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Western Life from Leavenworth, Kansas • 2

Western Life from Leavenworth, Kansas • 2

Publication:
Western Lifei
Location:
Leavenworth, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

"ILEGAL NOVICES Leavenworth Proper, according to the plot of said eUy designated We sv tii Coal. Investor snd promoter are Leavenworth," of record In ran who are generally several years ahead of their neighbors aid are generally looked upon as cranks or POST PUBLISHING CO "An order of transfer from, Efleh. bib to Alcatras is received by SSSRIFTt BMW NO. 88. i PUBLIC NOTICE Is hereby given fools.

When their inventions and government prisoner as I should imagine a ticket from hade Into 132 I. W. JAMESON, Sec. find Trow. the office of the Register of Deeds In and.

for sail Leavenworth county. A '( so all that part of that certain block known as Block' "D.V Lsavenr--ih City Proper, "Original Town, -lac cording, to the map or plat thereof, of record or oa file in the office of that, under and by virtu of a Judg schemes are realized, they are tor-gotten, ment rendered ia the District Court Take a case la point: With two or of the County of Leavenworth, In the State of Kansas, in an action FsbUshed Every Thursday at U'J WORTH, KANSAS. three exceptions, every electric road food Inspect. tr. iho makes his daily roua's of tie public market and.

the leading meat shops. In a recent report Dr. Cutler stated that be had found only one or two suspicious cases of doctored meats within the past few months, whereas la former years they were quite prevalent. If this officer Is doing his duty efficiently, and there is no reason to doubt that he Is, Kansas Cltyans who buy their meats in first-class shops are reasonably sure not to be poisoned by the juicy roast or the toothsome steak. The community enjoys this immunity by reason of the local Inspection that is made every day after the meat leaves the packing plants.

No thanks are due to the packers or to the government Inspectors, who are too often In their pay. Kansas City Journal. in Kansas City was promoted by W. B. Winner.

He brought more east-era money to Kansas City to carry numbered 15,408, wherein Wilson W. Zule Is plaintiff, and E. D. Sharp' and others were defendants, and of an alias execution Issued on said judgment, to me directed and delivered, I will on Tuesday, the 22nd out his plans than any other man. "A the Leavenworth Poitofnce Second Class Matter.

price, 80 cents per delivered. Advertising rates m' be furnished upon application. the Register of Deeds of Leavenworth County, Kansas, described; as follows: Commencing at a point pa the south line of said block ninety six test from the southwest corner ot said block, thence north parallel to. the west line of said block to the Ft. Leavenworth Government Reserve line, being the north line of said Paradise would be heralded." Albert Fields sentenced by General Fred S.

Grant to 'serve fifty years at hard labor in the rook quarries of Bilebblb prison, Isle of Luzon, adds the above postscript to his story of torture and human sacrifice which ha usually tells with the benediction, "They made It hell tor The former friend of Congressman Otis, of New Jersey, a young man of education and culture, Albert Fields Rhodes, crossed the path of hlB superior officer when the latter had a dark brown taste in Knockirj a Ilaoc" There seems to be two si Co fight on the mail ordf nouses. Tie Ada Star says; "The other day a measley, penurious old skinflint wrote us us a note urging us to go after the nail order houses 'a little Mt saying that the farmers wart spending thousands of dollars annually with these cheap John mail order concerns. This old 90 per cent credit system robber Is a merchant who seldom ever advertises, and never contributes a dollar for a. pub-Ho enterprise. He wrote the note sent us on a 'baking powder' tablet that is given away with a cheap alum baking powder he sells on credit to his customers.

It we should call on him for an ad he would likely say 'I don't believe In advertising' It called upon lor a subscription to a public enterprise he would say 'nobody never give ma Poor old varmint, his supreme gall is all be can count on. Whenever that falls him he will wither and blow away. His measley carcass wouldn't decent buzzard food." day of Maw A. D. 1906, at ten o'clock m.

of that day, at the farm of E. T. Clark (old Zule farm) on the. Today every one of these roads Is a success, but Winner has no part In them; other people are receiving the profits from his Ideas. It was also Winner who projected the electric road from Leavenworth to Kansas City.

