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The Coffeyville Daily Journal from Coffeyville, Kansas • Page 4

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Coffeyville, Kansas
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J. PAGE FOUR. THE COFFEYVILLE DAILY JOURNAL TUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 25. 1916. STREET SUIT OF CLOTH.

ED. V. PRICE COMPANY- SJlfe latltj 3ournnl HUGH J. TOWELL, Editor and Owner. OFFICIAL CITY PAPER ft i I these houses have been remodeled and made modern.

All are occupied. The fact that Girard has -been reduced from a postoffice of the second to the third class would indicate that the subscription list of the Appeal to Reason is declining. Will Aurora, follow suit? 5 Miss Mabel Getman, who has owned and managed drug stores at Columbus and Cherryvale, lias just left the latter town for lopejia to, accept a position as prescription clerk in a Tupeka drug Alex King King slock. farm, fcur miles jouth of Thayer, reports Jo5 pifjs from twenty Duroe sows the first two weeks of January. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Daily By Carrier One Week .10 One Month .45 One Year 5.00 By Mail One'Year 4.00 Daily Rural Routes and Buying Vicinity One Year $2.00 In case you fail to receive your Journal by 7 p.

call'up. We will be glad to send you one by messenger. Be sure and get your call in before 8 p. as we have no messenger service tfter that time. MEMBER ASSOCIATED' PRESS Entered in the Postoffice at Coffcy-villc, as second-clas matter.

A peace of baling wire on the side walk cansed a Pittdbuig girl to, tail Mid break three ribs in a perfectly good umbrella, according to tnc PiUh-burg Sun, Paul Jones' paper. the, year 1SC0 Samuel D. Cliieido lived? -with his wife near what Chicago, U. S. Jan.

21, 1916 The. Clothes Shop, Cof Kansas. Gentlemen: Following the custom pursued by us for many years, we wish our old customers, as well as our new, to return any coat made by us during the past season in which the lining has not given satisfactory wear or the fronts have not held their shape. We will be pleased to re-line the garment and put in new fronts, orTf.this cannot be done, make a new coat free of charge. Very truly yours, TELErflOxNK 71 VTV felL I MJ Bfcllcmont postoffice, in Wood on cjiintv, -Kansas.

The wife died, 4hc win given to a family in vicinity to raise. Should the ci or am one knowing about him see ihi-. ivi write to lotk box 742, I 'i cdoimi, Kansas. A reward would le pud for the. discovery of the son.

The Chicago Blade of last week I oo j'i to HoA aril most iii-lnigmshed itizen in the following di-iatih: There ib a man living at Howard, who once kept Napol- on ivlmn ho mio-lif. ld. v. rmcE a cq. 1 Charley Chaplin Mustache When M.

C. Buttcrfield, genial ager of the Bell Telephone now resigned to Kansas City he will take v.ilhhim one of the very few Charley Chaplin muataviies in this gcocl town. T. J. Hall, a farmer living near Labette, after a II, "there 'is such a thing as luck.

Thursday of last week Mr. Hall shipped a carload of hoi's to market and Friday morning when he gut up the pen in which the porkers were kept and would have been at that time, had. he net shipped them away, was under three feet of water? A i'at hog drowns very easily and alt doubtless would have perished. Parsons and Columbus each have a Ed V. Price Co.

i ucv iieim enjoying a reiresning- sleep. That man is John Munsinger, now cars tJd. Munsinger was a baby in Wittenberg, Germany, in 1812, when Napoleon with. his grand army wai r. me marcli to Russia, A huge ot the army camped in and about Wittenberg one nignt while on t'ie way to tie latal invasion of the czur's land.

