USA > Arizona > McKenney's business directory of the principal towns of Central and Southern California, Arizona, New Mexico, Southern Colorado and Kansas : including cities and towns on the Southern Pacific, Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, Kansas Pacific, and St. Joseph and Western railroads, 1883 > Part 50
USA > California > McKenney's business directory of the principal towns of Central and Southern California, Arizona, New Mexico, Southern Colorado and Kansas : including cities and towns on the Southern Pacific, Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, Kansas Pacific, and St. Joseph and Western railroads, 1883 > Part 50
USA > Colorado > McKenney's business directory of the principal towns of Central and Southern California, Arizona, New Mexico, Southern Colorado and Kansas : including cities and towns on the Southern Pacific, Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, Kansas Pacific, and St. Joseph and Western railroads, 1883 > Part 50
USA > Kansas > McKenney's business directory of the principal towns of Central and Southern California, Arizona, New Mexico, Southern Colorado and Kansas : including cities and towns on the Southern Pacific, Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, Kansas Pacific, and St. Joseph and Western railroads, 1883 > Part 50
USA > New Mexico > McKenney's business directory of the principal towns of Central and Southern California, Arizona, New Mexico, Southern Colorado and Kansas : including cities and towns on the Southern Pacific, Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, Kansas Pacific, and St. Joseph and Western railroads, 1883 > Part 50
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Along the lines of the Kansas Pacific and the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroads are thousands of acres of land, productive as any in the world, which is owned and for sale by the respective roads, and as the tide of persons seeking cheap homes is constantly flowing into those sections, it would be advisable for those who desire to procure homes on easy terms to take steps in that direction as soon as possible.
RAILROADS.
It was but fourteen years since that the important but youthful State of Kansas was very low down on the list of States in agri- cultural productions, but in 1878 she occupied the first rank in
CHAS. R. ALLEN, Anthracite & Cumberland Coal, 118, 120 Beale St., S F.
PACIFIC PRESS, PRINTERS, ENGRAVERS, ELECTROTYPERS, BINDERS, Oakland, Cal. Send for Estimates.
M. MADIGAN & CO New York Horseshoeing Shop.
faction guaranteed. S. W. cor Twelfth and West, Oakland. Horseshoeing promptly attended to. Interfering prevented. Satis-
The J. M. BRUNSWICK & BALKE CO.,
BILLIARD TABLE MANUFACTURERS: 653 and 655 Market St., San Francisco
the production of wheat, while her crop of corn gave her the ALPHABETICALLY. fourth position among those of her sisters, whose immense yields of that cereal brought them into enviable prominence. This was 470 Kansas. at a period, too, when but one-eighth of her territory was under cultivation, To the rapidity of her march towards this unpar- alleled development as a food-producing State, like those of her western sisters, she is indebted to the presence of her magnificent railway system, which was inaugurated and has been managed by the most intelligent, efficient and practical of business men, whose creditable management has added greatly to the fame of the State. THE ATCHISON, TOPEKA AND SANTA FÉ, With its line from Atchison, on the Missouri River, to the western- most boundary of the great commonwealth, penetrates and opens up to settlement the richest portion of it, along which scores of smiling villages have sprung up, farms have been purchased and are being cultivated, and an air of permanent growth pervades the whole extent. The receipts of this road from the date of its completion have gradually increased, and its traffic still keeps with the settlement of this fertile section. In 1872 the survey of this great route was finished, and its construction that year through the Arkansas Valley was one of the most important events in the history of this prosperous State. There are but twelve organized counties in the valley, which is fast acquiring a notoriety as the most productive, most healthful and most progressive region of Kansas, though a reportrecently issued by the State Board of Agri- culture shows that, although the most recently settled, the produc- tion of wheat in these counties amounted to thirty-seven and one- half per cent. of the entire yield of the State for the year 1878. In these counties, all of which border this popular route, there are 200,- 000 people, who impersonate industry, enterprise and intelligence, and who have established 400 church organizations, 833 schools and thirty-four newspapers. Besides the wheat crop mentioned, broom corn, oats, barley and corn, aggregating twenty-four per cent. of the total value of those productions throughout the State, were added to the results of farm labor. The soil of this beauti- 5 ful valley is a dark, sandy loam, varying from two to five feet in depth, which is underlaid with a porous subsoil, and which prac- tical demonstration has proved to be almost equal in production to that of the surface, which gently undulates from one end to the other of this promising valley, thus affording excellent natural drainage, leaving the atmosphere free from the taints of malaria, and making the locality attractive as a place of residence. The abundance of nutritious grasses also offers superior induce- ments to stockraisers, since experiments in this branch of industry have shown that it can be niade most profitable. Atchison, Topeka G and Sant Fé Railway owns land on either side of the entire length PACIFIC PRESS, PRINTERS, ENGRAVERS, ELECTROTYPERS, BINDERS, Oakland, Cal Send for Estimates. HOWARD BLACK, CUSTOM SHIRT MAKER, 126 KEARNY STREET, Rooms 7 and 8, San Francisco, Cal.
