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The Weekly X-Rays from Arkansas City, Kansas • 8

The Weekly X-Rays du lieu suivant : Arkansas City, Kansas • 8

Publication:
The Weekly X-Raysi
Lieu:
Arkansas City, Kansas
Date de parution:
Page:
8
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

From Friday's Daily Simple Home Recipe. Get from any prescription pharma A Denial from High Authority. Dr. H. W.

Wiley, Chief Chemist of Did You Know That there are forty automobiles in Arkansas City? That there are twenty million horses in the United States, and four million mules, twenty-one million milch cows and twice as many other cattle, sheep and swine. The average price of horses is $95, mules $107 and cows $32. Kansas has over one mill A. N. Brown's Sou on Editorial Staff of College Paper.

Roger Brown, son of A. N. Brown, general freight agent of the El Paso Southwestern, has been elected to the editorial staff of "The Cadet Adjutant," the official college paper of the Kentucky Military institute, which he is attending. It is quite a compliment to the young man to be chosen for the position, as it is an honor much sought after by the students of the school. El Paso (Texas) Herald.

Mr. Brown and family are well known in this city, he having been manager of the Kansas Southwestern railroad several years ago. The son spoke of in the clipping is just 14 years old. cist the following: Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half ounce; Compound Kargon, one ounce; Compound syrup syrup Sarsaparilla, three ounces. Shake well in a bottle and take a teaspoonful dose after each meal and at bedtime.

The above is considered by an emi nent authority, who writes in a New York daily paper, as the finest prescription ever written to re lieve Backache, Kidney Trouble, Weak Bladder and all forms of Urin ary This mixture acts promptly on the eliminative tissues of the Kidneys, enabling them to filter and strain the uric acid and other waste matter from the blood which causes Rheumatism. Some persons who suffer with the afflctions may not feel inclined to place much confidence in this simple mixture, yet those who have tried it say the results are simply surprising, the relief being effected without the slightest injury to the stomach or other organs. Mix some and give it a trial. It certainly comes highly recommended. It is the prescription of an eminent authority, whose entire reputation, it is said, was established by it.

A druggist here at home when asked stated he could either supply the ingredients or mix the prescription for our readers, also recommends it as harmless. The Bird In Hand. Lonny Say, let's promise to marry each other when we grow up. Gracie Oh, no. I might like somebody else better then.

Lonny Me, too. Oracle (hastily) Oh, yea, let's do promise. ion horses and only 147,000 mules, 774,000 milch cows. The average price of horses in Kansas is $89, mules $105 and cows $33. Other cattle are valued at $21.50, sheep at $4 and swine at $6.50.

Horses are hitrher now than bhey have been for thirty years, bub mules were higher between 1880 and '90. Milch cows are also higher but cattle were higher between 1880 and '90. Sheep and hogs are also higher than for years. More beef was cured or pickled in 18a0 than ever before, the amount being 97,508,000 pounds. That in Turkey the state is the land owner and permits the peasants to cultivate the land on shares? That wheat has never been so high as now since February 1905.

It is $1.20 per bushel in Chicago. Corn was 79 cents in Chicago in September, 1908, the highest it had been for ten years or more. Baled hay was higher in 1907, bringing $15 to $17 per ton. Hogs were $6.90 to $7.20 in February, 1907. Eggs one year ago in Chicago were the highest for ten years past.

Marriage Licenses. Eebruary 17. Fred Walton, Belle Plaine 18 Pearl Miller, Belle Plaine 18 Father's consent for him.) Leslie Wadsack, Atlanta 27 Cora Henderson, Atlanta 25 Joseph M. White, Maple City 22 Libbie Young, Hooser 19 John J. Peters, Ashton 33 Luda M.

Tibbetts 25 Last night Santa Fe Officer Cottrell arrested a man on train No. 18 at this place. The man was drunk and had been making things extremely disagreeable for the passengers for several stations back and the conductor had wired Cottrell to be ready to take the man when the train arrived here. He was locked in jail over night and in police court this morning was fined $10 and costs, $3, which he paid. Arrested On Kldtiappltig Charge.

Yesterday Constable Chas. Peek went down into Kay county and served a warrant on Frank Skinner, charging him with kidnapping and holding Henry H. Krebs, the eleven year old son of Lee Krebs, of this city. The complaint was sworn to by Lee Krebs. Skinner was put in the Kay county jail at Newkirk but afterward was admitted to bail.