At first, our people laughed at the scheme and then fought it, claiming that it would ruin the city of Leavenworth, If the road Perryrllle road ia High Prairie township, in Leavenworth County, Kansas, offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder, for cash in hand, block; thence east along said north line of said block to where a line parallel to the west Una of said block and distant one hundred and forty-four feet intersects said north lines thence south across said block, parallel to the west line of said block to the following described personal his mouth and it took him tour years and eleven months to see again the 'Leavenworth Is Growing. 'v Leavenworth. Is enjoying a period property, to-wit: One Spraying Machine (The Orchard Monarch), one of activity such as has not been -The packing, house scandals.Mll peHy please the What has The Kansas Hen got to pgr about the Coburn appointment? light God gives free to all who may be blessed with sight. known in the past" ten years. A the north line ot said block to point Disk Harrow, and one Mowing Ma citizen said yesterday that not in oa said south line one hundred and chine, levied upon as the personal forty-four feet east ot the southwest property of E.

D. Sharp and Carrie. corner ot said block; thence the past twenty years had he ever noticed so much building, painting and repairing being done as there is at present. M. Sharp, defendants In the above entitled action.

Leavenworth had a splendid flower trade without bait trying. Now, not try next yearT along said south line of said block And his five years of labor In the iquarrles took all the manhood a blueblooded line of ancestors had given Albert Fields Rhodes. His pardon, signed by the president, brought no lightness of spirit nor forgiveness of the wrongs he had suffered and Rhodes emerged from Alcatras bent and broken, maimed forty-eight feet to the place of be Dated this 10th day of May, A. A drive through the residence and 1906. ginning, said tract so conveyed being also described and known on the tax rolls ot Leavenworth County, Kan STANCE MEYERS, Sheriff.

By THOS. J. BROWN, Under Sheriff, sas, as lots numbered eleven (11) the Kansas City Post is doing its best to annihilate the "Mysterious Stranger." There is inspiration in the knowledge that the Boston ball team has Ipst twenty games in succession. and gray, with no ambition left but the. home coming desire a son never L.

Hawn, Attorney for Plaintiff. the business portions of the town demonstrates that Leavenworth is growing. There was a time when everyone knew everyone else In Leavenworth. Now it is different for almost every day an old timer can be heard to say, "Well, I never saw so many people who are strangers to me, on the streets before." This Is one of the surest signs of growth. 1st pub May 10, 1906 w5t.

forgets. Today, a free man, still wearing a government "shroud," and twelve (12) In said block and also known and described shd platted on the certain map of the City ot Leavenworth, Kansas, exhibiting all additions and subdivisions within the corporate limits, publish the victim of an officer's wrath pass SHERIFF'S SALE NO. 89. ed by Atwood and Yates as lots num PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given ed through Kansas City the other day. bound for the sheltering roof of, the only relative he knows, his foster father.

J. L. Reynolds, at I' A Kansas paper asserts that mail Order wives are just as unsatisfactory and expensive as mall order goods. that under and by virtue of a judg There are practically no vacant ment rendered in. the District Court of the County of Leavenworth, in the stores or office rooms and res Mount Vernon, N.

Y. Rhodes was pardoned from Al bered eleven (11) and twelve (12) in said block said map printed by Middleton, Strowbridge ot Cincinnati, Ohio; said lands and tenements will be offered for sale and sold separately in the following order, to-wit: First said lot twenty State of Kansas, in an action num idences that are for rent are harder to find than the proverbial hen's teeth. bered 15,646, wherein J. Granger catraz prison, which is built on Al-catraz island, across the bay from The Carnival only lasted a week, but the after-effects will last two weeks. is Plaintiff, and Annie Gilson and others are defendants, and of a spec The Coddling of Dogs.

ial execution issued, on said judg (20); second said lot twenty-two (22) and third said lots eleven (11) San Francisco, May 15, by President Roosevelt. The only privilege accorded a government army prisoner is access to the records of his court-martial and Rhodes soon learned was built The road has been built and has' passed Into other bands; Winner is out of It and today the road Is doing more to advertise and build up Leavenworth than any other institution we have. Winner's prophecy that it would bring thousands of people to Leavenworth is coming true. Winner had another scheme and one that is likely to bo taken up in the future. That was to build a large electric power plant in Leavenworth and to supply Kansas City, St.

