

.:,-.:-.:. 



aal Farm J*-h*-l at 



(iirnt which its 

 ...pefullv a a new depart'. 



Mlafitkme of Baronem i.- Ihn-h nave 





*** | ' 



T a.,- 1 Mr tlMMJ. 



..- II 'allied a 



ii of $'.'). *"' raham Slim ax 



\ einenl aroused 



-t, Illlt *.' 



ined tu a -mini nun 



illn*itnl laMiu-n. ii 

 Bo sympathy f . t mi far an it 



la-Ill that 

 in wa not i|.-|* ml IK ii I 'ali -tine lut had a 



nimndibU progress was made l>y ii..- \\ 



lirtM-h 



: in 1 s '.' 1 ami ha.H "Jo miles of 



Hfngnn, public bath boon, several store*, 4 fa - 

 >o houses, 8 ben 



m, ami 'J riu< atifiml i-it-. The existing 

 III < 'ana 



, aii-1 uith fKNMMR) invested 



capital ; io New Jersry . 4AO farti^ vitb 10.000 a, 



. ;*-,-,...,. ... r . 



l*ftNUNfamfed 



i; \ ' " ' 



M M : -' i'a - .- 



, 





 '... . .-. - . -. 



, . , -' ' s ', , ' ' .! 



frmlurr 

 ganiXAtlon. At it* annual meeting. > 



. : -.:...-.-... , 



I R M HO : - : .--, , 



... . : , . . . . .... 



stipends and $3H,000 in oonaajmisl m 



, ,. 







ra_ 



Order of Ifnai H'nth. rrturnnl from Europe and 



rka- 



. ,-.<: i . 



growth of the- order to Europe 



f.ronic Invalids 

 rk opened a country home at Bedford 

 Station I Miring the year 488 patients wet* treated. 



'TS Of 



$10.000 and $5.0UO rarh .-r.- n.a.l.- to the Quaky 

 < >rplmnac r.y Aaron Cohen and 1.. f 



oloniation mei an 



untimely iU nth rancisoo, as was predicted. 



. Maariv Temple, in Chicago, celebrated 



Pat- 



erson, Philadelphia. San Franci*ro. Chicago, and 

 Brooklyn. Some excitement was created in New 

 < udge Prior's refusal, in January, to grant 

 a charter to a Jewih tocietv because iu annual 

 meeting was to be held ou Sunday. Four rabbis 

 van mdmaied v :, Bebcww ,.-,.. .. 



otonati 



k \NN\S Weatern SUte. ailmitt.-.! to the 



,-.-' 



a. .-..nhn- (<> each decennial cen- 

 BM.wai IMT.-JIH; in 1800; B64JOOin 1810; MMM 

 isso; ,,! i.i-::.r..; In i"i"'. iu ih. sut. ivn- 

 of 1805 it was 1.884.068. ( apital. Topeka. 

 OoYemment. Tin- following were the State 

 ni: th- \.ar : i. - r. .1 \\ I ...-S . 



H. ii.-n.-- 



m 



ey-Oeneral. L ('. liovlo: Amlit* r 



11 



(. ovo: mt* r 



er all Itamx-r 

 d of AgrkMtltur puliliran: 



.. minimi.. n-n. \V,;: : 

 Innl. ami U I>. Dwelling: Oil Iimirclor. 



lUnk Commtswoner. J. W. Brvidrnihal. 

 ranoe CommiMioner. Webb McNall ; 



W. I'ulvrr; IjiU r 

 ^n : Stato Printer. J. K. Hud- 



urf .In*: 

 ^upreme Court, Frank Doster. Populist; AMO- 



ciate Justioea. a H. Allen, Populist, and \V \ 

 Johnston. Republican 



Population. Figure* compiled by the Secre- 

 tary of the Stale Ifepartment of Agriculture to 

 August show a ... t incnasa to the population of 

 Kaacas to 1800-^7 of 30.130, The total if 1J06.- 

 .- are 100 dties and towns having 1.000 

 inhabitants or more, an increase of 4 to the year: 

 8 have more than 10.000. They are: Kansas 



nvwtluSUM; 



1W. 0: Lawrence, 10^14. 



he grniraJ.rrvmue bill paawd bv 



genem 



the Legislature placed the levy at 4 mills, It will 

 give the State ftJUtf^rlrlf for the next to years. 

 An additional 0-1-mill levy .- n . 



nded iixJebiednem. Pro- 



vision was made by which th.> Sut.- Tr *rer may 

 pay grneral-rerenue fund $5*1.000 of 



the $200.000 of 7-ner-oejit. bonds issued in 1867. 

 remaining $150.000 are to U r- funded at 4 

 per cent, and sold to the School Fund - 