H. WACHHORST'S
Specialty is Fine Watches and Diamonds, Loekets, etc. 315 J Street, Sacramento, Cal.
KOHLER & CHASE The Elegant Boarding House; Apartments New, Spacious, First- Class; very Sunny. N W Cor. 9th and Washington, Oakland, Cal.
Kansas.
471
ALPHABETICALLY.
of its route, which is offered to purchasers at reasonable rates on most favorable terms. Desirable homes can be secured in this section by those who are seeking them, and transportation can be obtained at reduced rates on application to the management. The coaches of the road are inferior to none in the west; the officers and employes are attentive, polite and courteous; and the best of treatment is always assured to patrons. Cheap transporta- tion of household and other goods is offered by the company, and in this they show a disposition that is highly commendable. Besides the main line there are several branches of the road lead- ing in different directions, one to and beyond Wichita, a prosperous and thriving town, one to Eldorado, one to Greenwood and one to McPherson, whose combined length, including the branches to Kansas City and Pleasant Hill; will probably aggregate 800 miles, all of which are in active operation.
THE KANSAS DIVISION OF THE UNION PACIFIC.
This pioneer line has contributed not a little to the growth of Central Kansas, whose construction, in 1869, was the signal of a vast immigration of industrious people to the wonderful State, who have built substantial towns and cities, and taxed the resources of the virgin soil to its utmost capacity of production, though without endangering its fertility in the least, which strongly supports the argument favoring its exhaustless nature. The road also passes through a very rich agricultural and stock-raising region, whose remarkable development is a subject of wonder and admiration. There are perhaps 2,000 miles of railway in the State, with an immediate prospect of a flattering increase of this amount.
HISTORICAL SKETCH
OF THE ATCHISON, TOPEKA AND SANTA FÉ RAILROAD.
The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé Railroad originated in the minds of the early settlers of Kansas, as far back as the year 1858, the principal men who undertook the organization being Gen. B. F. Stringfellow, of Atchison, who is now a Director of the road, Hon. S. C. Pomeroy, and Col. C. K. Holliday, of Topeka, also a Director in the road, who, with several others, held a con- vention in Topeka for the purpose of blocking out a system of railroads for the State of Kansas. One of the roads decided upon at that meeting was a line from Atchison through Topeka toward Santa Fé, which to-day is the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe, with its extensions and numerous branches. The first work that was done on the road was to build a line from Topeka to Carbondale, a distance of eighteen miles, which was opened for business in July, 1869. From Carbondale the road was gradually completed west through Burlingame and Osage City to Emporia, which point was reached in July, 1870. Another year took the line to
GHAS. R. ALLEN, Agt. Pittsburg Coal Mf'g Co., 118 & 120 Beale St., S. F.
HOWARD BLACK, CUSTOM SHIRT MAKER, 126 KEARNY STREET, Rooms 7 and 8, San Francisco, Cal.