Napoleon and his empress, Marie of Austria, ii casting about the city for a nice homo in well developed town row and Neode- huh te stop, put up for the night at sha is kicking up a muVs with the Muiifinger residence. Now, John clerk of Wilson county for re- Munsinger was just the timest kind nortimr its census too low. Fredonia i a baby at that time, and his milk papers have taken up the cudgel in behalf of the aforesaid county clerk and Wilson county's two towns are saying naughty things about each other. was not agreeing with him. So he ev.erced iiis ugs' most lustily during the fore of the night, and the great I'Ve'irh emperor and his empress could riUt get, to sleep for ovei an hour after retiiing.

Napoleon was a good loser, however, and did not complaiti. In fact, he cared little about that time. He was -LARGEST" TAILORS IN THE WORLD OF GOOD MADE TO ORDER CLOTHES- There's a quaintness of by-gone days about this full-hipped, full-skirted coat suit of field-mouse grey broadcloth which will appeal to many. The little basque-like coat buttons primly down the front with a-single row of buttons and then stopping abruptly at the waistline suddenly spreads wide? ly over the hips, the width being increased by inset ruffles of the cloth. These mfflcs are tucked, following the, design of the skirt which has a narrow front panel while the sides and.

back are very full and laid in three deep tucks. A high collar of fur completes this. ROUND ABOUT COFFEYVILLE pulse to this study is derived from a democratic interest in Shakespeare, and its results are gradually made general property. 1 planning the great raid on Hussion I TT 1 A SHAKESPEARE YEAR Wcrld Studying the Master as Never Before. mi jiuavuw.

liiutTw, nu up lace that night' talking it all over with the empress. Recently John Munsinger celebrated his 103d bitthday anniversary. He wrote hi? autograph for holding aloft of each new scrap of fact. The kind of acutentss which annotates Shakespeare's "hawk and handsaw" into an argument for his acquaintance with a bird called he-ron-shaw has had merited ridicule Hut in Lee's summaries one can find assurances that recent inquiry mainly represents a devotion and reverence for Shakespeare's life and work, a desire to add to our appreciation of It is claimed that the Katy railroad is doing more business out of Barflesville at the present time than ever before in the history of the town. The children laughed gaily and mired the improved, snow man more than ever.

i the guests without glasses. He told vii-nrsr. eitj. "joved his dinner, and "There now," they said as they, went It is due to the unprecedented rush at funny stories after dinner cared the floor and to lunch, "there's a snow man that! as full loautrt (From the New York Evening Post.) A new edition of Sir Sidney Lee's life of Shakespeare ushers in a year the smelters, cars have bee i s-cti in the yards there cod a ucr. "Don srrl, the hlues.

iwin iastus an winter: both by setting them in the iullest ina single day. background But did it? Wait and see! That night something happened. I Something very serious to the lives' Courtesy First A note signed by the president of the Katy railway hanging in one of the Katy depots near Coffeyville reads: "We've secured an inexhaustible supply of courtesy for gratitu-tions distribution among our patrons, so if you're not handed a cheery distinct 'Thank when you shove your good money over to us whe: buying your ticket, drop me a postal card and I'll ascertain whether iU dyspepsia, biliousness or don't givc-a-rap that caused the omission!" Try Journal Classified Ads. 1 i. possible light against a bac volume itself evidence of the th ib, dctail satiate desire to enlarire our knowl- is look and Feel Clean, Sweet and Fresh Every Day Drink a glass of real hot water before breakfast to wash out poisons.

Behind all this an echoing of the I and well-being of snow men. A Jan- edge of Shakespeare's life and work. he said. "That is the vyjy to live to be 100. Blues kill people.

I never let them bother Independence officials hope to be able to move into their new city cap-itol next week. Walter Withers of Independence, who is sick with smallpox, is reported to be convalescing. uary thaw began. Hardly had the sun set when the warm, gentle winds from the south be- gan to1" blowf' All night long they I blew and blew and blew. Till the roefs began a-d ripping.

