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The Burlingame Enterprise from Burlingame, Kansas • Page 1

Location:
Burlingame, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

it Gonerous Prizes, r. Parade and All Kinds of Amusements. You'll Miss It if you don't come. HJoag j3UMIu'ut iflUilU i4UUU 5 1 UWi.rilB' rr 1 ill I I VOLUME XI. BURLIHGAHE.

KANSAS. THURSDAY. JULY 12. 1906. NUMBER 38.

IT) mmMffr JX. X-JL KF X-L fyg fi rooi, fyrnwi wm rvmtffi pr-i ir---crrr ft PERSONALS. I Good. if 0: uOO(Di Miss Laura Buek was down from To- peka over Sunday. Wm.

Lyman, of Qaenemo, was here this week on business. Popular Prices! Charlie and Mies Mabel Couchman were home over Sunday. Mrs. A. B.

Farr and son. Clifford, are Our Stock of GROCERIES are of the best and prices reasonable for quality carried. visiting at Marion, Kansas. W. G.

Beale returned Monday from a three weeks' visit in Texas. CI aude DeLemater went to Arkansas City Monday on a business trip. Miss Maud Wilkia will attend Camp bell university at Holton this winter. it -w Puck Sweet Potatoes 15c Best Ever Beets 15c Perfection Hominy 10c Onaga Kraut 10c are special brands of extra quality to please the most fastidious. Try them.

iuiss Virginia Jennings expects to IOWA CORN Four Cans for 25c 75c a dozen. -0 This is a bargain as they are standard goods of good quality. Remember the place. teach at Nam pa, Idaho, again this year. M.

L. Morrison and family are visit ing this week with relatives iuMissouri. Misses Schmialer and Held were the guests of Mrs. Jackson Wood Friday W. K.

Han na and family are expected home this week from theireastern trip. Mrs. E. Briggs, of Scranton town ship, will leave for a trip to Colorado his week. Aire.

Li. M. Couchman was in Esk- ridge Saturday visiting at the home iiy j) (yi. us Ck4S "''t" Ml V. Yuba Peaches 20c Yuba Apricots 20c Glenwood Plums 20c Wagner's Pineapple 15c 25c These goods only have to be used to be recognized as of Superior Quality.

Kenwood Peaches 25c Kenwood Pears 25c Kenwood Apricots 25c Kenwood Strawberries 25c Kenwrood goods will please the fastidious and the equal of any 30c or 35c goods in the market of GeQ. Waugh. Miss Winnie Warren left yesterday for a ten days' visit with her brother, Hiram, in Denver. Mi6s Bertha Bratton and sister, Mrs. Claude Case, of To peka, have been here 4- p2(LDtk aid 21 uuring the past week.

Mrs. L. P. Robinson and children have gone to Chicago for a month's visit with her parents. Mr.

and Mr. H. B. Pratt left for Salt Lake City Monday, for an extended visit with their daughters. Mre.

S. Cutler and Mrs. T. i I A lOO-Piece Dinner Set either of our CHINA or SEMI-PORCELAIN wares is something to please anybody and we have some bargains for you. Also a large line of GLASSWARE to select from lew prices.

0 We Fay for It, and You Get the Benefit. Mitchell contemplate a visit with relatives In Boston this summer. Mrs. DeCamp and daughter, Miss Maude, of Emporia, are here the guests of hef sister, Mr. I.

E. Mercer. J. P. Johnson and Miss Annie Butter, Eggs, Poultry.

Highest Market Price, and Take all You Bring. r7 Dun mire: Went to Topeka Saturday for -J two weeks' -visit with relatives. 5 Gay Stricklett is home from Kantas I City tjafi week. Miss Stricklett has re It has been our custom for several years to have a Big Chicken Day, This is done for advertising; purposes, to keep our name before the public and to set new customers 8. cently visited herold home inKeniucky.

Mrs McKenzio, of Baldwin, who has Ft? 4- 4 Deen here for iome time visiting her into our store, un this day we pay more tor chickens than daubter Mr8 Joe watuD, returned lsHl Monday. -s they are worth. Our plan is to pay for them in merchandise THE KANSAS FARMER. I' tical usefuln-s. A-Jc for fautLWe copies.