BLUESTONE A SPECIALTY. THE BLUESTONE AND REDUCTION WORKS, TOMBSTONE, A. T.
The J. M. BRUNSWICK & BALKE CO.,
BILLIARD TABLE MANUFACTURERS, 653 and 655 Market St., San Francisco.
Newton, 135 miles from Topeka. In the spring of 1872 the con- struction of the line from Atchison to Topeka was completed, and ALPHABETICALLY. also an extension from Newton to Wichita, making a total mile- 472 Kansas. age of 212 miles. The work was steadily pushed forward through the Arkansas Valley, from Newton west, and in June, 1872, the city of Hutchinson, 218 miles from Atchison, was the end of the track. Another year took the line to Grenada, Col., where it rested for two years, owing to the financial panic of 1873, etc. It was a difficult matter at that time to get money to build rail- roads, but certain enterprising people in Boston had their atten- tion directed to the future of this line, and they determined to take hold of it; these were Messrs. Thomas and Joseph Nickerson, C. W. Pierce, Alden Speare, I. T. Burr, and a few others, all heavy capitalists. They secured control of the road, and in the spring of 1875 began to push it ahead. In September, 1875, it reached Las Animas, Col., 531 miles from the Missouri River. Here they met very vital competition in the cattle traffic, the greater part of which, up to this time, had gone over the Kansas Pacific via Las Animas to Kit Carson, and the Kansas Pacific company threatened to build mile for mile along side of the Atchi- son, Topeka & Santa Fé track if they continued their construc- tion any further west; and so both lines started out about ten feet apart for Pueblo. The Kansas Pacific was a rich corporation, and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe was a poor one; but they had the pluck, and they went ahead. The Kansas Pacific.fol- lowed them until they reached La. Junta, where they gave it up, and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé went into Pueblo in Feb- ruary, 1876. Shortly afterward the Kansas Pacific track was taken up, leaving a clear field for the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé Road. About the same time that the line was opened up at Pueblo, the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé Railroad secured pos- session of the old Kansas Midland Road, which ran from Topeka to Lawrence on the south side of the Kaw River, and completed it to Kansas City, at which point they opened up on March 1, 1876. The next important extension was the line from La Junta, sixty- three miles east of Pueblo, to Trinidad, distance eighty-two miles. This was completed in September, 1878, since which time the work of extension in New Mexico, in which the greatest difficul- ties have been encountered in tunneling and working through mountain passes, has been steadily pushed forward. Numerous branches have been built in the State of Kansas, which are all proving valuable feeders to the original line. The eighteen miles in 1869, connecting two counties in Kansas, have grown (August, 1881,) to over 1,800 miles of road, reaching out and extending into seven States, viz .: Missouri, Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, Texas and Old Mexico. At Deming, New Mexico, a connection has been made with the Southern Pacific R. R., mak- ing a new Southern through line to San Francisco. Two lines PACIFIC PRESS, PRINTERS, ENGRAVERS, ELECTROTYPERS, BINDERS, Oakland, Cal. Send for Estimates. PACIFIC PRESS, PRINTERS, ENGRAVERS, ELECTROTYPERS, BINDERS, Oakland, Cal. Send for Estimates.
H. WACHHORST'S
Selection of JEWELRY is the Rarest in the State, No. 315 J Street, Sacramento, Cal. A
COSMOPOLITAN HOTEL, Tombstone, A. T.
