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The Sunflower Sentinel from Yates Center, Kansas • 2

The Sunflower Sentinel from Yates Center, Kansas • 2

Location:
Yates Center, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Japan Financial Condition. From a financial point of view the THE SUNFLOWER SENTINEL. In South-Eastern Kansas. ISMIiit3jEIALD Japanese were better cif when they lived by themselves, in a coan-try, than they now are when com E.II.IJUGUELASD,rub. YATES CENTER, KAjS.

pelled to fight under handicaps, for a place In civilization. Then they had frMUbri E7 Wedceiy. I Mil Ktopsch, Proprietor I. These lands are located in one of the best farming and stock counties in Eastern Kansas, only 125 miles from Kansas City, the recogniz3d market of the West. These lands can be reached most conveniently via few wants and enough to meet them.

the Missouri Pacific Railway. There will be Home-Seekers' Ex JHE Brightest, Best Most Beautifully Illustrated Family Weekly in America is Unquestionably The Christian Herald, Edited by Rev.vT. De Witt Talmage; D.D. It is. cursions the First and Third Tuesdays of each month, one fare.

plus Now their wants are many times greater, and their resources of gain have not Increased How to increase them and how to reduce the wants of the people present as puzzling a problem to Japanese publicists as any with which modern statesmen have to deal San Francisco $2 for the round trip. Published 52 Times a Year acre cattle farm only 9 miles from Yates Center, under goal fence, well watered by springs, ponds and and Aggregates 1,000 Large Pages, Brimful cf Pictures. Subscription Price $1.50 per Annum, a little less than Three Cents a copy. EU OUt. That th Chinese.

Wilder nits desirable as a diet is well known, but the reason is not familiar. A Chinaman is quoted as saying: "What a car rot Is to a horse's coat a 'rat is to the human hair. Neither tact can be ex plained, but every horseman knows that a regimen of carrots will make his stud smooth and lustrous as Tel vet. and the Chinese, especially the wemen, know that rats used as food will stop the falling out of hair and make the looks soft, silky and beautiful. I have seen It tried many times." Utica fress.

The Ladies' Home Journal is one of the best magazines now published. Its pages are filled with high grade literature, and its contributors are of worldwide creek, good 6 room house, 2 barns, about 100 acres under plow, the fin Fox Hunting on Wheels. Among other use3 to which the cycle is put is that of following hounds, and the cyclist Is by no means a novelty at most of the numerous meets in England. Those who follow hounds In the orthodox way do not welcome him any more than they do the mis- est ranch in Kansas for $10 per acre, 54 1 160 ficres of land only 3 miles from Toronto Kansas, fenced, all in grass, price $20 per acre, will exchange for a stock ot goods, write for particulars. No.

574. 80 acres 5 j-3 miles from Yates Center, good 3 room house, nice bearing orchard, well fenced 50 acres under plow, balance in pasture and grass. Price $2,000, would exchange for Iowa or Illinois land. No. 575.

160 acres 5 miles from write lor particulars. No trade con sidered. ADDRESS: The ehristian Herald 966 Bible House, New York 480 acfes 7 miles from Yates good 5 room house, new barn 36x50, nice bearing orchard, ever COST OF LITTLE THINGS. lasting water for house and stock, Pennsylvania Ballroari Speads 91,009 320 acres meadow, 100 acres pas ture, 60 acres under cultivation, price $25 per acre, will exchange for Iowa Yates Center, 100 acres under plow, good 3 room each room 16-16, good cellar, 2 good wells, nice bear Each Year for 1'Idi. It has been a hobby for many years with J.

N. Barr of the Chicago, Milwaukee St. Pa 1 railway to dwei.1 upon the value of watching "the little 3 1 sellaneous assemblage that, on foot and otherwise, tries to see a little ol the sport. With a good knowledge the country, the roads and the footpaths, however, the cyclist 13 often far from being "out of the hunt," for, though thrown out at times by tha fox taking an unfavorable line, he can get well to the front when a stretch of good road falls opportunely in his way. Chicago News.

Kitty En.lced the Mice. From the Weekly Telegraph: One of our Birmingham readers seud3 us an account ot a cat that lived in an outhouse and was seen one day to take a small portion of her dinner and place it front of a mouse hole in a corner. She then rc- land. ing orchard, creek runs across the No. 111 acres of first-class things" In- railway shops.