It seems that the reason of the kidnapping is on account of the boy being an Osage Indian allottee and when he is 21 years of age will receive a large sum of money from the government. At the time of Lee Krebs incarceration in the Kansas penitentiary his sister, Mrs. Minnie Pond, was appointed guardian for the child and on Kreb's release and restoration of citizenship he claimed possession of the boy which Mrs. Pond, under protest, gave him. Now Skinner, who is a son-in-law of Mrs.

Pond, seems to think the guardianship of Mrs. Pond, should still hold good, hence the kidnapping. This noon Chas. Peek and Lee Krebs went to Winfield and from there Peek will go to Topeka to apply for requisition papers on the governor of Oklahoma to bring Skinner to this state for trial. A Freak Bill.

Santa Fe, New Feb. 19. A bill has been introduced in the legislature, taxing bachelors ten dollars and unmarried widowers twenty-five dollars yearly; the money used to maintain spinsters. A Lyon county farmer who was induced to move to British Columbia several years ago has returned, and is renting the place which he formerly owned. "It was too lonesome up there," he said.

"I guess I'm not cut out for a pioneer and I couldn't stand it. I like to see somebody go past the house ones in a awhile." Surprise for Lodge-Keeper. It was a former archbishop of York Dr. Thomson who appeared once in th role of coachman. He had attended an evening party, and, on tearing the house, discovered that his ooachman was drunk.

There apeared nothing for it but to drive home him-sslf, and the archbishop, after placing the smiling but unconscious coachman inside the carriage, mounted the box and took the reins. The monotony of the homeward journey was broken by a wheel of the carriage coming into violent collision with a stone just outside the entrance to BIshopsthorpe. The lodge-keeper, unable to recognise the approaching figure in the darkness, oalled out cheerily: "Hallo, Bill, drunk again! and blowed if you alnt got the old cock's hat on!" "It's the old cock himself," gravely re-ponded his grace. San Francisco Argonaut Mrs. Beatrice Witham of Boston, who is advocating the new cult of 'Colors and Numbers" by the proper use of which she claims life may be the Agricultural Department, has demanded of the Calumet Baking Powder Company, of Chicago, that it cease the publication of alleged certificates or statements that he had endorsed the Calumet Baking Powder, or reported in favor of its puritj, wholesomeness or superiority.

Such statements, he says, are false. Dr. Wiley never served upon a com mittee of awards, as alleged, nor signed such a report or certificate, nor did he ever idorse the Calumet Bak ing Powder in any way. On the contrary, Dr. Wiley testified before a Congressional Committee relative to alum in food, as follows: "As I have said repeatedly, I do not use it in my own home, and would not use alum in bread if I knew it.

Alum is in jurious." It seems that Dr. Wiley's demand that the Calumet Company should Cease these publications, which are, he says, "against the truth," was nob complied with, although he says he has done all he could "to stop the base and inexcusable use of his name." The public will share in Dr. Wiley's indignation that his name and official position should be fraudulently used to aid ia foisting upon consumers a food compound made from ingredients which the Doctor has publicly declar ed to be injurious. From "National Food Magazine," Chicago. Dillraatt to the Pen.

Sheriff A. L. Branson went to Lans ing Thursday taking J. W. Dillman to the penitentiary.

The prisoner was convicted at the November term on a charge of criminal assault on Miss Hanrahan in Grant township last September. He saw her pass his place going to Otto and lay in wait for her return, when he pulled her off her horse, dragged her into an orchard and compelled her to submit. She was about fifteen years old at the time. He has a wife and children. They are now in destitute circumstances and are charges at the county farm.

Two of the children died recently of pneu monia and deprivation at Dexter. Courier. The body of James J. Drye, an old resident was shipped to thjs city this morning from Caldwell and was burled in Riverview cemetery this after noon, short services being conducted at the grave by Rev. L.

M. Riley, of the Methodist church. The deceased was 84 years old and died of old age at Caldwell yesterday morning. Mrs. Phea of Oklahoma City, a daughter of the deceased, and her son, Dick Cash were in the city to attend the funeral.

Tom Boyles, recently of Arkansas City, is now located at Venable, Mo. He writes to the X-Rays that he has a 155 acre farm, fine house and orchard; that fox-hunting is the popular amusement, and that there are plenty of wild turkeys in the neighborhood. He sends best regards to all his Arkansas City friends. There is more Catarrh in this sse- tion of the country than all ether diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be ia- curable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing bo cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable.

Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefer re quires constitutional treatment Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonf ul It acts directly on the blood aad mucous surface of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure.

