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The Kincaid Dispatch from Kincaid, Kansas • 4

Location:
Kincaid, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FOREIGN G03SIF, GAVE MANIA FOR SURGERY. A Cheap Dnily. We will send you the Kansas City Dailv World one year for only bl.oU. Th is offer is only good for a short time. The World coutains all the market reports, state news, aa-1 all the general iicwk.

llere ia y.mr chance to get a good daily for InAy for a whole year. Subscribe for or renew your sul scription to any paper, magazine or other periodical published in the Uuitetl States, at the Pontorhe News Stand, and save yourself the trouble aud expense of writing letter or remitting the money Back subscription money will be sent to the publisher without cost or trouble to the subscriber. A LIBERAL OFFER. The undersigned will give a free sample of Chamberlain' Stomach and Liver Tablets to any one wanting a rel'ablo remedy for disorders of Hie stomach, biliousness or Tii is is a tiew remedy and a good one. 0.

E. Durall, druggist. Original packages, consisting of 25 old newspapers, for only 5c a package at this ollice. They are just the things to paper your kitchen or put under carpets. Vwr A si If from now until Christmas will be found a free Same, amusing and mstniciive-50 different kinds.

Get Lion Coffee and a Free Game at Your A. M. STEWARD, IHCALKR IX Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware, and Spectacle1. I have trial lensas to test the eyes with. Eyes tested free.

I also have a nice line of albums, toilet cases, comb and brush sets, collar and cuff boxes, work boxes and ot her novelties. Also all kinds of watches, clocks and jewelry cleaned ami repaired. Gold and silver soldering done. Call and get prices We can save ycu money. Dispatch ami Toledo Blade oik year for 1.25.

Send the Dispatch to your friend C. I-, f. ili-u La KjJ In each pound package i .4 i .1 I. I -I yi, -i Si-m I. Grocers.

Kcsrt. StoraeiJ. Liver, Eovels aa-JS Bscs. Cm feet. Potts Disease.

ojieriiwou jsuowa no Eurgory, Do yoit want to hi cured? tt disiinctunderstandinsthatwo will yea souna nza wou or tae treatm. wut cost; yon noiauM vva euro i i anbeod, bcmiaal Veaknes3, Span 1 (orrhoea, Gonorrhcoa, Syphilis, Vari cele, BSricturo, and ail weaknesses of Men, it don't cosS you a penny. Consultation a advice free by letter or in person, strictly cot dentiaL Call oi mite. surcsis. The most complete Frivatfl Senitartt encotintonns stnbborn cases Postofflce, KAKSAS CITV.M0.

iily ef Lump aid 9 -S nn flin 'i Coali A Viennese stump collector recently told Lis stamps for nearly Switzerland has seven sanatorium: for consumptives. France lias 2S, of which only t.vo are for paying patients. Malta is the most thickly populated island in tlie world. Jt has people to the square mile. Barlmiloes lias 1,054 people to the square mile.

A s-iiver penny minted at Itristol in the reigai of Edward has just been unearthed in that city during some excavations for a new water main. In many hotels in Europe the guests are provided with slippers. The soles are of pasteboard, and the rest of brown paper. New ones are furnished to each guest. Near Leedi, England, is a summer hou.se, made wholly of buttons of every imaginable kind, and in tlie same county is a room the walls of which are adorned entirely by the ribbons of cigars, nearly of these being represented.

A noisy family kept by an old woman in Paris, aroused the indignation of the neighbors. It consisted of 20 hens, 5U roosters, 30 pigeons, eight dogs, four cats, a parrot, a goat and a dozen small birds. The neighbors couldn't sleep, they complained, and the woman's family was scattered by the jiplice. Kissine pepper, a new species described as quite unlike any other, grows abundantly in a wild state in Guinea. Kich in piperine and volatile oil, it is claimed to be valuable, both as a spice and a condiment.

small grains, characterized by a pedicle at their base, give a reddish-brown powder, higl ly perfumed and of a peculiar aromatic savor. A plan has been laid before the Berlin municipal council for an underground eljclric railroad from the extreme north of I'erliu to the llillisches gates ending at the suburb of Schoenberg, a distance of seven miles. Four years will be required for the construction of the road, and its cost is estimated at to be covered by a loan. It is reported that the underground and other municipal undertakings will render a $50,000,000 loan unnecessary. FAILURES OF PHOTOGRAPHY.

