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The Labor Chronicle from Leavenworth, Kansas • 6

The Labor Chronicle from Leavenworth, Kansas • 6

Location:
Leavenworth, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

CITY BRIEFS. $20.00, $16.50 and $15.00 Heavy weight Suits. Among them some Alfred Benjamin's make. All desirable patterns at $13.00, $12.50 and $10.00. WE HAVE ABOUT 50 SUITS AND DON'T WANT TO CARRY THEM OVER EVERY SUIT GUARANTEED.

Daileyar Burr, HE FORMERLY LIVED HERE Mayor William Oliver Gould is Dead at San Francisco. WELL KNOWN IN THIS CITY Was With Jim Lane's Kansas Brigade Preceding the War After Which Was Detalled for Duty In Leavenworth. Major William Oliver Gould, for years one of Leavenworth most widely known citizens, died recently in San Francisco, He lett Leavenworth for San Francisco in 1875. The memorial prepared by the commandery of the state of California, military order of the Loyal Legion of the United States says: Oliver Gould was born June 29, 1898, at Exter, New Hampshire. was residing in Kansas at the outbreak of the Civil war, and enlisted as a private in company Fifth Kansas volunteer cavalry, August 17, 1863, and was but a few days later commissioned as first lieutenant of engineers and served as engineer officers and assistant adjutant general of General J.

H. Lane's Kansas brigade 1 until the spring of 1862, in southwestern Kansas and southwestern Missouri. He was then detached for recruiting duty at Leavenworth, and assisted in raising the Tenth, Eleventh and Twelfth regiments of Kansas volunteers. "'In June 1863, he was assigned by orders from the war department, as assistant commissary of musters at Fort Gibson, Indian Territory, and in November, 1863, was commissioned and mustered as adjutant Fourteenth Kansas cavalry, and marched with the regiment from Fort Scott, to Fort Smith, Ark. March 9, 1864, he was promoted to be major Fourteenth Kansas cavalry a and was ordered to Fort Leavenworth where he continued on duty until he was honorably mustered out of service, August 11, 1865.

He was elected grand commander of the Kansas body of the Knights Templar in 1868 and served three years. "Before the civil war Major Gould was engaged in business in Leavenworth and after the war he resumed his former occupation and remained for ten years, occupying many positions of trust. He was grand commander of the Knights Templar of Kansas, and upon his removal to San Francisco in 1875 he organized and was the first commander of the Golden Gate commandery of San Francisco. He also took a deep interest in the Grand Army of the Republic and the Loyal Legion." MOTHERS can safely give Foley's Honey and Tar to their children for coughs and colds, for it contains no opiates or other poisons. Sold by Mehl Schott.

REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Real estate transfers reported daily by the abstractors, N. H. Wood room 25 Ryan block. J.

W. Niehaus to G. M. Carter, lot 11, block 29 in Railroad addition, $37. Lizzie Saxton to Danl.

Shanahad, lot 28, black 1, in Stille's 2d subdivision, $300. Jas. D. Parish to J. H.

Bell, lots 7. 8, block 39, in town of Fairmount, $370. Sami. N. Crosby and wife to James D.

Parish, same, $370. J. W. Niehaus to S. J.

McNaughton, west 25 feet of lot 9, block 34, Railroad addition, $35. Nova Z. Walling and wife to E. A. Kelly, lot 12, block 33, in Clark Rees' addition, 8100.

Walter Mason and wife to Alma Renter, lots 11 and 12, block 40, Central subdivision, $500. John Pruess and wife to Geo. H. German, lot 37, block 103, Day Macaulay's subdivision, $400. FOLEY'S Honey and Tar cures the cough caused by attack of la grippe.

heals the lungs. Sold by Mehl Schott. Back Pay Amounted to $1,005. Howard G. Palmer of the Soldiers' Home been granted a pension of $8 8 mon has with back pay amounting to $1,005.

Palmer served in the 106th New York infantry. THE most reliable preparation for kidney troubles on the market is Foley's Kidney Cure. Sold by Mehl Schott. I Love You." Attend masquerade ball tonight at G. A.

R. ball. Bishop Hendrix will lecture at Fairmount next Friday night. Louis and Al. Rothsobild, of Kansas City, spent Sunday in Leavenworth.

The Christian church of Wallula will give valentine social on February 14, Eugene Wohifrom has been appointed pharmacist at the Soldiers' Home. Mrs. Nathan Kantrowitz left yesterday for Chicago to be gone two weeks on business. Maria A. Webb has sold to James Webb seventy five acres in Kiokapoo township for $2,800.