C. BILICKE, Proprietor. EUROPEAN PLAN.
are being built in Old Mexico, one route being from El Paso south to the city of Mexico, by way of the city of Chihuahua, the other ALPHABETICALLY. south westerly from Deming to Guaymas, on the Gulf of Califor- nia. Kansas. 473 THE BRANCH LINES OF THE ATCHISON, TOPEKA AND SANTA FE IN KANSAS. ARKANSAS CITY BRANCH. This branch extends from Mulvane, on the Arkansas River, through Winfield to Arkansas City, within four miles of the Indian Territory, the distance being thirty-six miles. CALDWELL BRANCH. This branch leaves the main line at Newton and proceeds in a southerly direction down the Little Arkansas Valley to Wichita, Rome and Caldwell, the entire length of the line being eighty miles. EL DORADO BRANCH. This branch leaves the main line at Florence and extends down the Walnut Valley to Augusta and Douglas. HOWARD . BRANCH. The Howard branch extends south from Emporia to Howard, a distance of seventy-five miles. KANSAS CITY BRANCH. The Kansas City branch, sixty-six miles long, ends at Topeka. MCPHERSON BRANCH. SON, 319 Market Street, San Francisco. This branch leaves the main line at Florence and extends along the bank of the Cottonwood River northwesterly for ten miles, thence west to Ellinwood, Barton County. Marion Center, ten miles north of Florence, is the county seat of Marion County. Hillsboro and Lehigh are also stations in Marion County. At McPherson the road is intersected by the Salina and Southwestern R. R., a branch of the Union Pacific extending from the north. From Lyons the road extends due west to Ellinwood. PLEASANT HILL BRANCH. This branch extends in a southeasterly direction from Cedar Junction through a very rich agricultural district to Olathe, ten miles distant. One mile east the road is crossed by the Kansas City, Fort Scott and Gulf Railroad. Three miles east of Stanley miles to Pleasant Hill, Mo., the entire length of the branch being miles distant. One mile east the road is crossed by the Kansas forty-five miles. PACIFIC PRESS, PRINTERS, ENGRAVERS, ELECTROTYPERS, BINDERS, Oakland, Cal. Send for Estimates. ECLIPSE SELF-REGULATING INCUBATORS. Send stamp for Circular and Price List, G. G. WICK.
CHAS. R. ALLEN. Wellington and Scotch Coal, 118 and 120 Beale St., S. F.
910 Broadway, bet. 8th and 9th, Oakland.
A. STEIN, PROFESSIONAL TAILOR. Suits to Order from $25 to $60. Latest Style.
The J. M. BRUNSWICK & BALKE CO.,
BILLIARD TABLE MANUFACTURERS, 653 and 655 Market St., San Francisco.
474
Kansas-Abilene. ALPHABETICALLY.
Abilene,
DICKINSON COUNTY.
In the year 1869 no place was the scene of greater activity than this pretty little capital of Dick- inson County. At an early period in its history the town became famous for its lawless- ness and barbarism, but with the advance of civilization and with the improvement of the county, these objectionable fea- tures were expelled from her social system, and to-day she stands an example of morality and refined culture. There is a prevalent spirit of enterprise and public improvement shown to an encouraging degree in the citizens of the place, and her rapid strides from a fourth to a third-class city warrant the belief that she is destined to become one of the most impor- tant, if not one of the leading cities of the State. Surrounded as she is by fertile and well-im- proved country, with splendid schools and an excellent sanitary condition as additional attractive elements, and with a class of people that are hospitably dis- posed, she must become a pro- gressive city. There are three weekly newspapers published here, whose general appearance reflects the character of their supporters, and shows to an eminent degree what the feeling is concerning a respectable press. The business houses, as a rule, are well constructed, while the public buildings, notably the graded schools, are perfect gems in their way. Trains stop here
West. The Merchants' Hotel is the leading hotel of the town. It has elegant sample rooms for traveling men, and is first-class in every respect. Mrs. A. W. Sibbald is a lady of experience in hotel business, and knows how to cater to the tastes of the traveling public, and we wish her the success. she so heartily deserves. The genial clerk of the house, Mr. J. C. Criswell is enough to warrant that fact. The population is estimated to be 2,700, with a prospect of being increased thirty-three and one-third per cent. during the next twelve months. There are three banks, besides elevators. mills, hotels and other places of industry and business. It is 162 miles west of Kansas City.