Send for circulars and testimonials. Address: F. J. Cheney Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, 75c.

Take Hall's Family Pills for cqeiU- Mr. Bryan in 1900 The fight which Mr. Bryan has made through the Commoner and on the stump will be continued with unceasing energy during the year 1909. Mr. Bryan has again assumed editorial charge of-THE COMMONER and will give this department his active, personal attention.

All earnest, patriotic Americans are invited to join him in A SPECIAL CAMPAIGN OF EDUCATION to be inaugurated through the Commoner and the Democratic press. The government reforms for which Mr. Bryan is laboring are of vital importance to the welfare of the people. He should have the active support of those who want to see the government administered in the interest of the many Instead of the few. Join the movement for agressive action by accepting our special clubbing offer for one year.

Weekly X-RAYS and Commoner, both one year for $1.25. All clubbing subscriptions should' be made payable to the Eugene F. War "Ironquill" writes to Walt Mason, of Emporia: "Dear Walt: We read your anecdotes, and laugh just like a bunch of goats; we think the state should reimburse the writer of such bully verse. We hanker for the stuff you write and for the stuff of old Bill white; that which you write is fresh and gay, and what Bill writes is reshershay. He is the Nestor, you the Mentor; I pause to drink a fifteen-center." Will Call Roosevelt.

Oklahoma City, okla-, Feb. 18 That President Rosevelt will be called to testify in the United States court at Muskogee when the town lot fraud cases are tried, is the general belief in Muskogee. The defendants will seek to show that the president knew of conditions in the Creek nation when he approved the report of the special examiner and will allege that accusations against Governor Haskell arose from a political plot in the campaign last year. Analysis ef Good Temper. The good temper is born in natures of low vitality, iron nerves and thick pkin.

These are insensitive to change pf moral atmosphere, and what would Wound another soul mortally barely inflicts a scratch on them. The rest of their emotions are usually on a par with the temper placid, imperturbable and sluggish. Those inca-paple of the passion of anger must be Incapable of any other great passion. Exchange. Indigestion Ends.

You can eat anything your stomach craves without fear of a case of Indi gestion or Dyspepsia, or that your food will ferment or sour on your stomach if you will occasionally take a little Diapepsin after eating. Your meals will taste good, and anything you eat will be digested; nothing can ferment or burn into acid or poison or stomach gas, which causes Belching, Dizziness, a feeling of fullness after eating. Nausea, Indigestion (like a lump of lead in stomach), Billiousness, Heartburn Water brash, Pain in stomach and intestines or other symptoms. Headaches from the stomach are ab, solutely unknown where this effective remedy is used. Diapepsin really does all the work of a healthy stomach.

Ib digests your meals when your stomach can't. Each triangule will digest all the food you can eat and leave nothing to ferment or sour. Get a large 50-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from your druggist and start taking today and by tomorrow you will actually brag about your healthy strong Stomach, for you then can eat anything and everything you want without the slightest discomfort or misery and every particle of impurity and Gas that is in your stomach and intestines is going to be carried away without the use of laxatives or any other assistance. Nebraska Grown Trees. $1.00 will buy 20 Peach Trees $1.00 will buy 10 Plum Trees $1.00 will buy 15 Apple Trees $1.00 will buy 10 Pear Trees $1.00 will buy 5 Cherry Trees $1.60 will buy 20 Grape Vines Our new 50 page catalogue free.

Wood River Nursery Co. Wood River, Neb. Local Agents Wanted. 25tf X-Rays Printing Co. UNLIKE ANY OTHER Newspaper Is The Weekly Kansas City Star IT THE WEEKLY STAR, in addition to printing the entire news in concise form, has Absolutely Accurate Market Quotations and so valuable are these that such are copyrighted by the Star, and appear only in this newspaper.

1" THE WEEKLY STAR has also the famous Chaperon Feature, which furnishes free, advice and help on many perplexing problems. Also "Answers" which takes care of all questions the reader cares to ask. It has a practical, successful Kansas farmer in charge of its Farm Department, which is of great value to all farmers and stockmen. IT THE WEEKLY KANSAS CITY STAR isn't for any limited set of people It's for every member of every family. If you don't find something of interest in a particular issue, well, the office looks on that issue as a failure 25 cents pays for one year.

THE WEEKLY KANSAS CITY STAR Kansas City, Mo. a prolonged as desired..

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À propos de la collection The Weekly X-Rays

Pages disponibles:
3 817
Années disponibles:
1899-1909