Till the', icic- i 'J Vk 11 11 (3 lalVl 4 fiB CtL! 1 AO l' rrl 1 I I i llmmsplvPS tn-nnthinfrnPW 11! la. IS Hot mevcly t-' to llVC x- snow vanished from the vards and w.clh eat well, digest we'J. work well, housetops. sleep well, look well. What glorious I And still" the south winds blew and i condition to attain, and yet how very Cold Settled In His Back BED TME TALES blew till it seemed as though there i cay will only adopt the was nothing left to melt.

morning inside When, the bovs and vU wked un Foiks who are accustomed to feel THE SNOW MAN in the morning and ran to their win- spirit of Lamb in asking what the world would not give to possess a full history of just one of Shakespeare's working days. When Wallace published his discoveries, they were greeted with enthusiasm, because they enabled great numbers who had read the plays only impersonally to see Shakespeare as he lived in London with a very human family, and as in flesh and blood he walked through Bread street to the Globe Theater, perhaps speaking to the child there who was to grow into John Milton. From Rowc clown through Theobald, Warburton, Johnson, and Steev-ens, to the last century, knowledge of Shakespeare increased slowly. But since the middle of the nineteenth century there have been endless contributions of many-sided character by men of many lands. The writings of Halliwell-Phillips, Fleay, Collier, Stopes, and Wright in England have been supplemented by White, Furness, Moulton, and V.

Gildesleeve in America, and by Elzc, Thimm, Delius, and countless others in Germany. Textual, historical and biographical tsudy is pursued by associations and individuals the educated world over, in the hope that some thought can be made to shine the brighter, some passage given fuller significance, by stiSdy of grammar, stage history, social conditions, or contemporary thought. Im Farmers living along the Caney river north of Bartlesville are reported to have lost heavily as a result of that stream leaving its banks during the recent high water. J. Rainbolt of Dewey and G.

T. Bandy lost nineteen head of cattle, horses and mules, representing an aggregate value of over The stock was drowned. Mrs. Mean Bear, who wis reputed to have been the oldest member of the Ponca Indian tribe, died at her home on the-Ponca reservation, Monday, at the age of Mean Bear is survived by two Chief Big Goose, one of the leading members of the Ponca tribe, and Max Black Hair Horse; one daughter, Mrs. Charley Roy, and a brother, Little Dance.

Parpons.had the fewest number of fires'; in 1915- it bus suffered in many the annual report Fire Chief Waller A. therejwere only eighty conflagrations during Ih'e year Hat required the services fire department, amounting to totnl for the year of The report' shows that there were twenty-one fires from un-khowrl causes; iiineTrpm incendiary cauies, six from carelessness with bonfires and five from sparks from loccmotives. Harry Rich, an Iola young man who signed up for eight quart? of liquor for his own use, was haled into court and made to pay fine of $ltn and i cntenced lo serve 30 days in the Allen county jail. Cherry vale is enjoying a small boom as a result of increased activities at the big plant of the Edgar Zinc paid to be the largest'zinc smelter in iho world. The company owns a number of hauses in a smeltertown addition and in the past few weeks o.l of It might have been supposed that twenty years ago "all the available knewledge of Shakespeare had been examined and re-examined.

All that we actually know of the poet could be put on 'two or three of the 800 pages of this new book. Yet each year has brought forth some neAv fruit of scholarly research into his time. One great merit of Lee's work is that it was conceived on lines which admif of much filling in. Thus, he can readily add the facts so spectacularly discovered by our own Prof. Wallace concerning Shakespeare's residence with the French Mountjoys, and his figuring in their lawsuit.

Sir Sidney fas spent devoted study on the playhouses, the fate of Shakespeare's his pecuniary prosperity, the evidence supporting the impersonal nature of the sonnets, his court standing, and so They are rich accrttions to a standard work, which now draws not only upon his own and Wallace's researches, but those of Achcson. of Greenwood, of W. J. Lawrence, of E. K.

