forthcpurpo.se of nomltiatlni; a candidate fori mess, and for the election of a cou- lrresssiona.1 central committee.

The representation in said eoiivenflnn will he one uelctfiite and one alternate at larire from each county, nnd one dcletriite and one alternate for each mi votes or ma or fraction thereof cast for Walter Allen for president in I elect or iii Tlie said apportion ment will -rive to each county following represeuiallon: Atchison Hrown 12. Ilonlpliiin 7. a. ii. Leuvenworl li 91.

Nemaha IS. It is recoinmended by the committee that lie county convent Ions and primaries I here-for to elect delegates and alternates to the convention be held at the same line and place as the primaries and contentions loMect delegates to Ihe stale convent ion. All persons in favor of the reforms advocated by 1 he Populist, party are cordially Invited to participate in this convention, CJko. Hahman. Chairman.

S. Kenoykh. Secretary. APPELLATE COURT CONVENTION. A People's party judicial convention is hereby called to be held at I'eople's party reunite hall in the city of Topeka at 10 a.

Tl'ESDAY, AtlOnST 4. '00. to place In nomination a candidate for iudse of the appellate court for said eastern division of the northern department. The basis of said representation at, said con volition is. one delosiai.e fur each iNuiiily, and one additional delegate for -ach 000 votes or major fraction thereof cast for lj.

U. l.ewelllng fur governor at the elec-1 ion In 1SU4. The several counties in said division will be entitled to representation as as follows: Atchison Hrown 4, Doniphan 3. Ilininlas 4, II, 4. Johnson II, Leavenworth 0.

Morris Nemaha 4, Pottawatomie 4. Shawnee 8, Wabaunsee 8, Wyandotte 7. The People's party central committees in the respective counties will fix the time for electing delegates to represent their counties in said ju-diclnl convention. By older of said eastern division committee. W.

(J. Webb, Chairman. J. H. Dreisbach, Secretary.

CONVENTION DATES, National Prohibition con vention at Pittsburg, May National Republican convention at St, IU1S, lie Itl. ''I UeiiiocruUc coHveiiliuijafrhIca. at the at St. Louis, -efit of th Stale moCratti' convention at iiHehhil August 4. Kansasxaite Populist convention at Abilene, AugiL The time has come when men with hearts and brains.

rise and tako the misdirected reins Of too long left In the hands of tricksters and or hieves, lie who stands And sees the mighty vehicle of state Hauled tlie mire to some Ignoble rate And makes no! such bold protest as he can. Is no American. El. la WHKUi.Kr Wilcox. I'lat forms ant llian candidates.

more important Thos, of Maine says Mc-Kinley is a straddle bug. Sir Thomas can tell the truth when he wants too. and goldbugism will be smothered into obscurity this fall by tlie avalanche of ballots on election day. Kvcry Republican convention Id so far east of the Missouri ver has declared for tlie gold or said nothing about nance. The Republican party is more in favor of free silver 'aron Rothchilds.

than Money will buy a great many lgs and salt will save a great but there is not in circulation or Thii. ber gt tt mi; iniiiirii in iiiajiu- Heins givenvt' anything as cor-prieesif the old parties. Jo' 7 disauec- Satus of the old parties one stand without being party that has no li an to reap tbe benefits of an nut stem the tide long uu-t'e are offices enough to go 'f ver the Populists nominate vernor at Abilene be The Tribi.SK would be with any of the candidates died. The thing to do is to nominate tlie very strongest man. We want a majority this fall that will speak for itself.

1 A year ago in Thi.masville, Major McKinley, when offered the delegates of the three southern ates if he would declare for free 've, said in the presence of the this journal, "If the Re- bitform declares for free 1 not lie a candidate." brusnes-Herald, May fith, hlsaat, Editor, store. best ler, ian- S'llt. oer- Age aud tted tes, lity Mo. f. the Lgh igo ted low.

d'! 5 311, se-of rth 7H rk is- id ur 0IS DAP Advocates the principles which serve the masses. It does not fight riches, but the abuse of them. It is not one man's organ, but all men's. The laboring man will find it his friend and advocate. Public ownership of public utilities, and FREE AND Unlimited Coinage OF SILVER, 16 to 1, is its Battle Cry.

