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The Silverdale Record from Silverdale, Kansas • 2

The Silverdale Record from Silverdale, Kansas • 2

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

'1 WWW This Space will be Occupied II II II II II II I II II II II II Hume Hume GENERAL MERCHANDISE SILVERDALE, KANSAS 7 3 wq 7ncaea 'ft "Vw ws GIFTS IN PROPER SPIRIT. HISTORY WAS NOT TAUGHT. Stewart-Temple The Silverdale Record. SILVERDALE TOWNSITE CO. Published every Friday at Silver Money for Bible Society.

The American Bible Society has Just received a gift of $300 from a man to whom forty years ago, while lying a wounded soldier in the hospital of Vicksburg, a New Testament was given. He wishes the money to be used as soon aB possible In placing the gospel in the hands of wounded soldiers in Japanese hospitals. Hardware Company. I Building Material, fehiugles, Sash, Doors and Screens. a.

Agent. mHMIHHH.IHI4.HIHHMHHIUMIH.H,IHII dale, Kan. by Wood Lowtrian, Ed ors Recognition by Colleges of Importance of American Story. A little more than thirty years ago a boy could enter Harvard college and! after four years graduate with highest honors without knowing of the existence of the declaration of independence or when the constitution of the United States was framed, says i aid .1 MMMWMIIHIMIW.lM.IIH SUBSCRIPTION RATE. $1.00 per year in advance.

I J. R. BURTON, I i i Empress Eugenie Is 80. Empress Eugenie, once the most beautiful, now considered the most Advertising' rates made known and Calls answered promptly. pathetio figure in Europe, recently on application.

Significance of Recent Benefactions to Colleges. After all, the principal use of the college is as a place where the next generation is to get right ideas of what is worth while In life itself. The mere tacts which, to the ignorant, seem the advantages of education, are of minor importance. We hear much in the periods of college commencements of the necessities of the modern university in the way of enlarged endowments and increased equipment Some of this talk is, of course, reasonable enough. It is addressed mainly to the rich as a demand for the recognition by them of a duty of generosity, one which in our days has had a most remarkable response.

But apparatus Is an impossible substitute for Ideals, and the best endowment of a college is the character of its graduates. The $2,000 bequest, for example, to his Alma ilater, which the will of the late William H. Baldwin contained, was small if considered as a mere matter of money, but his character and the ideals of public I entered on ner eignuem year. IHH.IIHMMHHI,MMMMHHHHimiW.WMMl Application made at the Silverdale, Kansas, postoffice for second-class mail KNEW ONLY ONE BmR. rates.

Convivial Irishman's Misunderstanding Henry Cabot Lodge in the Reader Magazine. What was true of Harvard was true of other universities and colleges. American history was not included in the scheme of the higher education. Boys entering college were required to know something of the history of Greece and 1 Rome; but not of their own country. During the four years of the college course they had opportunity to study the history of England and Europe, but never to learn aught of the United States, This condition of education was merely an indication of an attitude of mind then passing away, but which had once been predominant.

The usual opinion seems to have been during the first half of the nineteenth century that there was no American history, worth Ben Lowman, i Barber Shop. Quite Natural. Friday, August 18, 1905. A Cincinnati man was describing the dinner in London that admitted Joseph H. Choate to the society of the Job -JPrlnting.

Good Courteous treatment. Laundry leaves Tuesday. i Old Benchers of the Inner Temple. "Mr. Choate was in his best mood, The Record is prepared he said.

"With epigrams, witticisms, and anecdotes he kept the table in a to furnish its patrons with continuous roar. first-class iob work of all "Perhaps he made his most telling telling, apart from the adventures of kinds at lowest possible fig impression with a story about an im the revolution, which were both con poverlshed young Irish gentleman, the IRONS HARKLEROAD, Livery, Feed and Sale Stables. Give us a call and be satis-fied. 1 1 i ures. Honorable Denis Bellew.

nected so closely with the history of Europe that they might be deemed of service which his life expressed form part of that permanent endowment which alone makes a university great The memory of a railroad president ready to sacrifice. If need be, his position, rather than lose an opportunity for usefulnea on an unpaid committee of citizens banded together for Important civic service is a rarer and more precious contribution to the fibtr of university life than any mere material bounty from ravenous fin "He said that Mr. Bellew, driven forth by poverty from his father's es Importance. Daffy Dialogues. MMWM.M.

They were talking at the grocery, George, about Norway withdrawing from the union with Sweden. -'The grocer always seems to know everything that's ring on. He said It was per HUME HUME, tate, went to London to seek his fortune. "He had been a gay, convivial blade and in the little home village he was missed. There was not a poacher nor a roisterer within ten miles that hadn't a soft spot for Denis in his heart Word one day passed about that up Midland Valley Restaurant.

Confectionery, Cold Drinks, Short Orders, Cigars and Tobaccos T. SHERWIN. General Merchandise. gers unclutched by hypocrisy or the fear of death. Oeorge W.

Alger in the Atlantic Monthly. Hardware, Shoes, Hats, Caps and Clothing. Paint to Please the Dead. It is at least eighty years since old Abbott Roby of died. He had hated black and dark colors all his life, and in his last sickness art.

begged that he might not be buried in a black coffin. A coffin of any other hue -was then unknown, and his request was received' in- silence or with Cold Drinks, Cigars, Tobacco. Short Orders.H Silverdale Townsite Co. 4 fectly riht for Norway to withdraw. But where can-' she go, Oeorge?" I Where can who got" "Wly; Korway." "I don't think she really intends to go anywh.re, my Jove.

-1 fancy shell settle dowa right next to Sweden. It may not be pleasant, but she's used to It, and If she' finds she can't agree with her1 neighbors she can build a high board fence between them." "A spite fence, like the McGringle'a and the Bellingers', Oeorge?" "Yes, something like that" "It will seem awfully unpleasant for a I guess. But, of cowas, they needn't take milk of the same milk man, nor' patronize the same iceman, nor buy their rolls from the same baker's wagon." "Of course not, my dear." "But mercy "Itiwill be dreadfully Inconvenient when either one wants to borrow something." "I'm afraid It will, my dear. I guess they didnt think of that" Cleveland Plain Dealer. expostulation.

The old man became Board by day or Week. at the castle news had been received of Denis. The village at once became excited, and a deputation of a half dozen or so was soon on its way to see the old lord. "'My said the spokesman, 'is It true ye've gotten news o. yer son Denisr "'Aye, true enough.

News at last, boys said his lordship. 'Faith, then, an' phwat might the bhoy be doin' up in London was the next question. "He has been called" to the bar the lord answered proudly. "The deputation looked at one another, for the phrase was new to them. Finally, in a loud whisper, one said: "'01 don't know what thot manes; but from what OI remember of the bhoy, he didnt want no callinV Pittsburg Gazette, enraged, and, sitting up in bed, shouted: "If you bury me in a black coffin I'll get up, now I tell ye!" The funeral was an event in the" small town: It was conducted by the C.

HARKLEROAD Masons, with ritual, procession and music, and when the community was Williams Stokes RESTAURANT. Cold Drinks, Cigars, Tobaccos, Short Orders. Board by day or week. Try us once. admitted to view the remains it was General Merchandise, Cigars and Tobacco.

seen that a dutiful son had painted a wide white stripe around the coffin, to the end that Roby's perturbed spirit might rut In peace..

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About The Silverdale Record Archive

Pages Available:
12
Years Available:
1905-1905