Joseph, Atchison, Topeka and Lawrence, in fact, all the cities within a radius of 100 miles, with electricity to operate their street railways, their factories and to heat and light their cities. When Winner was trying to get a franchise from Leavenworth for this power plant, it Beemed a wild, impractical scheme at least. That was the view the mayor and council took of it and Winner did not get his franchise. With his prophetic eye for trade conditions, Winner saw several years into the future ahead of his neighbors. The electric cars in Leavenworth and to Fort Leavenworth and to Kansas City are now operated with electricity generated at Wolcott, a station half way between Leavenworth and Kansas City.

Engineers have found how to transmit electricity more than 100 miles without losing much of Its vot tage. In the east, they are doing what Wolcott proposed doing here, building the large power plants where they have coal at hand. Edison, in an interview a few weeks ago, said that we are at about the time when power would be shipped over wires instead of in coal cars. Leavenworth is in a position to meet the new conditions. We 'have the coal to create the power to supply every city within 200 miles of us.

It is only seven years since the people of Leavenworth were fighting Winner's project to build thelectrlc road between Leavenworth and Kansas City. In another seven years, No domestic animal has been tho meat, to me directed and deliverd, I Revive Old Times. "It reminded me of old times," said an old time merchant the other day in discussing the recent carnival. Many have made the same remark and commented on the number of strangers in town and the number of farmers who visited their stores during the day. What has become of the "good old times" Leavenworth used to enjoy? Why can't the merchants revive them.

The Post believes it can be done and is willing to help. Here is a suggestion. Why not set apart two days in the near future for Farmers' Bargain Days to be widely advertised as such. Then let the merchants get together and agree to cut prices as low as possible on all lines of goods for these two days and invite the whole country side for fifty miles around to come and participate in the carnival of bargains. Arrangements could be made to have the bridges free for the two days, no doubt and cut rates could be secured on the railroads.

Every inducement should be made to bring the farmers and their wives and every courtesy shown them during their visit. This is only a suggestion of one way to revive old times. These farmers' bargain days might be a regular periodical events. Why should not special bargains be offered in such a way that the farmers can take advantage of them the same as the city folks? recipient of greater attention and The pessimists might at least awaken to the fact that it nowadays makes considerable difference how a man gains his wealth. and twelve (12), according to law and said special execution and with-redemption therefrom.

kindness than the dog and there is will on Tueuday, the 26th day of June, D. 1906, at eleven o'clock m. of that day, at the south front door of the County Court House in that in his case a court of nine of Dated this 24th day of May, A. Dv ficers had recommended his release after an investigation had been 1906. made into the killing of Arando Sev-veiros, a native, on the Isle of Sa- the City of Leavenworth, in the County of Leavenworth, in the State of Kansas, offer at public sale and sell to the highest bidder, for cash in r- Historians might for a moment divert their attemtion to the paramount question.

"When was Hoch discovered and who discovered him?" mar in 1901, after peace tad been restored on the island. I. STANCE MEYERS, 1 Sheriff. THOS. J.

BROWN, Under Sheriff. H. Wendorff, Attorney for Plaintiff, 1st pub. May 24 5t jj Rhodes was on sentry duty In the the following described lands and tenements, situate, lying and being i the County of Leavenworth, In court yard before the government hospital in Samar na night when the State of. Kansas, namely: there was revelry among the na Politics seems to have reached perfection in Venezuela where tho president of that republic has saved $30, 000,000 in six years out of a alary of $12,000 a year.