In a recen "arm affording plenty of stock water, Neosho River bottom land, located lecture before the Purdue university railway course by Dr. Charles B. Dud well lenced, a nice home. Price 1-2 mile from railroad town, good 7 ley, chief chemist of the Pennsylvania $25 per acre, no trade. room house, barn 30x50 with 14 IS Prayers for a Dangeroaa MUsIoo, At some ports in the kingdom prayers are offered for the safety of the crew outgoing vessels.

A slip as follows was handed to the Solaiers' Mission chaplain: "Captain Jones going to sea his wife, desires the prayers of the congregation." And, amid the giggling of some, they prayed accordingly. Lendon Chronicle. If you desire to go to Kansas call on E. F. Freeman of Tingley, Iowa, for information.

No. 577. 120 acres 3 1-2 miles Moot posts good water, 80 acres un from Piqua, good 4 room house, al- der plow, 30 acres timber pasture, a most new, barn for horses, bearing first-class corn farm. Price $35 per orchard of too trees, plenty ot peach acre, time given on 1-2 of price, no tired to a distance and set herself to railroad, it is shown how the co3ts oi the distinctively little things mount up in the offices of a large railway system. For instance, he shows that it costb the Pennsylvania each year about $1,000 for pins, $5,000 for rubber bands, $5,000 for ink, $7,000 for lead pencils, etc.

The fact that it costs nearly as much for stationery with which to carry on the business ot the Pennsylvania railroad as it does for pond in pasture also a good spring, No. 593. 160 acres, 60 acres un plump mouse came out, gave one look around, and, seeing nothing suspicious, commenced to eat the food. While the mouse was thus pleasantly some 50 acres under plow, balance der plow, 4 room house, nice bear- in meadow and pasture, a nice home. ig orchard, land all level, only 1 1-2 engaged pussy made the fatal spring and captured her incautious prey.

Price $30 per acre, would exchange miles from church, 1-2 mile to a for something good. school house, located 10 miles from No. tlS. 160 acres 1 mile from Yates Center A nice home. Price iron, as Dr.

Dudley asserts, Is indeed startling. A large amount of money undoubtedly leaks out in the way of careless use of little things. Some roads have realized the extent of waste in such directions and have, among other measures, ordered that a large part of the communications between their various officials shall be written Gayier That Keeps Exact T'oie. One of the most curious clocks in sj I 1 Rose, a nice little town on Mo. Pac.

$25 per acre tha ivnrlfl In that which Amna Tnnp of Railway, 8 miles from Yates Center, 240 a.res in Onion creek valley, Amideer constructed some time Tremendous, Power of Cycle Careful estimates of the force of a cyclone and the energy required to keep a full-fledged hurricane in active operation reveal the presence of a power that makes the mightiest efforts ef man appear as nothing In camparl-Bon. A force fully equal to 475,000,008 horse power was estimated as developed in a West Indian cyclone. This is about fifteen times the power that is oreatable by all means within the range of man's capabilities during the same time. Were steam, water, windmills and the strength ef all men arid all animals combined they could not fair house and barn, all tillable land, 200 acres in cultivation, good frame ago. The machinery, which is noth Ins hut a face, hands and lever, is con a fine location on main traveled road, house ot 6 rooms with cellar, good on pads of manila paper instead of oa 1 regular letter heads.

Price $30 per acre, inc. $1,500, will barn and granaries, 40 acres in grass. exchange. 2 miles from railroad station and nected with a geyser, which shoots out an immense column of hot water every thirty-eight seconds. This spurting never varies to the tenth of a second, and therefore a clock properly attached Animal! That Never Drink.

There are in the world several kinds No. 579. 80 acres 7 miles from church, school 1-2 mile, possession 3f animals that have never swallowed Rose, small house and barn, bearing can be had a year from next March. to It cannot fail to keep correct time. a drop of water in all their lives; these at all approach the tremendous force orchard, nice level land, 30 acres un- 240 acres 3 m.ilesnorth of Inde nclude tha llamas' of- Pfftagnrjr d-, exerted by this terrible storm.