Leave orders for piano tunning with Mrs. Cunningham, of 410 Miami street. Both Phones. The Methodist ladies will give a box social in the school house at Kiokapoo next Friday night, Packers flour mill men attend the ball tonight. The postoffice at Joy, Leaven worth county, Kansas, has been discontinued.

All mail should be directed to Easton. I Love In the district court Saturday evening Nora Reichling was granted a divorce from Bert Reichling on the grounds of extreme cruelty. There are many applicants for the position of carrier on the new rural free delivery route which has been established out of Wallula. bad John his E. pension Rust, of increased the to Soldiers' $14, Home, and Fer- has dinand Snider, also of the Home, has had his pension increased The Reverend Trupper, formerly pastor of St.

Paul's Episcopal church, of Leavenworth, has been appointed chaplain of the new federal penitentiary at Atlanta, Ga. Valentines, school supplies and picture frames. G. C. TRUE, 406 South Fifth St.

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Klasinski, living three miles west of town, celebrated their twenty wedding anniversary Thursday, A and, Friday night they gave a dance for the young people. Get your seats reserved (for I Love You' at opera house Tuesday eve Feb. 11, George Hedges, colored, was sentenced to sixty days in jail by Judge Gillpatrick Saturday for shooting another negro 1 in North Leavenworth several months ago.

Hedges' victim recovered. The bishop of Kansas, the Rt. Rev. Frank R. Millspaugh, begins next week his tour of the churches of his diocese.

He will be at St. Paul's Episcopal church in Leavenworth on April 13. The funeral of John Finn who died at St. John's hospital Saturday, took place from the Cathedral at 2 o'clock. Sunday afternoon.

The deceased carried a life insurance policy for $2,000 in the C. M. B. A. Nearly all of the army officers and their wives of Fort Leavenworth have received invitations to attend the big banquet of the Commercial club in Kansas City on February 25.

The officers will attend in full uniform. Benjamin Harding, who was once arrested for constructive treason and tried at Leaven worth, is suffering from a stroke of paralysis at his home in Doniphan county, and is not expected to live. He is one of the pioneers of Kansas, having settled in the state in 1846. Mrs. W.

J. VanEman and children will make their future home at Bellville, New York where Mrs. VanEman lived before coming to Leavenworth. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Stacey, reside at Bellville now. Mrs. VanEman and family will leave for their future home about March 1. Chart is now open at Fritche's for four- -act drama, I Love You." Presented by the Young Men's Catholic Casino at opera house next Tuesday ing. Walter Brown and Everett Ewing, both colored, were arraigned before United States Commissioner Bond today on a charge of destroying government property.

They shot at mail boxes along one of the rural free delivery routes in the country. They were placed under bonds of $500 each in default of which they were sent to jail. NO MORE ORGAN PREMIUMS. New Ruling of Postoffice Department Effects Many Kansas Papers. Scripps-McRae Telegram.

TOPEKA, Feb. 10-Several country weekly papers in Kansas have been caught by a new order issued by (E. C. Madden, third assistant postmaster general. These papers have been conducting organ contests in order to swell their subscription lists.

They would advertise to give an organ to the school whose pupils would turn in the most cash subscribers. The third assistant postmaster general has made a ruling that subscriptions not obtained because of the value of a newspaper as a news or literary journal but secured through a voting contest are not legitimate within the meaning of the law and has ordered such subscriptions held upthy the postmasters. One of the peculiar effects of this that it will compe some postmasters who also run papers to hold up their own papers. An effort will be made to get the order modified. AT Winfleld, June 12.

Scrippa-McRae Telegram. CHERRYVALE, Feb. 10-The Third district Republican congressional committee met here Saturday evening and called the convention for Winfield, June 12. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The best and most famous compound in the world to conquer aches and kill pains.

Cures Cuts, heals Burns and Bruises, subdues Inflammation, masters Piles. Millions of Boxes sold yearly. Works wonders in Boils, Ulcers, Felons, Skin Eruptions. It cures or Do pay. 250 at Mehl Schott' drug store.

OLD COUPLE IS DEAD Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schutz Dead at Their Home in This City. DIED BUT FEW HOURS APART Mr. Schutz Died Early Sunday Morning and His Wife Followed this Morning -Both HI.

Four D- -Lived in worth Many Years. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schutz are both dead at their home, 927 Ninth avenue. Mr.

Schutz died at 1 o'clock Sunday morning of pneumonia fever and Mrs. Schutz died at 8 o'clock this morning of the same disease. They hnd been sick only about Joseph Schutz was born in Germany 72 years ago and had lived in Leavenworth a great many years. He was a stove mounter by occupation. Mrs.

