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Udall Herald from Udall, Kansas • 1

Udall Herald from Udall, Kansas • 1

Publication:
Udall Heraldi
Location:
Udall, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

E)on't, Be a Mail-order Fiend, Support: Home Industry, Take Your Home Paper, VMM THE TJLL HERALD, 4 I .51.00 A YEAR IN ADVANCE COWLfcY COUNTY, KANSAS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1914 VQL. I. NO. 3. of The Meanspgi Ihnry Tmn ESrdered.

Henry Timm wa? kuind.dpnd nl licroj five miles norfu'efhere Wednesday. jiad been shot in the back 'of he heucj I A Story for all I Thinkiii Mei 1 A Story tor all I Thinking Me JfiSB a MM i I and Women i 77ie! United'" 1 Act As Tho Simaritan to The European liter. :3 VAVAVAV.V.V.V.W.V.'.V.'.S-rt-V.V'l Si- and the 6uppositiou is that he wos muu dered and robbed. The body wab fouocj near a tub of water in tlie house eie he was doing his washjng. and make them American by allowing Ninety-five dollars was fpund in tt(e.

them to hoist tne Anierican flag. So bottom of his trunk and papers showing N07 rmageddon has a real meaning npw have roaring in our ears the "der of the captains and the rig of a continent in conflict. If this le had about $2,500 on time depost in a that avenue 6f profit irom-' the war is closed tons. Aiid the vessels w-liich would be glacl tp cany our- wheat, cot-touj maizej and meats are parryi'-S armies forthe invasion of empires, and bank at Mulvane. was believed and generally thought that he either carried or kept a considerable amount of nion-; ey the house and that is the.

be-uq Armageddon, we shall never gufr fer that final of the nations. i ucvv theory why he was mnrdered. Mr. Timm was a batchelor and about supplies and niaterjal of war. This is yor'ing miracles, which go forth unto, 53 years o( He ha? a brother John v--lm nf ihe earth and or the whole somewhere ia this neighborhood and a brother livng in Missouri, who has been notified and will come here an4 look after the burial of his brother's remains and also take care of the est3te.

The officers and Coroner were no: ifi- ed and inquest held, after which the mains were buried near his latliac world, to gather them to the battle of -v haf great'day c-J God Ahnlghty.r Civilization Uself stands in jeopardy. nations whiph are at war are the of enljghtenment for the earth, aiid they are entrapped into freascn tp their trust. For, after all has been said on the sides of virtues, developed by war, we know that these peoples will not be the sarfle peoples after this tornado hap swept thejn. For the destruction of a Galveston, the a id mother in' the Littleton graveyard. tue shoqk to our commerce and ousmess.

When the war ends, and at, sometime during the war if it' continues ttirany months, this' lack in all probability be supplies. Where the fhipi? will come from we cannot see, bat they will come). When Europe must have food, the transportation will be provided. ready the British Government has some extent solved-the problem by its guaranty of shipments of all grain tp British potts. or later the freight will nioye.

Then for a while in' fact( as long as the war lasts and for some time after it close3--we shallmake -nureh money out of it. The grain fields; of and the Balken states, and that garden spot, Hunaway Beaih, r.fr. R. C. Atheru, about z.

and Jiiighter, while on their way tu Udall Vp.rlnp&uav with relatives of Lamed, i shaking and burning qf a San Francisco, the overw' fining of a. Davton, the of Omaha, or the inundating of a Johnstown tftere is a remedy in mutual help and intensified industry and enterprise. These calamities come from man's defeat at the hands of Nature; but this infernal thing in Europe is man's defeat of himself. The index "who were to take the train hcrs ji' their bourne, had a serious runaway resulted. in the deuth of Mr, Uhern.

who live at Akron, about i.eveij Ues sotheast of here, and the seri his ljiiry of Mrs- Woods, of Lamed, ians. The other three occupants of thej arriage escaped -with minor injuries, matched and shaKcu up." C' the Danube Valley, will be ravaged by armies and lie fallow for want of hu3': Dandmen. In the meantime railways will be torn up, engines ruined; all sorts of machinery destroyed, cars worn out and shot, to pieces, rnilb.hnt Athern received a- dislocated hi;) number of everything good will stand lower after it is over. The pressure -ihd iutrrnal injuries; which caused hi ealh about jater. Woods; of LarnecJ, receiveda fracture of the skull and a dis; gauge of efficiency will fall when it is I idewn, arrested.

fac? nver. Iricled. it will never Denver. location of the left shoulder, her face. long jplimb to the uplands of the yas also cut and lacerated until she, ae nnrpr.ripnizable.

altlioueh the phy A NovsHzation of Eugene Walter Famous Drama by Webster Denison PRETTY, young wife wants fine clothes and a luxurious living; her husband cannot afford to give them to her hon I is not gained' by sudden leaps; atd a long, tragic- slip' like this must be re-J gained by effort which would otherwise lory nanus win iu iuc ui.b.- demand for manufactured products of many sorts will be enormous and where else will they come from but the United States' The work left undone by these worse-than idle hands, the replacement of the manufactured articles destroyed, must fall largely to the factories and the workingmen. of the United States. be great grain-producing and meat-producipg peoples of Eorope are actively engaged in the war. It began in the sicians in attendance say she recover, Wq-da' 2-year-old jaby was uninjured with the exception it a minor 'scratch or two. and Mrs.

-vVoods' sister was slightly injured an jcratched abqiit the face and body. Miss Atherd was uninjured and a3: iisted in caring, for the injured. Those injured we carried into thq a-jine of Chas. Jylyers and Dr. Simonq vas called, who called Dr.

