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Abilene Daily Reflector from Abilene, Kansas • Page 2

Abilene Daily Reflector from Abilene, Kansas • Page 2

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

use. The Initials, A. will be emblazoned on the panel and In- Sail! lcflcctov ISSUED BT i Ihe Reflector Publishing Co. Entered ns second clnss mall matter at the poatofflce at Abilene, Kansas. Charges Again Ten Eyck.

Manhattan, June 2fi. Charges against Prof. A. M. Ten Eyck, director of the Kansas agricultural experiment station at Hays City, are being Investigated by a committee of the board of regents.

The charges are that Prof. Ten Kyck wrote a pamphlet for a harvester company advertising scheme and that he is sending these ont as agricultural crop bulletins. run nixo ox thk senate. Topeka State Journal: There are only forty senatorial districts In the state, yet from early Indications more than forty representatives who sat In the house In the last session will go after seats in the upper house next year. There were 125 representatives, so there are not enough senatorial seats to go 'round.

A large number of able men answered the representative roll call last winter and it. is certain that some of these must, be reckoned with by senators who want to come back at the next primary. fieorge Allen, the orator from Wyandotte, will likely make the race next time for the senate. Sena A Woman's Back Has many aches and pains caused by weaknesses and falling, or other displacement, of the pelvic organs. Other symptoms of female weakness ara frequent headache, dizziness, Imaginary specks or dark spot floating before the eyes, gnawing sensation in stomach, dragging or bearing down In lower abdominal or pelvto region, disagreeable drains from pelvis organs, faint spells with general weakness.

If any considerable number of theaboT symptoms are present there Is no remedy that wlVglve quicker relief or a mora per-maient jJxm than Dr. Pierce's Favorlt hs record of ovsr forty years of rnriA b) the most potin Invigorating tonic andjitrengthenlngjex-vne known tn pwj Ira I jcience. It Is mad o( the glyceric extracts of natlva madid-nal roots found in our forests and contains not a drop of alcohol or harmful, habit-forming drugs. Its Ingredients ara o'clock, and when you have settled yourself on your couch for Rome real slumber, do? In the back yard begins to express Its sentiments so that It can be heard five miles away. When you have chased the do away, with sundry well-aimed bricks, the roosters begin their morning serenade, and then you give it up, and go out and sprinkle the lawn.

After all this painful experience you come down town feeling like Jonah after he escaped from the whale, and It Is hard to wear a sunny smile, and go around telling your friends that everything is right side up with care. Yet the effort Is worth while. It always Is worth while to be cheerful and good-natured, even If Uorimer Letters to Be "Read. Washington, June 26. Three United States senators will have the pleasure next week of having private letters addressed to them and iheir replieB thereto concerning the $100,000 Lorlrner "slush fund" revealed to public gaze.

Girls Who Stokes on Bond. New York, June L'U. After spending 17 days in the Tombs, lithe! Conrad and Lilian Graham, the "shooting show girls," who made a target of W. E. D.

Stokes in their apartment, were released in bail each. Their hearing Is set for July 6. McNamara Kidnappers Released. Indianapolis, June 26. Judge Markey in the criminal court ordered the release of Walter Drew, J.

A. G. Hadorlf, W. J. Ford and Frank P.

Fox, all of whom had been held under bond, for the alleged kidnapping of John J. McNamara. Flew 80 Miles an Hour. Fall River, June 26. Glenn H.

Curtiss gave some interesting demonstrations of the working of the hydro-aeroplane here. With the wind 25 miles an hour, he attained a speed of 80 miles an hour while in the air and remained aloft twelve minutes. One Dead in Revolver Fight. Marion, 111., June 2f. In a revolver fight on a public highway six miles southwest of here James Turnage, formerly county supervisor, was killed and Sheck Holman was wounded.

Officers are searching for Holman. Madison Visits Roosevelt. Washington, June 26. E. P.