Abilene Bank, E A Herbst cash- ier
" ABILENE GAZETTE" (The), V P Wilson & Sons proprs
Asher & Nottorf, groceries and cigars
Aspley Geo, bakery
Austin W H, physician and sur- geon
Barcus, Pierce & Co, furniture
Barnes S W, gen mdse
Berry Bros, gen mdse
Bonebrake J E, hardware
Bowersox Henry, cigars and tobacco
Brucke H, groceries
Burroughs S A, attorney at law Burton & Schoonover, druggists Bush Z T, barber and hair goods Cadis Chas, livery
Campbell J P, attorney at law
Carpenter & Baldwin, flour and feed
Carpenter Samuel, hotel
for meals going both East and | Case John B, gen mdse
H. WACHHORST'S
Selection of JEWELRY is the Rarest in the State, No. 315 J Street, Sacramento, Cal.
HOWARD BLACK, CUSTOM SHIRT MAKER, 126 KEARNY STREET, Rooms 7 and 8, San Francisco, Cal.
KOHLER & CHASE
The Elegant Boarding House; Apartments New, Spacious, First- Class ; very Sunny. N. W. Cor. 9th and Washington, Oakland, Cal.
Kansas -- Abilene. 475
ALPHABETICALLY.
HOWARD BLACK, CUSTOM SHIRT MAKER, 126 KEARNY STREET, Rooms 7 and 8, San Francisco, Cal.
Ceis Mrs A M, millinery, fancy goods and hair works
Clark E, justice of the peace Como Mrs L & Co, millinery and fancy goods Conrad P E, cigar mfr
Cook A, restaurant
Cooley Wm L, jeweler
Cooper John J, meat market
Cooper & Slough, livery
Cox W H, dentist
Crise G A, dentist
CRISWELL J CALVIN, clerk Merchants' Hotel
Curtis & Co, proprs Henry House
Curtis J, justice of the peace
Davidson A S, clerk district court
Davidson S, jeweler
Davidson S E, tinner
Davis Wm, restaurant
D'Huy & Son, druggists
"DICKINSON COUNTY CHRONICLE," J W Hart edi- tor and propr
Dryer W R, cashier First Na- tional Bank
Durkee J S, gen mdse
Eicholtz W H, undertaker
Faulkner L H & Co, clothing
Finley M A, groceries, etc
First National Bank, John Johntz pres, W R Dryer cashier
Freeman Geo H, real estate
Giles & Gordon, elevator
Gordon A W, jeweler
Grady Will, stoves and tinware Gravey A M, county superin- tendent schools
Hart J W, editor and propr "TheDickinson Co Chronicle " Hamaker J G, gen mdse
Hansbrough John A, photog- rapher Hawk C G. treas Dickinson County
Hazlett & Co, gen mdse
Heigele P, harnessmaker
Hendricks W N, agt U PR R and Pacific Express Co
Henry House, Curtis & Co proprs
Henry T C, land, loan and in- surance agt
Herbst E A, cashier Abilene Bank
Hickman Wm, hotel
Hodge Bros, hardware and agri- cultural implements
Hodge & Edwards, grain
Hodge W .S, postmaster
Hofinan M, groceries
Hoffman W T, editor "The Weekly Democrat "
Hoffmire & Pierce, attorneys at law
Hurd G W, attorney at law and insurance
Irion W H, China, glass and queensware
Johntz Bros, gen mdse
Johntz John, pres First National Bank
Keiser J F, physician and sur- geon
KELLEY J S, jewelry, clocks, watches, etc
Kenyon C A, gen mdse
Kirby Thos, banker
Kissell & Maxwell, bakery
Knox Robert, coal, sewing ma-
chines and musical instru- ments
Lane W, barber
Langellier A L, notary public, insurance, etc
Lebold, Fisher & Co, bankers
Levi Frank, meat market
Litts Henry, sheriff
Marx Peter, Hour-mill
McBride Daniel, loan agt
McInernay T C, boots and shoes
McLeod A L, roadmaster U P RR
CHAS. R. ALLEN, Cannel and West Hartley Coal, 118, 120 Beale St., S. F.