The undivided one-half interest in the east half of lot three (3), in ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. tives. Sevveiros attacked him and made an attempt to wrest away his block twenty-three (23), in Latta's Addition to the City of Leavenworth; gun. The fight brought other THE STATE OF KANSAS, Leaven i natives to Sevveiros' assistance and according to the recorded plat there of, said lands and tenements will be offered for sale and sold according to Signs of Good Times. There are so many things happening to prove that not only our own people, but outsiders hare confidence worth County, ss, Inh the Probate Court in and for said County.

In the matter ot the estate of Jesse D.Pierce, deceased. Notice is hereby given that let law and said special execution and In the skirmish that followed Rhodes was terribly hicked by the Bolo men. He at least remembering his drill code, "presented arms, butts forward." The butt of his rifle struck the native in the forehead and he fell dead. From a window of with redemption therefrom. Dated this 24th day of May, A.

D. We Need a Band. ters of administration have been granted to the undersigned on the estate of Jesse D. Pierce, late of said There is no finer advertisement .1906. STANCE MEYERS, Sheriff.

the hospital Grant Grant saw. the County, deceased, by the honorable for a city than a good brass band. native fall, the, Probate Court of the County and Many people who know nothing By THOB, J. BKUW.W, When Rhodes recovered he was State aforesaid, dated the 4th day of May, A. D.

1906. Now, all per- Winner's other scheme may be car Under Sheriff Hawn and, Wendorff, Attorneys for Plaintiffs. 1st pub May 24 1906 5t called before a general court-martial and exonerated of the charge of murderine a native, according to sons having claims against the said about Topeka, know all about Marshall's band. Leavenworth could, and should support a band. We have the finest material in the world for it and the citizens should take an interest in properly equip the records of the trial.

But Gen, eral Grant had reason to teach Prl in the future of Leavenworth that it is Impossible to name all of them. The building of magnificent homes i by our business men is only one Of I the, many good signs of the Last year. Otto Wulfekuhler built a fine residence on the North Es-I' planade Albert Wulfekuhler built himself a modern residence on the corner of South Broadway and Oak street, and Senator Louis Wulfekuh-p ler built himself a modern resist dence on South Broadway and Mar-i ehall street. These three brothers spent on their homes something If like $8,000 each and Mr. Helmers, the furniture manufacturer, built himself an' $18,000 residence on 8outh Broadway.

This year, A. J. Schilling, the Cashier of the Missouri Valley ried into effect and be as great a success as the electric road. Time has demonstrated that a power plant in Leavenworth would be practical and there is no question but that it would be profitable. It is coming someone is going to build SHERIFF'S SALE NO.

90. PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given vate Rhodes some principles of army discipline and he saw malice in the killing where the officers of the court discovered none. Rhodes says that under and by virtue of a judg it. Leavenworth will get the plant estate are hereby notified that they must present the same to the undersigned for allowance, within one year from the date of said letters, or they may be precluded from any benefit of such estate and that if such claims be not exhibited within three years after the date of said letters, they shall be forever barred. ROSALIE ASHBY, Administratrix of the Estate of Jesse D.

Pierce, Deceased. May 17 1906 w4t. ping and uniforming the Speer's Military band. This is one of the finest organizations in the state, and if the men were furnished with neat uniforms, which don't 'cost much they would have an incentive for getting together oftener and if the a relative of General Grant, Lieu because no other city has the coal. ment rendered in the District Court of the County of Leavenworth, in the State of Kansas, In an action tenant Gad Morgan, was ordered to pass sentence according to the gen The Poisoned Meat Scare.

numbered 15,631, wherein Mrs. R. eral's wishes. Rhodes was accord city would again appropriate money Notwithstanding the nauseating disclosures which have been' made recently regarding the methods 'of Howell is and Jack Mane-han and others are Defendants, and of a special execution issued on said none more deserving. In addition to his value as a- protection, he possesses some of the elements of character that are found only in the best of human beings.