Chambers and others. Shakespeare has constantly attracted a swarm of the keenest investigators to the literature and drama of the whole Elizabethan age. In a year in which drama leagues, libraries, schools, learned societies, the stage, and even civis. odies will be drawing our attention Shakespeare, it might be inquired whether this unwearied scholarship is really a symptom' of an enually unwearied popular interest. The enKwer must surely be affirmative.

Why did th actor-playwrigkt who received 150 before and at his death was spending 1000 yearly equal to five times as moVh in our day leave 10 shillings to the Stratford poor and his second-bet bed to his wife? Why did "gentle" Shakespeare, nraised by contemporaries for his Foley Kidney Pill lwy tive prompt relief." Ed Vcltoa, Rofcers, Nefcr. Ed Wlton. of Rogers. "I have used Foley Kidney Tills for backache, the result of catching- cold settled in my back. Foley Kidney Pills always slve me prompt relief and I can cheerfurty recommend them." The reason Foley Kidney Pills oct fo satisfactorily is because they neutralize and dissolve the poisonous waste matter that remains in tha blood because the kidneys do not do their work properly in filtering and casting out from the system uric acid and other poisons.

Relief usually follows jn a few davs and such symptoms pain in the Eidea or back, stiff, joints, sore murcles, rheumatism, too frequent action of the bladder at nicht. and other painful and annovios: ailment3 disappear. Folev Ktdnev Fill3 contain no harmful ingredients. They are safe as well as auick Acting. Florea Drug Company "Let's make a snow man!" cried the children as they jumped off the porch ready for a Saturday morning's play, "let's make a snow man that will last all winter." "All right, let's!" agreed everybody, and theyset to work.

'l he jpoys shovelled great piles of the dnip, heavy snow. The girls began the task of shaping the snow man and -everybody worked their hardest. It is not much wonder that with three boys and two girls working as theoe young folks did, a -very- handsome oiiow man soon, stood in the front yard, is it? Alice ran in the house for a bit of red flannel for his lips; Sue made a raid on mother's button box for big black buttons for the front of his coat, and the boys found a itout club for his cane. dull and heavy when they arise, splitting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, instead, feel as fresh as a daisy by opening the sluices of the system each morning and Hushing out the whole of the internal poisonous stagnant matter. Everyone, whether ailing, sick or well, should, each morning, before breakfast, diink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoor.ful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach.

The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on an empty stomach is wonderfully invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast. While you are enjoying your breakfast the water and phosphate is quietly extracting: a large volume of water from the blood and getting ready for a thorough flushing of all the inside organs. Thc millions of people who are bothered with constipation, bilious spells, stomach trouble, rheumatism; others who have sallow skins, blood disorders and sickly complexions are urged to, get a quaiter "pound of limestone phosphate from the drug store which will cost very little, but is sufficient to make anyone a pronounced crank on the subject of internal sanitation. "ihere, now cried Jack when That nirht Wonderful Campaign Year Bargain The St.

Louis buttons and cane were in place, "did-p Something very seriei's to you ever see man?" the lives and well-being the children regarded their work 0f snow men critically. "I think he ought to have dows for a first brcatn Q- -resb ai a hat, said. Edward. I am going to they saw a sonpy, melted, frrrrrt yard, tha attic to find one. I drippy eaves and trees, and not a "And I going to pve him some 5i8.nof their snow man! lie had blue marble said Tom 'and vanished in the night.

After thev make him some stylish black cye-wcre dressea they went to the porch brows of coal toot. 'and looked to be certain sure. AI! RAT DAILY GLOBE-DEMIOC HI W.WIIIIIIJJHgLLiJ i-V "sweetnesse." and loved by "Johnson Every Day Except Sunday Six Days in Every Week "this side idolatry, drive bargains with such shrewdness, and prosecute a yeoman who" owed him r7 What were his relations with Southampton, with Elizabeth, with James? Much Shakespeare research is -simply a learned rombintr'of his age competitively, in which applause greets the .1 that was left of that handsome creature was a damp old hat, a club, half a dozen buttons and a bit of red flannel which lay forlornly in the middle of the big front yard. Did the children mind? Not so very much, for they knew Jack Frost would soon drive the south wind back and then they could make another tnow man. Tomdrrow Mikey Mink.

