Lutheran Church. ‘There will be no service in the Luth eran church on Sunday. The interior i being improved and the building can not be used for another week. Last week Miss Mcintosh, one of the daughters of James Mcintosh of Buckeye, was married to a son of Teddy Ball, and a big crowd of friends, to celebrate that event and! glo the 2th anniversary of the wed ding of Mr. and Mrs. Teddy Ball, which occurred the same day, Nalton—Oldharm. On last Sunday afternoon, April 18, at the Methodist personage, the cere mony was performed that united in marriag. Alien G. Oldham and Ida Nolton, Rev. A. N Smith officiating. The young people took the evening train to Wakeeney near which place the young husband has a home ready for his bride. She is a daughter of Jonah Nolton of our city and was born and raised here. She will make the young farmer a good, practical and helpful wife. The free Press extends congratulations. Eddingfield--Hughes. ‘The young folks of Buckeye town ship will remember Miss Eddingfield, wh visited her uncle, Howard Baker, gummes. the area attended our ite Normal but was called to her home in Mlinoia by the sudden death of her father. This week she returned as, the bride of our young carpenter, James Hughes and they are now biv ere in one of Mr. Frank's new cottages on East Main Street. Our young folks welcome her to our city and congratu late Jim. Miss Annie Froelich has returned from her visit to Denver, George Philip and Isaac Zeigler are having the trees along their sidewalks nicely trimmed up. Many others should do so. The trees need it. This week this office has rejected a _$50 contract at the Montgomery, Ward Co. as it is an outside house and we are advertising for Bays business men. SHOES—The finest lot of ladies’ low shoes ever brought to Hays, ‘ The Dorothy Dodd. Come see them at Zeiglera’ ‘The Early Brothers have bought the Harnesa shop material and machinery of John Blender on North Chestnut street and Blender will now move to his new farm near Topeka. What a fine auto spin it will be down Chestnut and up the Experiment Hill when the new bridge input across the creek. Now they spin down Chestnut, keep to the right through the Public park and up Milner avenue to Normal avenue. Conversation overheard last Satur day evening in the post office: “Bid you see the ‘Free Press’ this jeek? It is better than ever, in fact the best paper ever printed in that office. It is full of local news and has a supplement to hold the extra ads ‘To that eo} Why I went there some time ago and ordered the paper stopped and I thought the paper had quit. He was like a party of young folks down on the creek last week in the public park. Some young men wanted to stop the creek running and threw in an armful of rocks, but the girls laugh | tred as the water kept running the same as ever and you couldn’t even see the hole the rocks made.