$1.00 In Silver takes it ONE YEAR. 50c in Silver takes it SIX MONTHS. It is the best policy of political insurance you can invest in. Subscribe Now For Sale! Choice, well im-proved farms must be sold in Thirty days; terms easy. Farms located in Atchison, Jefferson and Leavenworth counties.

Some good Farms for Rent. $100,000 To Loan at lowest rates, in sums of $500 or more. For particulars, see Murray Rice, 120 N. 5th St. Atchison.

The position of the State Journal of Topeka on tlie silver question is very amusing. It says that McKinley is sure to be nominated and elected and that it is now the duty of Republicans to see that only persons in favor of free coinage are elected as senators and representatives. That if the senate and house would pass a free coinage bill, McKinley would then not dare to refuse his signature. This ig a great dodge the Journal has to favor McKinley, but there is neither honesty, consistency or logic in the position. It is a elevf scheme to stand in with the McKinley crowd and at the same time curry favor with the Rooms 301, 302, 303 and 304 Atchison National bank building, third floor, th world.

I have no hesitation in saying here, Mr. Resident, as I have said beforettat whenever the political organization to which I be long eeajdPji to present my my judgment on great fundamental principles I shall cense W.ilb ongressioaaL i ion man Record, 02. THE DEMO-REP. FREESILVERITE. Do you see it? What? That thing over there.

That man? No, that thing that looks like a man. What's the matter with him? He wants free silver. Does that hurt him? He thinks it will hurt him if he don't get it. Is he trying to get it? He says he is. How is he trying? By staying in a goldbug party and voting for a goldbug.

Why don't he join a free silver party? lie thinks the best way to get free silver is to vote against a free silver party. Is he crazy? He says he's not; he says all the other fellows are crazy. How long has he been trying to get free silver that way? More than twenty years. Is he any nearer it now than he was? I Ie's farther away. lias he got any brains? He's got what the dictionary calls "The whitish, soft mass which constitutes the anterior or cephalic extremity of the nervous system in man or other vertebrates, occupying the upper cavity of the skull, and considered to be the center of sensation and perception.

What does he use it for? To hang his hat on. Don't he think? Only with his mouth and stomach Who does his thinking? The political bosses. How do they do it? Just slice it off to hira as you would bread and butter to your children. Does he take what they give him? Just as young birds take whatever the old bird brings them crickets, byns or worms. WhatffMes matter with him? )ut of clay (a poor Kot lry nomlise the matter with yeaf Til forgot to put a back bone in him, or else he's traded it off for a tow string.

Does he love his wife and Heft qualmh- Yes. leiepnone jo. 4i. MISCELLANEOUS. H.

B. HORN, Insurance Agent and Notary Public. Insures all kinds of property against loss by urn, t-yciunw aim DgnulUlg, III DeSl COID' panics at lowest rates. CaTI and see me. NO.

120 N. STH ST. ATCHISON. KS. Brickell Bros.

BARBER SHOP. 117 South Third Street. First shop north of Union Depot. Atchison, Kan. The best place to buy Marble and Granite Is at M.

W. WELLS, 112 N. 5 th street. M. C.

Crahan, Merchant Tailor. Suits made to order from first-class material at prices from $13, up. Mending neatly done. Clothes cleaned and dyed. 107 South 3rd Street, Albert Cure, HAY, FEED, fClMjed.

i Who is the home merchant? He is the man who helps pay for the streets upon which you walk; for the schools in which your children, or perhaps you, were educated; he helps to keep up the church in which you worship. He is a man who builds a home which enhances the value of your property. Every subscription paper that is passed has his name upon it He is the one who cannot afford to swindle you; self-interest and nothing else would prevent this. Hh bears his share of the burden of good govennent, and stays with yyu in sunshine and darkness, in the days of prosperity and adversity. These are hut few of the reasons why our patronage should be given to the home werchatfart0k LUrtLanCfk Terms Steward Elliott, Gn sr.

D. K. ton. BTs..

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À propos de la collection The Atchison Tribune

Pages disponibles:
36
Années disponibles:
1896-1896