TO STANDARDIZE MILK Today And A Generation Hence The flight of time makes ui think of the future. The of today reflects tyt 1 iMl If Sill! I 14 A. S' "fei Father Says I ffl nl Great! Glendale for me every meal time! And 1 kB-S'? the money-saving of one-third will amount to something i 1 itrTKv big on the month's grocery bill! what greatness may acquired when ha grown up. And any influence that bring TWO DOLLrARS PER YEAR Extra special campaigrTrate.on yearly subscriptions only, limited to order. received by March 1, 1916; open to subscribers who receive their mail by Rural Free Delivery or Star Route and at post offices where there is no newsdealer handling the DAILY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT; not open to subscribers who live in towns served by DAILY GLOBE-DEMOCRAT newsdealers.

Not an Incomplete "Rural Route Edition" The REAL Daily Globe-Democrat Comprehensive and absolutely trustworthy reports of the big events during and following the Republican National Convention at Chicago and the Democratic National Convention at St. Louis. Every detail, from start to finish, of the important campaign of 1916. The truth, the whole truth, without bias and without preju-diie. All the news of all the earth.

An interesting and helpful page for women every day. Correct market reports. Brightest and fullest sport newi. tfwaualcd Special Features for all the fanr.ly. Clean, RELIABLE, rp fo the In every way, COMPLETE.

In every vay, SUPREME. In every way, THE BEST. SEJJD IN YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TODAY. If you wish the GREAT SUNDAY GLOBE-DEM OCR AT add two dollars for that issue, making $4.00 for the Daily, including Sunday, one year. Sample copies free.

THE GLOBE PRINTING Publishers, SLlouis, Mo. Food and Drug Departments of Two Kansas Cities Wilt Co-Operate Kansas City, Jan. 2.5 A closer co-operation between the -food and drug departments of Kansas City, and Kansas City, to the end that a similar standard may be' reached in the grading of milk is being planned. Officials in the two cities have held several conferences and both TT. H.

Phipps, the Missouri commissioner, and CarJeton Coon, the mother fa the first anJ I greatest of i There Is a splendid remedy known as! "Mother's Friend" that i has been a safeguard, a helpful daily iaflu-, ence, to a host of women. Applied exter-; to the muscles tbey become pliant. 1 inspector, asserted-today that GLENDALE i Oleomargarine Uncle' Sam inspects it so vou kaoTv it's pure. Ihey stretch without undue pain, there is an absence of distress, the nerves are soothed by taking away the burden of leaving all to just natural conditions. There is in "Mother's Friend" tie dh-ect and Immediate lelr that all expectant mothers require.

Used by their own band, guided by their own minds, they learn at once the blessed relief from morning skiress resulting from undue stretching. They dairy calm and nightly rest. Itl is indeed "Mother's Friend." Get a bottle toda cJ it is expected that grades given dairymen in Kansas City, will be accepted by the Kansas City, department, and that Kansas City, will do likewise with Kansas grading. Much of the milk used in both cities is shipped from Kansas dairies and the proposed agreement would elim vt neq cust-prooi cartons. At aa grocers.

ARMOUR ACCOMPANY any droggist. Then write EradSeld Regulator 410 Lamar Atlanta. Ga fortma the most entertaining aad -ratable littla inate the necessity of a double grading. It was asserted that the propos- ed co-operaticn is the first step look- ing. toward a closer collection of the pnwiiiLMftiiiii un i mi wwwjii.ip'wt.p..tiwww books eyer; pregenteaT" pyortnwriamy municipal activities of the two cities.

lor. 7.

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About The Coffeyville Daily Journal Archive

Pages Available:
59,291
Years Available:
1880-1923