Guy, nid Dr. Guv, of Whineld, the be unnecessary. A 'thousand years frcm'juow) the world will be suffering morally and. spiritually from the effects pf ths' uuthinl able thing which has come upon We may, have gained will be lower than the lev- aIo should have stood if n( A thni'ii where jj the Berchtold had riot thought heart of the food-producing center of ever) thing possible was done for 7 DC yiUU-Hlc iiuuwv.i the Danubian provinces and HPy will effect the United' Stales? the. Balkans.

It suffering ones. Mr; Myers is to be co neuded on his quick action in securing estly He finally satisfies her desires at the cost of his honor arid in the end he pays the price. You've seerj this situation yourself man-; times probably. A big, gripping, realistic story that handles the theme without gloves- a startling picture of the extent to which the lust for wealth the get-rich-quick idea spreads its poison through the whole structure of character. Oar Next Serial You'll Find It Well Wort Reading! lof My we shall stifier1 with the rest of aid at once.

thorn was fine of CowleV COUU- l.Virt ftHail-nnt be so deeply the best fields in the world, those jpf Germahy and France. And when Russia flew to arms the region of the Old oa mi.ht be if we plunged iVll. IHUVI 4. prosperous farmers and well liiied. t.

T-Urt ran.ina ,1 (ho Klnnrl rvf nnr fftl- lllilU3 111 Wlp t. oy all woo Knew huji. mo vere removed tp his borne that evening. 'Mr T. Woods of Lamed, husband of.

World most like our Mississippi Valley, was -affected. When the reservists, of these nations. twere called 'o the colors iTis our jpQor brethren in Europe but we, too, shall be degrad-ft blood lust turned loose upon the seriously injured ladv was notified. they left the harvests unrea'ped and the nd arrived at the bedside ot his wire bout 1:30 Thursday morning, As we'eo to oiess Thursday night alj 6rld's psyology. No man liveth shocks of grain to waste in the rains.

The autum work will go undone save as nqr dieth unto him- the injured mentioned in 'the above i.uivv e. We are members one of it can be performed by the old men, awav are reported as uoiug nuc. the women, and the children. And lier. More man ever oeiuic iuc whole provinces will be wasted with fire A LETTER TO BDALL FRSESS, i'j's history afe the pations members orintVipr.

These neoDles are our and sword. The paralysis of war strikes EllWfcu.h.. 1 .1 mnHioro ae V'fll as down agricultural efficiency, and un "fcrs anq Every drop "of blood certainty deters the husbandmen from ren. Pawtucket, R. Aug.

24, 1914, car Frip.rids at Udall: torn and reut by war, money will com; 1 blood flowing "in the veins of of textiles and shoes. It js said that a a new pair of shoes every. effort. To the United States, Argentina, and Canada will fall the task of rn vraM today I left your com, to the, United States. Provided at last YV fcricans.

From the breast of every -'I in arms there runs the threads of 'iinltir i rf mv work here in the city of with a good currency system, we should thirty We "shall have to make the cotton, the woolen goods, and the feeding the hundreds of millions who must otherwise be' left destitute. No be able to extend the field for. the em to us. We feel 1 ploynientof American capital in foreign shoes to supply this enormous and ab4 shortage of ships, it would seem, will thrilling, from man toman and from Pawtuket, RhodQ Island. That Sunday evening service, which was held out' in the open, is one I shall never forget; and the many good wishes trade and to increase the amount of family to family, the hatreds let loose be long left unsupplied under these nonnal The cotton clothes and woolen blankets destroyed in re foreign capital enlisted in- the stable, across the water.

This is a part of the conditions tor hunger must be served. nroSnerous. peace-blessed industries of and The conditions in cereals will exist in spiritual penalty we shall pay as mem I "God speeds" given me uyuc vy-of Udall, I am constantly thauklul America. If these things be true, it pie bets of the white race for this white meats. The breeding herds of Europe will be a blessing to the world as well The year has been a one.

will be sacrificed to supply the sharp man's suicidal war, for, He as to" us. If we were embroiled in -war, who calls us to His- seivo The immediate pinch is on us at this treats, burned in' the destruction of. sup-, ply depots and abandoned in marches, "ruined by weather, and worn out in campaigning, we shall be called upon to manufacture in large measure, and we shall no only make the oottOii stuffs, but we shall sell the cotton from which they are manufactured the world's outlook would be indeed 11a fails writing. At some ports there is an ac biack. The one clear spot in the sky A are uefidinK Jesus Christ as needs while transportation is interrupted, and a shortage will be created which will be long in filling up.

The United States will be called On for every pound of its supplies, meats at high prices. ol against the exportation of atfr these davs and He is neeu- their r.rnf1nr.ts5 an embargo rendered of the world is the United States of America, at peace, ready to do anything in her power to restore peace to others, onri rallinc for more workers in ma ing necesVJ "fi' lack of ships to carry tu. a 1 11.. great field of service. May He De iue Horses and mules will be sacrificed them.

Congress has done what it should As the great neutral nation, our securities will no doubt be sought for and full of shops, factories, mines, farms, have done years ago-opened American Master of every heart ana lite oui community and guide you in your work and highways, all which may be used in enormous numbers and will increase in value in this country. The temptation to sell them and adopt motor ve- (registry to all foreign-built ships; but it is too late; will be accounted as for and will be used to keep the earth froin the interest of your coinmuniiy auu the be ttsruieut of humanity Sincerely-. for our fields for investment favorably passed upon by capitalists. We may hot be able with perfect freedom to take over ships, but money has no flag, and ith almost every other great nation mder the flags they flew at the open- hides in their stead will cause a further nr. nt t- over shifting from dratt ammais to macnines.

Ida nu Hostilities. -v (Continued on page IV. a time of ww Armiea wear gut enormous quantities XIC DUa.

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About Udall Herald Archive

Pages Available:
747
Years Available:
1914-1921