Schutz was about 60 years of age The funeral arrangements have not been completed, but both will probably be buried at 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon. The deceased are survived by the followlag children: Albert Sobutz and Mra. Jacob Rohr, Leavenworth; Mrs. Joe Neisel Vancouver; George Schulz, Arizona; Edward Schutz, Hannibal, Joseph Sobutz, Detroit, Michigan; Frank Schutz, Santiago. California; Mike Schutz, Pueblo, Colo.

They are all expected here to attend the funeral. DECISION IS FAR REACHING From 3d army officers and partially of volunteer army officers at The Presidio, California, on June 8, 1900 on the charge of embezzlement. He was sentenced to serve three years in the federal prison at Fort Leavenworth. Captain Demming was received at t1 the prison on June 23, 1900 and on good time his sentence would expire in December, 1902. Captain Deming was employed on the staff corps of the subsistence department of the army with the rank of captain of volunteers.

The writ ordering Captain Demming's release will probably be issued some time this week. Judge Hook is expected home Wednesday and if he arrives then the writ will he issued by him. Otherwise Mr. Atwood will have Judge Thayer of St. Louis issue the writ for Captain Demming.

Fatal Boller Explosion. Lima, Feb. boiler of freight locomotive on the Lake Erie Western railroad exploded yesterday while the engine was standing on a siding near St. Marys. Fireman Floyd Brown, of Lima, was killed outright and Engineer Edward Casey, of Fremont, scalded so badly that' he died a few hours later.

A number of cars were wrecked. A defective crown sheet is supposed to have been the cause of the explosion. Six Days Go- As- You Please Team Race. New York, Feb. teams, made up of men of almost every nationality, started in the sixdays go-as-you-please team race in Madison Square garden at five minutes after 12 o'clock this morning.

No man is allowed to remain on the track more than 12 out of 24 hours. The winners of places will receive $5,000, which is to be awarded in prizes. Cancer Successfully Cultivated. London, Feb. to the Calcutta correspondent of the Daily Mail the India Medical Gazette announces that Dr.

Rost, of the Indian medical service, has successfully cultivated cancer and has infected a guinea pig with his culture. DON'T waste your money on worthless imitations of Rocky Mountain Tea Get the genuine made only by the Madison Medicine Co. A great family remedy. 35 cts. Magnet Drug Dept.

Dr. H. H. OLNEY Rooms 8 and 9, Mfg. Nat'l.

Bank Bld'g Leavenworth. Kansas. 0. E. DYSPEPSIA TABLETS will give immediato relief and positively cure Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Feeling of Distension st Pit of the Stomach, Bad Breath, Bad Taste, Sour Stomach, a Ravenous Appetite yet Unable to Eat, Furred Tongue, Sallow Come piexion, Flatulency, Acidity or Occasional Vom Iting and Irritability of Temper, Distress After Bating or any of the Symptoms of Indigestion, Dyspepsia or Stomach Troubles.

Infuses New Life into the Impoveri bed Gastric Juices and gives acting you a stomach. sweet Sent AD by mail wholesome, on receipt properly of price, and $1.00. C. E. CARTER 71 W.

Jackson Street, CHICAGO We, the undersigned Druggist, can recomnend these Tablets because we know what they "'o made of ED. C. FRITSCHE, Druggists, Cor. 4th and Delaware, Leavenworth, Kas. WANTED WANTED A first Inquire class cook 185-A, and Fort laundress! Leavenwages.

worth. WANTED- At Fourth once and good Pine cook street. Apply Hurd FOR SALE. FOR SALE- -Pianos, from 6 to $1,045 on cash terms or payments as low as 25 a week. Eleven diff rent makes from which to chonse.

F. G. Abernathy, 607 Chestnut street. Phone 48. FOR SALE- square piano at a bargain; party leaving city.

Address Chronicle. FOR RENT. FOR RENT -New Abernathy, pianos, 607 and Chestnut $5 per month street, Phone 48. FOR RENT- Seven room cottage. No.

512 Congross street, between second and Third avenues, gas, large cistern and cellar: also six room brick cottage, No 418 Olive street be tween Fourth Fifth streets, gas, large cis. tern and cellar, Both the above re are in good pair. and possession g. ven at once. For terms enquire of John D.

Edmond, 310 Olive street. be Third and Fourth streets. RECEIVED Advance Styles For Ascots and Four-in-Hand Ties. Exclusive Designs. S.

H. SOLO 414 Delaware Street. Warning! Let us fill your coal bin for you -cold weather is now on the way. Be prepared for it when it comes. M.

B. McCREARY, Tel. 471. 500 S. Fifth street.

Your yield will depend on the kind of oat seed you sow. It doesn't pay to buy poor seed, as you well know. Not too early to look around. Many have already been here to see our choice oat seed They liked the oats and took what they needed, because the seed was heavy, sound and sweet. Come in and see them.