Madison, representative from the Seventh Kansas district, spent two days last week at the home of Mr. Roosevelt at Oyster Bay. The visit was by invitation. Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications, as they can not reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness and that is by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian tube.

When this tube is inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F. .1.

CHENEY Toledo, O. Sold by druggists THc. Take Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOR I A Children Cry 1 WVPtw- OFFICIAL PAPKIl OF THK ClTlf OF ABILENE. UB8C1UPT10H HATES.

iN ABILENE Pr wk. cU; llvcred free. BT MAIL In county, per week It cent; outelde coumtr. per week. II cents.

One Tr it pld la advance. WEEKLY EDITION Per Tear, I.S0; elx monthe, 10 cente. Ordera for delivery of THE DAILT HEKKCTOR to residence or place of buelneee may be made by poatal card or through teleohone No. 96. Any Irregularity In delivery ehould be Immediately reported to thla office.

MONDAY, .11 'NH 2 0, 1 I mot i It is lisird to mi optimist when the. went her is dislied up snicikini; luit, day after liny. Ohm limy liuve a praiseworthy cictcrmiiiiilliMi Id I)" a Sunny in nplte of vrytli inK. Iiit, unless constantly on his Kiianl. lie will find himself Hii.yliu? thin that would lie "rejected tiy the editor of a Sunday school paper.

The worst tliitiK nhout hot weather-Is that, yon can't sleep well at nlnht, unless you are All thiriHs are possible to the If you arc stricken In years you look forward to the night, hours with gloomy foreboding. For when you retire the real agony begins. You tos and kick around, and ehew the pillow, and knock all the bedclothes galley west, and strike at Invisible mosquitoes, and bump your head against the wall, and after a great deal of this sort of business you finally fall Into a troubled sleep, and dream that you are being run through a corn sheller feet first. "er you have slept an hour or 'f -in wake lip cold. The tetnpera- fallen about a hundred de-ou reach around for the all-ithes and can't find them, 'iave been kicked to all room.

Then you have turn on the light, to sheets and things, 'nil are reasonably chair and break 1 other piece of imo it. is EDWIN BRUSH. you feel the other way, because of the Influence you have upon others. Kinporia Tin: tax m.Misrti. A tax of more han I ijo.O'iO tins been collected under the Inheritance law In two years.

This tax is unjust. In the same period thousands of dollars have escaped taxation by being hidden in banks and mortgages, the tax law expressly forbidding investigation of individual bank accounts by assessors. We say that reform lias miscarried in many Instances. Hiawatha World. IMII.I.I Y'S AIMiPMKNT OX ItAVKS.

Topeka State Journal: In support of ills stand against overdoing the banking business in any one community, as per the Abilene bank case this week, Hank Commissioner Dolley cites tho t'nited States supreme court decision in the Kansas bank guaranty case as follows: "We cannot say that the public, Interests to which wo have adverted, and others, are not sufficient to warrant the stato In taking the whole business of banking under Its control. On the contrary we are of the opinion that, it may go from regulation to prohibition." Mr. Dolley argues that the supreme court decision above quoted was made in the Interest or the good of any community and is In line, with the stato law giving the charter board discretionary powers regarding I lie number of banks needed In a town. Hank failures are a blow to any town and state supervision carried to the point of "prohibition," means, according to Mr. Policy's interpretation, the restriction of oversupply as well as the regulation of hanks already chartered.

SA.Y, IF YOU don't think this to be a fine Chautauqua pro- ram, and that you'll V.kc every bit or it, voa ast ought to think thrt way. It is a fine program and you'll like every bit of it. And it doesn't cost much either only about 15c a nui and that' easy easy if you gei a sea son tic ker, ar.d not bad if you do Git ticket, and go eve day you'll like it all right, and you'll wis i it wen to la: ill su liiner. S7 RTS July 28 and Lasts a Week crusted with Montana sapphires so impeded that to steal them will be Impossible. Dawrenee Journal: Wisely, the state quarantine against dogs ha been abandoned.