The dog can never be- induced to betray his master; he will not fawn on those he does not and as to his faithfulness that has become proverbial. Remembering all of these, noble traits one canpot be censured, for kindness; to this noble animal, butt the "extent to which is carried on in this modern day is surprising, to say the least of it. -r Of course the public has become accustomed through the press to the dog party, even to the minutial of the style of invitation, the menu, manner of serving, etc. It has also been informed of the various dressr making establishments for caniue t. It is also a well' known fact 1J, the sooiety world that every well-to-do dog has a maid whose business it is not only to feed him, but to perfume and give his bath, brush bis woolly to amuse hira in fact, to give to doggie her entire time and attention.

The caref ul, grooming and training that go on preparatory to the great bench shows would make the average child the personification of beauty and culture. One of the latest forms of luxury for the canine is the dog trunk, which is very necessary for him in being transported to and from the summer homes of the mistresses or on trips to the mountains or seashore. It is fashioned after the ordinary trunk and differs from it in no material way except that it has slats on top for ventilation. It is transported as the regular baggage, but it is safe to predict that the blow of the baggage smasher is softened by a goodly tip. There 1b also the dog valise, which has screens at the end to admit the air.

This is Intended for the drawing room car, the object being to fool the conductor. (i New York, however, with its accustomed progresslveness has come to the front wua an up-to-date dog cemetery. It covers eleven acres of ground, has a broad expanse of flower bedecked Is dotted here and there with marble or granite tombstones and has the regulation sexton. The burial boxes, as a rule, are white zinclined affairs that cost on an average from $15 to $25,, but of course the very wealthy want something more expensive and" therefore use the satin lined casket and spend asNmuch as $70' or $80. The funerals are conducted by a prosperous looking undertaker, who wears the princesse frock coat, glistening top hat and seems much Impressed with the importance of his position.

The tombstones are of all grades, ingly stripped of the buttons of his uniform before his regiment and sentenced to fifty years' imprison 1 Bridge works is building a $9,000 the meat packers and the revolting conditions in some of the packing judgment, to me directed and delivered, I wil on Tuesday, the 26th day modern residence on the corner of Arch and Second avenue and next ment in Bilebblb prison, Luzon. plants, it la very Improbable that The trouble that led to General Grant's desire to reprimand Private of June, A. D. 1906, at eleven o'clock a. m.

of that day, at the south Rhodes is stold by the former con vict In a few sentences. "It was on front door of the County Court House in the City of Leavenworth, in the County of Leavenworth, in the sentry duty before the general's for free concerts this summer the people would not only enjoy the sound of the music, but also the sight of the band. At present the men wear a make-shift uniform-which consists of bed ticking trimmed with cheap braid. It is "good enough" of course, but whenever they have occasion to go out of town to play and are introduced as the Leavenworth band they feel like "thirty cents." Why doesn't some enterprising, public spirited citizen start the ball rolling and raise $250 with which to buy the band uniforms that will cause visitors to remark at the elegance of our musical organization. any appreciable quantity of tainted or "poisoned" meat finds its way into the local market here in Kansas City.

Doubtless a great deal of the talk about these conditions, as portrayed in such books as "The Jungle" and other morbid publications, is exag quarters at night three weeks be State of Kansas, offer at public sale door to him, Sam Garrett of the Gar-i rett Lumber company is building an i $8,000 modern residence, and on the corner of Third avenue and Spruce etreet, Ed Olvis, a Platte county man who is vice president of the State Savings bank of Leavenworth, I Is building a fine modern $8,000 resit idence and his brother-in-law, Mr. Pitt, is building a fine $8,000 resi-i, dence on the corner of Fourth and fore I fought with the Bolo men. and sell to the highest bidder, for cash in hand, the following describ Some drinking song awakened Gen eral Grant. Stepping to the window In his night dress, he commanded ed lands and tenements, situate, lying and being in the County of Leavenworth, in the State of Kansas gerated. The cases which form the me to call the guard and have the ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.

THE STATE OF KANSAS, Leavenworth County, ss. In the Probate Court in and for said County. In the matter of the estate of John C. Rotzel, deceased. Notice is hereby given that letters ot administration have been granted to the undersigned on the estate of John C.