ROASTING and MILLING of REFRACTORY ORES, by the Bluestone & Reduction Works, Tombstone, A. T.
The J. M. BRUNSWICK & BALKE CO.,
BILLIARD TABLE MANUFACTURERS: 653 and 655 Market St., San Francisco.
SPECIALTIES.
MONEY MADE BY SELLING MY
COUNTRY MERCHANTS, G. G. WICKSON, 319 Market Street, S. F.
476
Kansas-Abilene. ALPHABETICALLY.
MERCHANTS' HOTEL, Mrs A
W Sibbald propr, J Calvin Criswell clerk
Meredith L P, books and sta- tionery Metzger D H, livery
Meyer V, bakery and restaurant Nelson B F, groceries and con- fectionery
NICOLAY M, lumber, lime, and coal
Niswanger W H, confectionery and fruits
Northcraft J G, druggist
Reed L A & Co, lumber and coal Rice & Floyd, lumber
Rockwell G A & Co, gen mdse Rohrer G W C, wines, liquors Romig A C, gen mdse Rothschild J, drr goods Rugh Miss M E, millinery and dressmaking
Pannenberg E, county surveyor Parent E F, groceries ParentG E, groceries and queens- ware Pisle D L, harness
Prathers L H, attorney at law Prather & Ogden, land agts Sewell T E, books, stationery, etc Shadinger H S,livery, feed, and sale
Shaeffer E P, clothing, boots and shoes
Shook G W, fruits and confec- tionery
SIBBALD MRS A W, propr Merchants' Hotel Simmers L, blacksmith Sisson E E, bakery and restau- rant
Smith D G, druggist
Southworth Hiland, attorney at law
Stambaugh & Hurd, insurance and attorneys at law
Stambaugh W S, attorney at law and insurance
Stevens C, loan and real estate Stoke J B, groceries
Thornton T L, register of deeds Upshaw M V, furniture
Vegiard Ed, tin and plumbing Wahl A, meat market
Walker & Nichols, millinery Waring Richard, county clerk
WEEKLY DEMOCRAT" (The), W T Hoffman editor Whitehurst W H, foundry Wilson F B, land and loan agt Wilson V P & Sons, proprs "The Abilena Gazette "
Worley & Spangler, harness and saddlery
Merchants' Hotel,
ABILENE, KANSAS.
MRS. A. W. SIBBALD, - - PROPRIETRESS.
This House has recently been purchased by the proprietress, and put in first-class order. A FINE SAMPLE ROOM has been attached to it for traveling men. It is located close to the Depot and convenient to all the business houses. It is first-class in every respect, and charges are very reasonable.
J. CALVIN CRISWELL, Clerk.
H. WACHHORST'S
Selection of JEWELRY is the Rarest in the State, No. 315 J Street, Sacramento, Cal.
PACIFIC PRESS, PRINTERS, ENGRAVERS, ELECTROTYPERS, BINDERS. Oakland, Cal. Send for Estimates.
COSMOPOLITAN HOTEL, Tombstone, A. T.
EUROPEAN PLAN. First-Class.
Kansas-Alma-Arkansas City. ALPHABETICALLY.
PACIFIC PRESS, PRINTERS, ENGRAVERS, ELECTROTYPERS, BINDERS, Oakland, Cal. Send for Estimates.
477
Alma,
WABAUNSEE CO.