A. M. GEIGER, OPPOSITE HAY MARKET. MAY 5, THE DATE. Republican County Convention Will be Held Here on that Date.

The Republican county central committee met in a Leaven worth Saturday afternoon for the purpose of selecting dates for two con-one to elect delegates to the state convention at Wichita and the other to elect delegates to the congressional convention at Holton. 5 was selected as the date on which the county convention to elect delegates to the state convention will be a held. It was decided to hold the primaries on May 3. The convention will be held in Leavenworth, probably at Turner hall. After considerable discussion it Was decided not to hold a convention to elect delegates to the codgressional convention, the delegates being selected by the committee.

The list of delegates follows: First ward, J. W. Skinner. Second ward, W. I.

Biddle and Ben Endres. Third ward, Louis Wulfekuhler and F. C. Schulte. Fourth ward, T.

W. Bell. Fifth ward, Martin Ehart and D. R. Anthony Jr.

Sixth ward, C. M. Moates and E. B. Baker.

Alexandria township, Sherman Medill. Sherman township, George Wetzel. Delaware township, J. M. Wilson.

Kickapoo township, John Sprong. High Prairie township.C W. Morrow. Tongonoxie township, Lincoln Ballou. Reno township, W.

C. Phoenicie. Easton township, John Nieman. Stranger township, J. Carter.

Fairmount township, H. G. Radloff. Soldiers' Home, C. H.

Dallas, A. C. Pyle, George Southwell, D. J. Baker, Moses Myers, William Van Houser, George German.

J. D. Fessler, Airs and Daniel Scouten, The delegates were instructed to vote for Charles Curtis for congressman. THE sky looks bluer, the sun shines brighter, a feeling of youth and strength creeps over the soul after taking Rocky Mountain Tea made by the Madison MediCo. 35 cents.

Magnet Drug Dept. Small Blaze Saturday. There was a small blaze at Henry A. Sheed's harness store, 607 Cherokee street, about 9:30 o'clock Saturday night which was extinguished before the fire department arrived. The damage was slight.

TRANCE CLAIRVOYANT MRS. C. L. GORDON, 510 Shawnee Street, Who sees it all, tells you all, and instantly gives you peace and happiness; I never ask a question, but before you utter a word I tell you all that you are interested in, all dates, facts, etc I tell you who are true to you and who are false, what hope you may have winning your desires. and what obstacles are in your way and how to remove them; how to make the most of I your talents articles and and prosper; locate how to get money; find lost treasures before entering into any business, law, divorce or marriage, consult me; drive away evil habits, stumbling blocks, bad luck and habits, and overcome all evil works, rivals and enemies; I never fail; I have brought about more happiness than any and all other mediums; others are being helped, why not you? If you are going to see a medium, why not 800 the very best? It costs no more; nothing to be paid in advance, and if not entirely satisfied, nothing at all; de you desire anything fairer than that! Hours, 9 a.

m. to 8 p.m. 510 SHAWNEE STREET, POSITICOPERA HOUSE. OPEN FOR BUSINESS. J.

P. COSGROVE Successor to ACKFNHAUSEN OS. with full line of fine and heavy Harness, Saddles, Whips, Blankets and Robes, and everything pertaining to a first class harness shop. Repairing promptly done and the manufacturing of fine harness a specialty. J.

P. COSGROVE 413 CHEROKEE STREET. DR. J. S.

WEVER. Eye. Ear, Nose. Throat. Ryan Bldg.

Hours 10-4; Sunday 1C-12 J. WELCH SONS, COAL, WOOD, LIME. CEMENT. HAY AND FEED. IOWA OATS.

old, Telephone 440 197 742-744 CHEROKEE STREET. PATRONIZE Wittenberg Bugbee, Practical and PLUMBERS. First-Class Workmanship at Reasonable Prices. TELEPHONES 572. 403 SHAWNEE ST.

All of the Latest Stationery can be Remember we are the only Opticians had in our Stationery Dept. in' Leavenworth. New Spring Styles in Wedding Silver. The most superb collection of Sterling Silver Fruit Dishes, Bon Bon Trays, Almond Trays, Nut Bowls, Tea Ware, Sugar and Creamers, Berry Sets, Fancy Trays, ever shown in Leavenworth. Just received and now on sale at WUERTH SON, Leading Delaware Jewelers and Fifth and Streets.

Stationers, It will be to your interest to see us before purchasing anything in our lime. New goods in every department arriving daily from the leading manufacturers of the east..

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About The Labor Chronicle Archive

Pages Available:
1,745
Years Available:
1895-1902