Rotzell, late of said County, deceased, by the honorable, the Probate Court of the County and State aforesaid, dated the 3 0th day ot April, A. 1906. Now, all persons having claims against the said estate are hereby notified that they must present the same to the undersigned for allowance, ir' year from the date of said letters, or they may be precluded from any benefit of such estate; and that If such claims be not exhibited -within serenaders arrested." basis of Mr. Sinclair's wholesale denunciations are undoubtedly exceptional, and granting that they are all namely: All of lots nine (9), ten (10) Here Rhodes sought immunity from being the object of the wrath Arcn streets, ums and ruts are new additions to the business interests ef this city. They are going make Leavenworth their home, eleven (11).

twelve (12) and thir true, as he relates, the percentage of the officers of his own company, teen (13), in block thirty-one (31) of diseased or doctored meat as com in South Side Park, a subdivision of His reply to General Grant's command that the singers be arrested and are showing their confidence in the city by investing money in our a part of the City of Leavenworth, was, "But they are officers." btl tislness institutions, and by build pared with the total product of the packing plants sold to the public is probably infinitesimal. In fact, it is doubtful if the public fares any worse nowadays in respect to the quality, purity and cleanliness of its "But they are officers!" Thai according to the recorded plat thereof; said lands and tenements will be offered for sale and sold according ing themselves new homes. Several other business men are figuring on building themselves residences of the same class. to law and said special execution and meant a great deal. With Private Rhodes on duty It meant immunity from arrest.

When General Grant went down into the court yard he with, redemption, therefrom. fresh foods than it has always done. Dated this 24th day of May. A. Long before the meat industry was organized on its present gigantic scale, before the days of great pack asked the names of the officers.

But if Private Rhodes had ever known their names he had forgotten them When asked to divulge their Identity that they might be thrown in the 1906. STANCE MEYERS, Sheriff. By THOS. J. BROWN, Under Sheriff.

three years after the date ot said letters, they shall be forever barred. C. C. KISSINGER. Administrator de bonis non with, the1 Will Annexed of the Estate of John C.

Rotzel, Deceased. April 30, 1906. -1st pub May 24 4t ing plants and more or less inefficient government Inspectors, cattle Infected with tuberculosis were eon- guardhouse. The guard was called, vHawn Wendorff, Attorneys for verted into beef, chickens that died I A Good Month. The month of May was one of the best The Post has had.

The city circulation increased every day. The Post's outside circulation has grown so rapidly that it is almost impossible to keep np with it. During carnival week, the street Bales were immense as the strangers all seemed to want The Post to take home with them. The advertising was greater for the month of May than usual. Busi from croup and the pip, and hogs and It was Rhodes who went into irons.

The following day he was plaintiff. 1st pub May 24 6t that fell victims to cholera', were un released with the admonition that EXECUTRIX NOTICE. loaded on the Ignorant, unsuspecting he be very careful, as General SHERIFF'S SALE NO. 91 public by unscrupulous butchers and Grant would "settle later" with him, over-thrifty farmers and housewives. The old saying that everyone must eat a pound of dirt before he dies many of them costly.

All bear dates, was probably as true then as now. ness men. are beginning to appre A Health Resort. The late Dr. M.

S. Thomas always regretted that the business men of Leavenworth had not grasped its advantages as a health and pleasure resort. It was his idea that a hotel built on the top of Pilot Knob and over looking the city would be one of the healthiest places in Kansas. When people are seeking health, they get out. of the valleys and on to the hill tops where the air is pure and bracing.

When this becomes a large city, the rich people will build their homes where Dr. Thomas would have built a hotel and some enterprising man or company will build a hotel there. If the reader of this article will drive out Spruce street and go a mile beyond the city limits and then south to the Knob and come back to the city by Ohio avenue, he will see a piece of the prettiest landscape in America. On the north, he will see the Federal prison and the fort, on the south, Lansing and the state penitentiary, on the east, the city of Leavenworth, the Missouri river and a big stretch of Missouri and on the west, farms with their growing crops and orchards. The man who is a lover of nature, will wish that he owned a house and a little patch of land on Pilot Knob.