Every time the water spurts up it strikes the lover and, moves" the hands forward thirty-eight seconds. der plow, balance in pasture and pendence, two old houses, good well, ertain gazelles of the far east. A par- iquct lived forty-two years in the Lon- meadow. Price $25 per acre, inc. shade trees, some fruit, S5 acres in HOME-SEEKERS' EXCURSIONS.

lon zoolulcal gardens without drlnk- CXxn Ill I cultivation, 22 acres is nrsi uuuuu. S1 RMMiTfi avears ng a drop, and some naturalists think 160 acres 5 miles north from Yates land 100 acres ofgood praitie grass fiubgcrL'ion to the Ladies' Home that hares take no liquid except the lew that sometimes forms on the grass Remember the Missouri Pacific, Center, good 5 room house, with eel- pasture, balance is 10 timber pasture, 1 paper-weu suited for the with connecting lines north and lar, earn ior norses, cawie snea, never iauing water in iviver, ims is American home hey eat. A considerable number of eptiles serpents, liaards and certain 1 live and prosper in places chicken house and other out-biuld- an excellent stock farm, scnool on ast, will run Home-Seekers' Ex ingB, about 60 acres under plow, 20 adjoining farm and near enough to vvhere thera is no water at all. Finally v- A Happy Slave. A pretty saying of an army officer cursions on Feb.

6 20; March 6 here are, even in France, in the neigh 2o and April 3 17 to Yates Cer acres pasture, 80 acres meadow, Independence for advanced scholars watered bv two-, never.failine wells to attend the countv school. Write borhood of the Lozere, herds of cows ter, Kansas, at one fare (plus $2) is reported by an exchange. He married, in 1865, the daughter of a man whose whole heart was in the cause of the southern negroes. The mar- and goats which almost never drink, and pond, orchaid of about 10 acres, for price nd.they nevertheless produce the milk for the round trip. It hi which the famous Roquefort cheese A stock and grain farm of 480 a- riage has been a very happy one.

all kinds uf fruits and berries, nice fchade trees around the house in 3 mado. cres, some rough land suitable for "Were you much interested in the I slavery question when I knew you? There will be Home-Seekers' ex tact this is a home ready lor living. A Matrimonial Musing. pasture, has living water, 160 acres cursions from Tingley, Iowa to asked a college friend, who had not seen the officer for thirty years. "Yes, Price $30 per acre, incumbrance in cultivation, balance in pasture and Eastern Kansas twice each month $1,350, will exchange equity.

meadow, well fenced, a never failing For rates, etc. inquiro of E. but I didn't talk much about it," was the reply. "But after I met my wife's father I became a strong abolitionist, No. 580.

160 acres on Cherry spring well which affords an abun Freeman of Tingley. 1 1 1 iuc a. ci use jruuug mail IUIUK.3 is in a position to marry if he has $2 in the bank and a steady job. Hope is a great factor in a love affair. After the man Is 40 he wonders how he ever did it, and when he eats pie at night and has the niehtmare he always imagines that he fs marrying again on $250.

Atchison Globe. uiccK. 1 i-a nines suiuun danre or water, lair Darn, a name and very soon after I met her I became a slave!" Santa Fe Railroad in Woodson house, fine shade trees, fine orchard good 3 room house, new barn 24x30, school house 1-2 mile, 5 miles from 80 acres under cultivation, good bear- Elk City, 11 miles from Indepen We have made arrangements ing orchard, another orchard of 3 a- lenCe. A snap whereby we can offer McClure's cres just set but, 80 acres in pasture magazine and the Sunflower Sen 200 acres in Sycamore valley, 2 i-2 miles from R. R.

station and tmel tor per year, the regu and meadow, only 7 i-a to Yates Center, this farm is a nice Lome. postoffice, school house 3 4 mile, 10 lar price of the magazine. Price $30 per acre, no trade. miles from Independence, orchard, A Daohes Who VteUs Prison. Perhaps the woman who knows the most about women convicts In English prisons is Adeline, Duchess ot Bedford.

Her grace holds special permission from the home secretary to visit the convict prisons in which women are incarcerated for longer periods than two years, and very excellent use has she made of the great trust reposed in her. With her colleague, Lady does everything in her power to give the prisoners, upon their discharge, a fresh start under improved conditions. The duchess is a handsome woman in the prime of life, and when speaking from the platform her charming voice Is curiously like that of her sister, Lady Henry Somerset. False Tng. As a rule the hospital patient looks up to his medical attendant, especially to the visiting surgeon or physician, with implicit confidence and a good deal of wholesome awe and reverence.