The Camera TDuei-t Tiot Show Action as UeuIixiMralljr as the Ar-t t'f jiclj Uses. Ever since instantaneous photography demonstrated 'that the movements of animals are ready quite different from the impression which, they gave to the eye, the suggestion lies been made with more or less persistence that artists should change ilieir representations in confoiniity with the verities recorded by the camera. Kecently, ia a contemporary, writes the London Telegraph, the Earl of 2Jount Edgeumbe has proposed that a cinematograph should be mounted on a motor car and used in taking a scries of photographs of horses in motion, so as to show which positions are the least fleeting, ami therefore give the truest? of what the eye ecu see. The artist would then be enabled to sidect those attitudes most suitable to his purpose; but while achieving truth in a mechanical direction, would he not be forsaking it in another? His purpose is to depict his subjects as they are presented to tlie eye; and as the eye retains no impression of such Movements us the camera records, the. pictures would hi reality be false.

L'ntil ihe camera in the hands of End-weard Muybridge showed them to us we had no conception of the actual movements of a horse's legs; but though we know them now we have never seen them nor ever shall. Of what use, then, to draw them? Does a photograph of a horse race give anything like the Impression of furious motion that an artist can convey with his pencil? To take a kindred case, we know that a revolving wheel is actually precisely the same as one at a standstill. Put no one would dream of suggesting that 1'i wheels of a moving vehic le should be depicted with every spoke distinct. Tiie photographer is himself keenly conscious of the defects of the camera in representing motion. We turn to the A car, containing photographs of the motor ears in the Circuit lies Ardennes rate, taken when the vehicle were tnatliag at high speeds.

Save for the cloud of dust in their wake they might as well be at standstill for all the appearance of f-peed that is iu them. hit a drawing by a skillful would have conveyed the impression of rapid motion by rendered what his eye actually saw. Photographs attempting to represent motion seek refuge in making some part of the foreground of the picture out of focus. This demonstrates the canicrisl's appreciation of the failure of his instrument to do to movement. This paper and K.

C. Star $1. Thi' Dispatch ami twice a week Capital 1 .00 Too SInjiy Vnaeeennary Are Performed by Members of the I'rolt'iseiiou. A mania for performing operations seems to have seized upon the surgeons of the country of late years. The introduction of anaesthetics, by aid of which the horrors of an operation are reduced to a mere dis-comfort of breathing a fuw times into a bag; the extended use of hospitals and nursing homes, which has tin) result of relieving relatives and friends of all the trouble and all the disagreeable incidents of au operation, and, finally, the fact that with modern antiseptic methods the scar left by it is often quite trivial, have conspired to make people regard the ordeal with curious indifference and enter with a light heart into adventures from which they would perhaps have shrunk had they but known a little more.

And whera operations nre necessary all thi.4 is good. It has to be admitted, however, that there is another side to the question, says the Chicago Chronicle. Partly owing to the publicity given to operative work, party to the fact that the successful case is apt to bo by no means reticent about the advantages of "getting the thing over," and partly to the fact that dead men tell no tales, the public has come to look with unlimited and undue confidence upon operations as a way out of every difficulty a deus ex ma-china which can always be invoked to hurry matters up should the treatment of a malady prove a little tedious. A curious sort of demand for operative treatment lias arisen. People, urge each other not to allow their doctors to "dally" with their cases but to do something "radical," and it is to be feared that sometimes if the doctor does not adopt this radical polTey or at least do something that requires an anaesthetic ihey regard him.

as "old-fashioned'' (the very hardest thing that one can nowadays say of any doctor) and run oft' to some one else. This is a kind of public sentiment which is by no means easy to combat; the Irresponsible chatter of the patient's friends condemns the cautions surgeon, while the unmeasured praised bestowed by the same irresponsible authorities upon the occasional success of an adventurous operator, leads to undeserved fame. A3 we need hardly say, the effect of all this must react injuriously upon the medical profession. Soine men, indeed, assert that the evil consequences of this mania for operating have already attained considerable dimensions. THE WILY FILIPINO.

A Native Tcnehrr Tliransli His Cnpld-i'ty Inito Trouble and Iioiwetii Hijs I'oisitioii. In August last Prof. Pablo Trinidad, rector of the Colegio Filipino, which Is situated on Calle Conception, missed from his safe a large diamond pin valued at 1,000 pesos. After searching nil through his apartments, and finding no trace of it, he took the native teachers into his confidence, and told them that he would give 500 pesos to any man who would cause the return of the pin, and ask no questions, reports the Manila Freedom. A young teacher named "Pose del Ilosario took him to one side when a a opportunity presented itself, and told the learned old man that hU father was a fortune teller, and that he would implore him to reveal the whereabouts of the missing jewel through the medium of the occult art, of which he was a master.