Allen J E, barber " ALMA NEWS," Sellen Bros editors and proprs Buelnur Geo, physician Chicago Lumber Co, Eck Josept mgr
CODINGTON C W. agt Pacific Express Co and M A & BR
CORNELL GEO G, co attorney CRAFTS FRED, drugs and postmaster
DEARMOND W T, meat market Degen Peter, saloon and billiard hall
ELDRIDGE & CARROLL, drugs ELDRIDGE E W, physician and surgeon
FAIRFIELD S H, county re- corder
Fechter Geo & Bro, dry goods GARDNER D M, sheriff Greene J, physician
Gregory Mrs A, millinery Hecka F, shoemaker
HOCHHANS .R A, wagonmaker " HOME WEEKLY," W W Cone,
editor and proprietor Jouvenal L, hardware Kast M, barber
Keaggy Chas, probate judge LANG A F, blacksmith LICHT H G, land and loan agt Limerick J F & Co, brokers MAHAN W T, county surveyor McDonald Wm, blacksmith McELVAIN J C, restaurant and grocery Meyer E, gen mdse MILL CREEK WATER MILLS, Panly L propr MUELLER P, saloon and bil- liard hall Palenskie Louis, artist Pierce & Mahan, real estate and loans, attorneys at law
PIPPERT HENRY, saddles and harness and sewing machines, mayor of Alma
Purcell Elevator Co, grain and gen mdse
Richter H G, furniture
Ross Chas, county treasurer
Sellers Bros, editors " Alma
News "
Simon F C, hardware
Solcheid Wm, gen mdse
STANLEY T C, livery and feed stable
THOMSON MATT; supt public instruction
Wald R A, insurance agt and loan broker
WATTS T H, county clerk
WINKLER HOUSE, John Wink - ler propr
WINKLER J, propr Winkler Hotel
Wright S F, propr salt works
ZECKSER ADOLPH, mfr and dealer in boots and shoes ZWANZIGER G, real estate, loan and insurance agt
Arkansas City,
COWLEY COUNTY.
Is situated four miles from the Indian Territory, near the con- fluence of the Arkansas and Walnut Rivers; was incorpo- rated in 1872, and has a popula tion of nearly 1,300. Distance from Atchison, 262 miles; from Topeka, 212 miles; from Pueb- lo, 510 miles.
Alexander John, physician Benedict & Kimmel, groceries Betts J R, restaurant and hotel Bonsall I H, real estate and in- surance agt, justice of the peace, and notary public
CHAS. R. ALLEN, Agt. Pittsburg Coal Mf'g Co., 118 & 120 Beale St., S. F.
M. MADIGAN & CO., New York Horseshoeing Shop.
faction guaranteed. S. W. cor Twelfth and West Oakland. Horseshoeing promptly attended to. Interfering prevented. Satis-
The J. M . BRUNSWICK & BALKE CO.,
BILLIARD TABLE MANUFACTURERS 653 and 655 Market St , San Francisco
478
Kansas-Arkansas City. ALPHABETICALLY.
Brooks Clarence O, livery, sale, and feed stable
Chapel A J, physician and sur- geon
Chenowith W E, mgr Chicago Lumber Co
Cunningham Geo M, dealer in agricultural implements, and shipper of country produce Eddy É D, drugs, books, etc
Ekel W T, agt S Branch Lum- ber Co
Endicott & Loveland, butchers Fairclo -, Livery, sale and feed stable
Farrar H P, . cashier Cowley County Bank
Fitch & Barron, notions and sewing machines
Fleming S B, pastor Presbyte- rian Church
France C U, propr City Hotel Gibson J H, restaurant, confec- tionery, etc
Godehard Herman, groceries and bakery
Godfrey O F, billiard and pool room
Grubbs R E, books, stationery, notions, etc
Hammond B D & Co, fruit dealers
Harkins M, loan broker Henderson Mrs W M, millinery, notions, etc
Hill James, pres Arkansas City Water Power Co
Houghton O P, gen mdse.
Houghton T R, saddlery, har- ness, etc
Houghton & Speers gen mdse Horn Albert, bootmaker Howard Bros, hardware Hoyt Saml, loan broker
Hurley J E, produce shipper
Huey J L, cashier Creswell Bank
Ingersoll O, agt A, T & S FR R
Kellogg H D, mayor
Kellogg & Mowry, drugs, medi- cines, etc
Kroenert John, groceries, hides, furs, and produce
Laverty L F, pastor M E Church
Loomis J A, dentist
Mann Adam, restaurant, confec- tionery, etc
Mantor S J, groceries, tobacco, cigars, etc
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