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The Searchlight from Arkansas City, Kansas • 3

The Searchlight from Arkansas City, Kansas • 3

Publication:
The Searchlighti
Location:
Arkansas City, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FELL FROM THE 8KIES. S. P. GOULD FIKE, Ask S.TOECAMP, GEO. HETCALF.

Sumner Co. what they thinks of our buggies STEPHENS BUGGY CO. theory That Precious Stones Came ta Earth as Meteorites. Diamonds from the skies, conveyed to earth In meteoric showers, Is a the ory first broached by Meydenhauei, tays the Chicago Inter-Oceen. The diav.

mond, he Bays, cau be of cosmic origin only, having fallen as a meteorite at a Jate period of the earth's formation. The localities where diamonds aid found contain the residues of not very compact meteoric which may have fnllen In hl'fitnrlr upph nnri nona. LIGHT, CYCLONE, WINDSTORM, LIFE and ACCIDENT INSURANCE. Room ti, Isabella Block. J.

II. KNICKERBOCKER Chief Justice Brewer who is visiting at his old home in Leavenworth says that President Roose velt will not be a candidate for a third term. When questioned trated more or less deeply according to the more or less resistant character of the surface where tbey fell. The most Btrlklng confirmation of the theory comes from Arizona. Her' on a broad plain over an area about Ave miles In diameter were scattered 1,000 to 2,000 masses of metallic iron, the fragments weighing from half a ton to a fraction of an ounce.

There Is little doubt these masses formed part of a meteorVo Bhower, Uneven vo record exists as to when the fall tooK place. Curiously enough, hear the center where most of the meteor-rtes have been found is a crater with ragged edges, three-quarters of a mile In diameter and about 600 feet deep, bearing exactly the appearance which jvould be produced had a mighty mass of iron or fallen star struck the prnnnrt BfttoHnc all rHrnotirma. The Mother's Appeal. Mother---O, Mr. Saloonkeeper, I beg you don't sell The stuff to my boy that may send him to hell; Kemember how dear to my heart he must be, And let him Tonight return sober to me.

Salooxkheper They licensed me, madam, to sell him the stuff; The fool ought to know when he's taken enough. You can't expect me to refuse all who come; My business is to sell drinkers their mini. Mother Mr. Saloonman, I beg you to think How much it may mean if yon sell him the drink. His soul is in peril, don't wreck it for gain Don't make it another young life you have slain.

Saloonkeeper. Go yonder, and talk to the men who have said I may sell to the voters who stand at the head Of the church where you pray; don't whine away In this place they have licensedgo yonder, Isayl Mother Mr. Saloonman, they say you may sell, But whose is the sin, if you send him to sell? He buys at your bar what must bring him to shame; For all that may follow, God holds you to blame. Saloonkeeper-No, madam, the sin is not mine at the Nor for it shall I be the only man cursed; The men who permit me to sell are the ones To settle with God, if I ruin their sons. Selected.

We do all kinds of Upholstering and Repair Work on Furnitnre and all kinds of String Instruments. Also Furniture Polish always for sale. Call up Main Phono 22 and we will send our wag- on and get your urni-tui and return it. about Bryan the chief justice said the country would be safe in his hands. He linked Roosevelt I ami Bryan together as being the two great men of the United States.

SOUTH SUMMIT ST. "It is stupid to talk about the rights of the saloon. Decent pub and bulled Itself under the surface. Dr. Foots In cutting a section of this Kansas Druggists Arrested.

lic opinion has resolved that the saloon is a social pest and that meteorite, found the tools were in Jured by something vastly harder than metallic iron. He examined the sped- Fredonia, 6 E. D. has no rights." New York Trib une. Alikesell, assistant attorney gen eral for Wilson county, instituted The Weekly Capital of Topeka three suits against each of two Neo uieu cueaiu ttiij ouu bwii cuici tup aounced to the scientific world thai the Arizona meteorite contained black and transparent diamond.