The next nay Ilosario informed the professor that his father had found the diamond, and that if he would visit a certain the latter would give him a pawn ticket for the same. The professor visited the silver-smith as he was bid, and was told upon arrival that he could secure a pawn ticket for his pin by paying The professor carried only $23 with him; this he gave to the silversmith as a guarantee of good faith, and took the ticket, promising tj bring tlie remainder of ihv money the ni'Mt day. The professor took the pin to his home and reported the matter to the detective bureau, which looked into the case, and arrested Jose del Ilos ario. It turned out that Ilosario had stolen tlie pin and pawned it for $110 gold. When the professor offered for the return the diamond, he saw a chance to make some more money, and took the ticket to his friend, the silversmith, with instructions not to tell where he had gotten it, and to deliver it to the professor upon payment of Mexican, lie reasoned that the remaining SIM the professor would give him, and he would be that much ahead.

Alas for his schemes, he not only loses hi: position iu the school, but will spend some time in Eilibid for his 1 siflB nnsinij FifPAra fjjrrpsr? Catciroa, ErcpchU-ls. Cyspcjsfa, Icsooala, Dysentery, Rickets, Fits. hmi Pcboa. Par- -THE- Met Store, WILSON, Proprietor. Cash for Produce.

Fresh Line Groceries. J. F. WALKBR, DEALER IX Stifle ana Fancy Groceries Mi Prelce KJNCAID, KAS. In the Power's huikling.

Garnett Flour, best in town. The Dispatch and the Topeka Semi-weekly Capital $1.50 per year. A MOST LI BE UAL OFFER. -li- Four l'itpprn for All our favour readers ali.mld take advantage of the umwecedeiited clubbing offer we thif- year make, which m-clcles with tliis jasper Tlie Oiiy Live Stock Iudi-citoiy its special Farmers' F.ditions and The Farmer Tlici-e tbiee ait tlie best of their clas and should be in frti'co home. To them we add.

for local, county and uvreral news, our own paper, ami make tin) plica of tlie 4 one year only 1 25. Never before was so much faiperinr reading matter offer-I'd for so small an amount of money. Tlie three papers named, whluli we club with nor own, are well known ihruiiSjhout the West and commend themselves to Hie reader's favoianle attention upon mere mention. The Kansas Oity hive Slock Indicator is Uih' artwt agiicultinal and live paper of 'the West; I'lifl. l'ojiltry Farmer is the roost pj-iicl ical poultry paper for the itniinr, while The Special Farm ira' Institute Editions are the most practical publications for the promotion of "rood fvrmitig ever published.

ThKh advaiitatie of th's (rret cttvr. it will hold good for (i. short time only. Supple copies of these paoers uuiv be examined by nailing at this fillice. The Mo Ho East Via MISSOURI I'AGIFIC.

(io West. Via COLORADO SHORT LINE. (Jo South VA(JKXOU 110UTE. (lo North MISSOURI PACIFIC. lleMching St.

Ft. Smith. Little Roclr, Kansas City, Omaha. Pueblo and Denver. IT.

C. TOWN SEND, (ieneral IMwiurer and Ticket Agent, St Louis, Mo. Farmsr'R Stationery. Printed Envelope 40 cent' per 1001 Note llcadt 50 cent per 100. We print in no smaller amounts.

Try un ad In the Dispatch. It will pay you. IatLsFlrstCtcccFcmak! Ccrnrlaints. and Kseasos oftae Kioney8. Cnrvatcre, nnna Gome Treatment Cure3.

Vldto for Symptom List. Consultation i'et. Think of the advw 'agoa. Trained Specialist for each ckss of disoaso. Over thirty Specialists, representing Allopathic, Homenpathio, and Eclectic Schools of Ilcdicino, combining their skill whoa necc iiry on each individual caso.

AU medicino furnished, and et co frroater cost than one ordinf tiotorwoold charge for writing prescriptions and sending you ta the drug store to th-lllsd at yonr own expnnse. Telegraph iik ia pmnviTeucy cases wo will send a specialistoa ruiu uiiyiiuit) ui punutiuiuy uuuiutuiuauy nay JTJ C1R PI If yn suiter from V4rl.iS ESS la any of taa Woak- by Ignorance, excess or coat; if you have been robbed and da-jived until the mere mention of the vord doctor rnnkes your blood boil, ymi IX 1 i'Piewrt iniTtB UTAH a r-, v. notim proven cur sicin in en rue A muds of voluntary testimonials of boms atoplo, giving names, pictures, and ad- xs(i bnt we can't publixh. out' cures in Private dimensea, because it would betray con- 1'tenco. Henco, wo have to prove our skill ia his class of disease iu another way.

IX'f mtrijerir eases treated wish sJcitl and tao west. Local I-hysicians wui nna auvftiiwiira co vini us. to uu-vu tho X-Eays. Bewaro of trnvelin? doctors who claim to represent us. MAJUiJi fjRBJS, Hluaiarated Private Books tor eitber lien or women.

V.MS3 912 Walnut St Opposite 01 All Kinds -o vV is Best pa Constantly aSI Prices. on' il turn I i va' -a.

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About The Kincaid Dispatch Archive

Pages Available:
11,147
Years Available:
1888-1944