It was never a practicable proposition. There are people in Kansas who would just as soon think of muzzling their children as their dogs. They believe the dogs are all right and are willing to trust them. Ilesldes the sheep are to be driven out of Kansas so the dogs can do little harm any more. KKCI.AMATIOX K.VST AND WKST.

The East Is waking up to reclamation of a new kind. Reclamation in the West is, in the very strictest sense, not reclamation at all. It is not the winning back of something that man bad held and lost, but the extension of man's empire over the primitive desert. The conquest of the arid lands of the great Southwest Is simply being achieved by the introduction of that precious element, water, which lias never been there. Far different is the situation in the East, and particularly in New England, New York and New-Jersey.

There the new movement back to the soil means the recon-quest of lost ground. A couple of centuries of improvident cultivation, the drift of population to the cities, and the competition of the great West have resulted In a phenomenon which the visitor from abroad never ceases to wonder at n)imely, the abandonment of long-worked farmlands which only need fair Intelligence and some capital to be put once more on a productive basis. And this among a people that prides itself on its intelligence and its wealth, and in close proximity to the great centers of population where the demand end the price for the farmer's products keep on rising. Agriculture calls for soil and for men. And there they face an ap parent paradox.

In the great, spacious, thinly settled West, as they are accustomed to think of It, it is not men but Boil that is lacking. In the crowded, overpopulated ist, It is not soil, but men that are lacking. Hut the paradox is nor. difficult to explain away. If the Western farmer findH himself crowded lor space today, it Is because hi? conception of elbowroom is much uore generous than they hold in the East.

The West's standard of living, expressed in terms of a res, is high. When It wants more land, it wants it in the form of thousands of square miles. This is in accordance with the West's ale production, the still active pioneer spirit and the comparative want of scien-ti'ic, intensive cultivation. That is why the government, spends millions of dollars annually in irrigating the waste lands. It is not a question of winning back meagre Inches as the laborious Hollanders have done around their Zuyder Zee, but winning back entire valleys and counties.

And the money expenditure is justified for two reasons; first, because of the actual acreage thrown open to cultivation; and secondly, and perhaps more important, because of the certainty that the land so painfully gained will not be subjected to the traditional mistreatment. Intensive cutivation of the soil will follow the intense effort to win the soil to cultivation. In the East, the situation is this: The soil is there in very considerable quantities, and the men are surely there in vast numbers, in eiery one of our urban tenement districts. Ac tually, however, the men are not there to the extent one imagines. At first sight, it seems that the average Italian immigrant in New York or Boston is just the man to bring our 'worn-out farmlands back to life.

He Is an agriculturalist by birth and training, unci his lower standard of living qualifies him peculiarly for entering into successful competition with large-scale production in the West, a form of competition to whic the native-born farmer in the East has succumbed. But against such inducements for the Italian immigrant to go ont upon the soil, we must take into account the handicap imposed by his ignorance of our language and our customs and his lack of capital. It is not only a natural tendency for foreigners to herd together on their first arrival here, it ia an inevitable tendency. Only is the years pass, as tire immigrant grows into closer touch with the American spirit, the American environment, and the American tongue, can we conceive his breaking away from the city tenement. As a matter of fact, that is what the Italian Immigrant is be ginning to do.

Italian immigration to this country is scarcely twenty years old a short enough period for the necessary social and economic all printed on the bottle-wrapper and attested under oath as correct. Every Ingredient entering Into Fr vorlte Prescription has the written o-dorsement of the most eminent medical writers of all the several schools of practice more valuable than any amount of non-professional testimonials though ths latter are not lacking, having been con-trlbuted voluntarily by grateful patients In numbers to exceed tho endorsements given to any other medicine extant for tho cure of woman's ills. You cannot alTord to accept any medlclna of unknown composition as a substitute for this well proven remedy of knows composition, even though the dealer may make a little more profit thereby. l'o-ur Interest In regaining health Is paramount to any selfish Interest of hit and it Is an Insult to your intelligence for him to try to palm off upon you a substitute. You know p'hat you want and it is his business to supply the article called for.

Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are ths original "Little Liver Pills" first put up by old Dr. Pierce over forty years ago, much Imitated but never equaled. Llttla sugar-coated granules easy to talt as nandv. RAILWAY TIMETABLES.

CNION PACIFIC Eastboiutd 102 Passenger 4:08 a. m. 110 Passenger 3:25 a. m. 104 Paasenger 11:22 a.

m. 108 Paasenger 1:45 p. m. 158 Local Freight ....2:10 p. Frt, Belolt to Junction.

6:15 p. ml. 'Daily except Sunday. Westbound 101 Passenger 3:03 a. m.

109 Tassenger 10:09 p. m. 107 Passenger 2:10 p. m. 103 Passenger 3:24 p.

159 Local Freight 8.30 a. m. Frt. Junction to Btlolt 6:45 a. m.

KOCK ISLAND Eastbound 536 Passenger 11:12 a. m. 566 Local Freight 3:00 p. m. Westbound 535 Mail and Express ....5:45 p.

tn. 565 Mixed 10:25 a. m. SANTA FE Southbound Passenger 11:00 a. m.

Freight 1:60 p. m. Freight 4:15 p. m. Northbound.

Passenger 8:07 a. m. Freight 11 a. m. Freight 12:45 p.

m. Salina Branch Leave for Salina Mixed I .8:20 a. m. Mixed 12:05 p. m.

Mived 4:05 p. m. Northbound Arrive from Salina. Mixed 7:55 a. m.

Mixed 10:55 a. m. Mixed 3:10 p. I 306 30S 310 307 309 311 317 319 321 318 320 322 for Fletcher's Signature of MURRAY STRICT. NEW VORK CfTT.

tor Milton, a Democrat, represented Wyandotte last, time In the upper house. Allen has served two distinguished terms in the lower house. A. li. Carney, Democrat, repres entative from Cloud county, if he floes not run for slate office, is pret ly sure to make the race for the senate from ills composed of Cloud and Republic counties.

The Republican senator from that district. Caldwell, did not receive as li ny votes by twenty as Moore ills Democratic opponent, four years ago, but won in the contest before tho legislature. Carney made brilliant record In the last house and is sure to he heard In the next pri mary. Charlie Case of Abilene, Dlckln son county, served his second term as representative last winter, and Is spoken of as a senatorial candidate next year. Senator Avery of that district Is from Clay county and It.

Is Dickinson's turn. Case made good In Topeka ought to be able to make it lively for his oppon ents. When you are walking home In the hot sun tills piece of news may cheer you up: Jack ordered the most expensive automobile obtainable as a gift for his wife a Chalmer's limousine that cost Tlie champion signed a contract with a jeweler for 125,000 worth of Interior fittings. The car will bp royal blue in color and will be lined with blue and gold brocade. Included in the fittings will lie gold vases and a solid gold arrangement containing cigarette boxes, match boxes, flasks and scent bottles and powder boxes.

When the question of I 1 -caret, gold arose, Johnson insisted on lS-caret, and also ordered a duplicate set In silver for ordinary MISS BESSIE LEIGH, READER, MISS BERTHA WELLS, i NTS, A jS The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been In use for over 30 years, has horne the signature of and has been made under his Bonal supervision since its infancy. larvr. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are hut lOxperinients that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants nnd Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Cnstoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups.

It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, nor other Js'areotio nubstance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys AVornis and allays reverishncss. Jt cures Diurrlnta and Wind Colic.

It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the l'ood, regulates the Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural bleep. Tho Children's Panacea Tho Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS p- sr JSP- 'vrsi Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years TfcV eCNTAUII COMPANY, TT ID LAN DON, CHARACTER MRS. CAROLYN JORDAN.

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About Abilene Daily Reflector Archive

Pages Available:
44,465
Years Available:
1888-1922