When Leavenworth's mineral waters are advertised and people begin to coma here tor their health, the city will go westward and some day the hills and the woods of Pilot Knob will be dotted With villas and hotels and boarding houses. Some one will carry out Dr. Thomas' Ideas. and inscriptions. Some of the latter are as follows: "Mignon, dearest and best beloved," "Little No apologies can be made for the greedy, merciless beef trust, such as ciate The Postr One business man today said: "The Post is a good The years spent in Bilebblb were full of the "hell" mentioned by Rhodes.

At one time the prison was in charge of Major Dell Car-ringham, of the United States army. Later the major was a prisoner In the quarries along with Rhodes, a few other white men and some natives. doctor. Whenever our business gets sick, we call in The Post and our business is soon all right again." The Post' has only one ambition, snd that is to build up Leavenworth and make every man and woman in Scrap," "Our Pet," "King Victor," "Gyp," "Our Darling Muddle," and a particularly touching one Is: "Mamie lies forever 4 Beneath this grassy hummock, She died on our kitchen table Of acute catarrh of the stummock" The patronage of this cemetery Is THE STATE OF KANSAS, Leaven-. worth worth County, ss.

In the Probate Court in and for said County. In the matter ot the ea-; tate ot John C. Schroth, Deceased. Notice Is hereby glvea that letters of. administration have been granted to the undersigned en the estate et John C.

Schroth, late ot said County, deceased, by the honorable, the Pso-bate Court of the County and State aforesaid, dated the 9th day of May, D. 1906. Now, all persons hav-ing claims against the said estate are hereby notified that they must present- the same to the undersigned ttt allowance, within one year from the date of said letters, or they may be precluded from any benefit of said estate; and that if suck claims be tot exhibited within three' years after the date ot aald letters, they shall be forever barred. MARGRATHA SCHROTH Executrix of the Estate of John, Schroth, Deceased. 1st Tub May 10, 1906 w4t the city happy and prosperous.

The Post is only nine months old. There PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that under and by virtue of a judgment rendered in the District Court of the County Leavenworth, in the State of Kansas, In an action numbered 15,407, wherein LaFayette Granger is plaintiff, and Frances Golletz and others are defendants, and ot a special execution issued on said judgment, to me directed and delivered, I will on Tuesday the 26th day ot June, A. D. -1906, at eleven o'clock a. m.

ot that day, at the south front door of the county court house in the City ot Leavenworth. In the County of Leavenworth In the State of Kansas, offer at public sale and sell to the highest bidder cash in hand, the following described lands and tenements, situate, lying and being in the County of Leavenworth, In the State of Kansas, namely: Lots numbered twenty (20) and twenty-two (22) In block numbered thirty-three (33) in the City ot has never been a paper published in could be made for the ignorance of the oldtlme butchers, who had no microscopes or scientific appliances for testing the meats they handled. There Is absolutely no excuse for the murderous methods of the packers' trust in these enlightened days. They know what they are doing and they ought to be exposed and punished without mercy, with as little consideration as they have shown the public. But there is very little reason, after all, in the scare which has seized the public on account of these disgusting revelations.

As stated above, the proportion of diseased meat to the total consumption must be exceedingly small. But' Kansas City has a presumably efficient city Down at Minneapolis, according to the Better Way, a Sunday school superintendent asked the primary class rather abruptly: "Who killed John the Baptist?" The little fellows were somewhat startled, but a little towed headed boy finally answered: "Deed, Sir; 'twasn't me, 'cause maw don't 'low me to have no gun, an' I traded my knife to Billy Gooden 'fore we moved up here." Leavenworth that had the number of subscribers and received the amount of advertising that The Post has received in the Drat nine months not confined to New York, but of Its existence. Buffalo and other cities contribute to this exclusive happy hunting ground. What next? Fort Worth Record. The people of Leavenworth wanted an evening paper, and they are entltw to a good one and The Yoftt is going to do IU best to give Conditions are never so bad as imagination paints them nor so An art that serves its possessor well is that of remembering names.

them the best-evening paper pub Led ia Kansas. good..

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