His anxiety to help the doctor in every way is sometimes unintentionally comic. A senior surgeon, says a writer in the Cornhill, was lecturing a class of students on different appearances of the teeth. "Here, gentlemen, in these two teeth we have No. 5S1. 80 acres 7 miles from 120 acres in cultivation, part of this Brare Elephants.

Yates Center, good 3 room house, creck bottom, can all be cultiva- No animal will face danger more I. stable for 4 horses, splendid "bearing Ue(j 0 acres of wheat now bein readily, at man's bidding, than the ele phant. As an instance, take the fol orchard, good cistern at the house, 2 pUt in will go with the tarm, good, lowing Incident, which recently oc Donds and a well in the pasture, 60 nw mom louse, "rood cistern, a i curred in India. A small female elephant was chsred by a buffalo acres vnder plow, a nicj home, small new barn, good cribs and gran well-marked symptoms of- Pa- in high grass, and her rider, in the Price $25 per acre, will "exchange. Uries.

will sell cheap. I tient (interrupting in a deprecating- 1 hurry of the moment, and perhaps owing to the sudden stopping of ttie manner) But please, sir, them two's A fine sheep ranch ot 1,500 acres fio gcres l2 miles rom inde. false 'uns." located 10 miles from Yates Center, -ie trom p0stoffice and elephant, fired an explosive shell from 1 1 1 ycuuv-uwv, 1 i hnffalo. hut into his rifle, not into the buffalo, but into gooc, water, unaer gooa ace, gra station and school, gooU 4 The wound 1 r. 1 I I ucc u.gn uuw mifi ucuij, paStu.Cw roQm house, solendid cistern and cis- was e0 Svere tnat it had not healed a all summer.

Come and sea this, will cma11 crnmp unrn orchard, year later. Yet the elephant stood An African Chief Umbrella. An African chief's umbrella Is of greater importance than many people suppose. Apart from its enormous size. Its loss in battle more than equals the loss of a standard of a European eommander.

Some of the umbrellas are of prodigious dimensions, being no less than 25 feet in diameter, with ribs 12 feet 6 Inches long. sell at a snaD orice. '1 frPPS. Arm, although it was gored by the buf 0 111.. 11 lal0 wnicri was tnen Kineu oy auui.ua 903 acre iarm 10 miles Srom lates land is goou isi anu znu uunum, Whaf ig even more grange Center, a good 6 room ho.ute, 2 good susceptible of cultivation, 40 acres that the elephant was not nervous of hams.

nir Viparlnfr nrr-harH. fenrvrl nnsture. acres of which is good gun reports afterwards. 1 of His Lino. "Do you know," cautiously inquired a young man who was making" his first trip on an ocean steamer, ar proaching a group of passengers on the deck, "whether there's a doctor on board?" "Yes," replied a fun-loving passenger.

"That is one, standing over there near the rail." The youflg man hastened over to the grave, elderly personage who had been pointed utv to him. "Beg pardon," he said, hurriedly, "but you're a doctor, aln" you?" "Yes," replied the other, wit a slight smile, "doctor of laws." "Well, Dr. Uvlaws," rejoined the young man, "I wish you would come down to the cabin with me. My ifo Is awfully sick to her stummick." ') and cross-fenced with -wire, good timber, 40 acres will be put in wheat The Weight of yueens. sfnrlf watpr fnr enn lanil lavs which will ffO with the farm.

Write I nice and level. Price $20 per acre. I for more complete description f' ft Natural Benentment. Flosy I don't care, I think Jack Townley Is real mean! Annette Why, Flossy? Flossy He wrote to me from Florida, saying he had shot an alligator seven feet leng, and said when he shot another he would have a pair ot slipper made for toe. Harlem Life.

The queen of Italy weighs 176 pounds, Queen Victoria 171.6 pounds, the queen of Spain 147.4 pounds, the queen ot Belgium 143 pounds, the German empress 136.4 pounds, the queen of Portugal 132 pounds, the czaiina 129.8 pounds, tho late empress of Austria 13C.8 pounds. ADDRESS 1900-A. S. Hogneland, Yates Center, Kansas. Immigration Agent Missouri Pacific Eailwuy.

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About The Sunflower Sentinel Archive

Pages Available:
194
Years Available:
1896-1901