This discovery was verified by Professors Fried el and Nolssan, who found that contained three varieties of carbon, diamond, graphite and amorphous car and the Skakchlight, both one desha druggists who have permits to sell intoxicating liquors, a crim year for 65c. See adv. in another .1 bon. inal action, an injunction suit and column. AH kinds of feed at Jackson's feed store.

6 1 FATAL1TIE8 IN THE ALPS. a suit against their permit bond. The druggists are L. P. Gal breath ALRERI BUNCHARD AND ED.

BROWN There is one safe Way to pre and Ross Porter. In the criminal Craze for Edelweiss Has Cost Many Lives. The craze for edelweiss has eauseA vent the drug stores from engag STICK. action each is charged with thirteen counts, eleven sales and two ing in the saloon business, and that is the passage of a law requiring Go to Jackson's, the best and checpest feed yard in the city. tf Saturday, in Judge Walton's court the joint cases of Albert Blanchard and Ed Brown were nuisance counts.

Under the thir that a druggist's permit to sell in teenth count in each information a toxicants for medicinal purposes called for trial. Each were found search and seizure warrant was is shall apply only when a physi guilty of six sales and maintaining sued ordering the search of the cian's certificate is given and the medicine mixed by the druggist. basement story of the Hurst building in Neodesha. The defendants many accidents, such as happened to a man named Custer, who was killed on the elopes of the Herranruetli while trying to gather a bunch of these flow-era. Quite seventeen deaths during this year are attributed to the fool-hardiness of people in endeavoring to gather this flower in nearly inaccessible places, saya the London Express.

During the last fortnight of August twenty-nine people lost their lives, including two ladies. The saddest accident, however, of the year. took plaoe on the 26th of last month, when Rev. John Hartley, vicar of Exton, near Oakham, lost his life near the Red Shelter, St. George, in the Engadine.

The clergyman was accompanied by the best guide of the a Is tr let, a man named Sebastian Platz. Mr. Hartley was on his honeymoon, and took his tf 1 i j. i i. This would shut off the signing up were arrested Saturday and brough of a "death warrant" by an.appli a nuisance and fined $300 and costs on each count, making a total of $2100 each and 540.

days in jail each. Both cases were appealed to the district court. Bonds required of each of $2100 which was furnished. The case of R. W.

to EYedonia. Each gave $1,000 cant wherein he secures liquor for a beverage under perjury, No druggist should" be permitted to bond. The Hurst building was searched and "about 165 cases of keep a book, where an old daily Rochford was dismissed, there being no evidence upon which to whiskey boozer can sign up for wiiw uau -way uy mo njuuuiaiu 'an him, leaving her at the Boval Siv 115 9 convict. the "chills" or some conjured up ailment. The drug store that does "Wets" Win.

Salina, Aug. 4 Judge R. Hut. Ha then proceeded toward gummlt, but on reaching the Cra Aguzza he fell over a precipice, drag ging with him the guld Platz. During the last few days many more accidents have taken place, the most remarkable one happening on Mont Blanc to a famous guide named Bairn at, who died from heart failure whea descending the giant of the Alps.

a legitimate business is condemned by the public sometimes by reason of some other druggist who violates his permit. R. Rees, judge of this district, today granted a temporary re empty bottles belonging to the two druggists were seized and are now in the custody of the sheriff. The druggists to obtain their permits were each compelled to give a bond in the sum of $1,000 as a condition that they would conform to the law in the making of sales of liquor. It is for a for feiture of these bonds that two of the suits are brought.

The injunction suits were brought to restrain the further illegal sale of intoxicating liquor by the druggists. The records in the office of the probate judge each of straining order to prevent Mayor Shields and the other city officials The remains of Frank Clark, umy iwo aays ago six more aipm disasters war reported. son of Mrs. Stella Jones of this city, who was killed at Garden City last week by the explosion of from holding, an election in the proposed new Fifth ward for two members of the city council. The ALWAYS BLUE-EYED BABIES.

a Santa Fe engine boiler, was case was decided on a law point Eyes of Infants Are Never Any Other Color. It is not generally known that ths brought here Monday morning by that the council could" not repeal Mrs. Jones and interment made in an reliance by resolution. The yes of infants are always blue, and that they do not begin to assume then permanent color until the sixth or eighth week. There is, therefore, truth as well as poetry In the state Parker cemetery, The young Fifth ward was created by the Wilson county show that in July.

temperance members of the city ii 11 i i Sells Big Line of Furniture And Stoves At Low Prices. Ships Lots of Goods To Other Towns. ment that babies look about them i each of the druggists sold about 165 cases of "kidney trouble." Galbreath -sold council, tne noerai memoers opposing it. When the resolution "blue-eyed wonder." The wonder may be left to peets and philosophers, but the blue is always a practical fact. It is not uncommon to see different about the same amount in June.

was put to a vote the liberal members walked out of the council colors in the eyes of the same person, and even In the same eye half of the Iris is sometimes -brown, and the other half blue. There is a popular notion John Parrish of Atlanta, who room. Attorneys for the mayor stated today that the case would that dark eyes are stronger than light has disappeared two or three times under very peculiar circumstances nes. There is no truth In this except be carried to the Supreme court. far as they are better protectee against excessive light.

Hence light All rural mail fellows must un derstand that no wooden boxes go with Uncle Sam. The boxes must be made of galvanized sheet yes prevail among Northern nation and dark eyes "among races who llvt la the aim of a tropical sua. But It Was Not Stationary. It was a ramshackle little branch railway; but It was the best they had the neighborhood, and they put up with it, says an English exchange. It so happened, a little while ago, that a newly arrived resident was expecting a fowlhous to reach the local Charing Cross, and he chartered a man was killed while making his way to Colorado.

Clyde Caldwell and Frank Cissne were arrested Saturday night on the charge of burglarizing the English Chop house. They were taken before Justice Mcln-tire and their preliminaries set for today. H. S. Ilines has been employed in the defense of Caldwell.

Mrs. S. A. Druley has returned from an extended visit with relatives in Atchison and Topeka, Kansas. Ut for ThUr Ham The wife of District Attorney and her little daughter wen itanding at a window of their couis try house looking out over a meadow where there were cows.

"1 want to go out there," eaid' the ohlld. "But you musn't," said her mothe. "Why?" "What do you suppose those cow would do with their horns now if went out there!" queried the mother. The child thought awhile, and thea answered: "Maybe they would blow them you say papa blows Yorl Tiroes. or sheet steel, and be of certain dimension.

The heavy and continued rains in the first part of August has was arre3ted in "Oklahoma this week, charged with forging his father's name to checks amounting to a considerable sum of money. Parrish is the fellow who a year ago claimed he was doped and robbed in this city and placed in a car of corn and shipped to Texas. His alleged crooked work will be watched with interest. It is said that Marion county, which is the home of Governor Ilochis free from licensed drug stores to sell whiskey. Bro.

Hoch certainly believes in the old adage of "keeping your own dooryard dray and trundled it off to the to i broken the heated term, and we him hitherto unknown station to fetch it. Arrived there, he saw his look for an early fall and winter. a purchase, loaded it on to his wagon and started for home. On the way1 he met a man In uni form, with the word "StatloD muster" on hli cap. Sol.

Long visited home folks Sunday from Anthony where he is engaged in prosecuting some whiskey cases. "Ef what the merry springtime nave yon, got on that dray?" he asked. "My fowlhouBe, of course," was the reply. "Fowlhouse be blithered waa the Kreamer has returned from St. Louis.

Justly indignant responsa "Thatt tfceiutleal.

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About The Searchlight Archive

Pages Available:
360
Years Available:
1906-1907