We have made arrangements with The Kiinfa Fnrmr that we can furntfih The E'-rprfpe and The rTftnH- Parmer for one year for onlv $1 50 for both pnpr. Mr. and Mrs M. B. VanPetten and Miss Mamie and Mr.

and Mr. A. VanPetten leave for Colorado next Monday. Mrs. H.

D. Shepard and daughter, Mrs. L. T. Price leave next Moudav and in this way we introduce our goods to the people, and we find it about as cheap a way of advertising as any way we know of.

So next The "old relia.b!e', Kansas Farmer, established in 183(5, is the best ermine agricultural weekly paper in the West. It solves the problems for the busy farmer. It helps and Interests every member of the farmer's family. It has 12 regular departments. It contains Only a fucce-ful balloon voyage stands between Walter WeHman and undying fame.

(The North Pole.) Some of theTbaw' are warm numbers. for Sao Bernardioo, California, to visit Mr. and Mrs. BVed Richards. Misses Helen Palmer, Uarda Wood and ina Crumb departed fur Colorado Tuesday.

Miss Palmer and Miss Crumb 24 to32 pages each week. It is the best implementon thefarra. Itis published in Kansas oy men who understand Kan- 9 -Friday Saturday July 20th and 21bt, sasconditions. Each issue is worth the It is still safe to indulge in in eating bananas. No unwholesome adulterations have been found.

expect to remain until September 1. price of a vear's mbscri ption in prac Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lyons, Miss fand Earl -Lord rere in Kansas City ft 44i we will take in chickens at our Burlingame store. The price aaturaay toattena tne weaaing 01 Miss Maud Thomson to W.

Holtz. JackMcPhillamey started this week I Hot QUI 1 for a visit with his mother at i Liberty, New York. It is his first trip Ln east In thirty years. His mother is for hens will be 10c per pound. We can not make a price on Springs and other produce yet, but you can call us up about them.

We expect to get more hens than anything else, as they are about done laying now. eighty-four years of age and quite re cently received injuries from a fall. If you want the Loveliest' Hot Biscuits you ever saw you will certainly have to use Vaughn Son's home rendered lard is pure. Try some of it. Your baggage delivered to any part Bring us all your surplus stock old or young, fat or poor, we want them all.

We will pay a tittle better price than usual for all other kinds of produce, such kinds as we Oo Cyclone i OH I I vuw vjr UC1U UUbhlOU St Vaughn Son's. They are very fine. ii can handle. We will also have some special prices on our i Tlie fflao Witiiou i goods for cash, so you can buy whether you have hens or 5 i i. not.

Our object is to pcet a Rood biar crowd and we want jU bank account is traveling on foot, i i 1 t. rt i i everybody to come. We will disolav all of our roods in the uu There's no shenannagin about this Flour. What it is today, you'll find it tomorrow, next week, next year. Uniformity is the first essential of proper blending.

Then it's made of the finest Selected Wheat milled in a new and modern way. 50 pound Sack for $1.20. 5 4 4 i best manner possible. a rate of speed afforded by modern improvements. 1 We Will hAVf nIfrvH rif PYtrn l-iln anH Aant vroii fr hrinor i i it aoes not require a large amount i 41 of money to start a bank account.

ii all the hens you can. We want several hundred and these i Place the money with which you i oav vour bills in th hanlr Wp Jlll. prices will bring them. will issue you a pass book. You can tnen write a check for each Try It and You'll Always Buy It.

obligation; these checks come back 4 to the bank and are returned to 3 ou I when we balance your pass book OOO These checks are indisputable re ri 1 ceipts for every cent you pay out. After you have started to carry S3SC IliiSBp on your business by a checking ac -rs II vss, rv I 1 er 1 Jl. II 11 MMvt a-k ww-rwa fin jlvji. Ui.iit V-JMJo 5 and that without a bank account oocl Tilings for Little Money I you are at a disadvantage. s.rjr i T1? rvrf3T rr in-'- Tr? rrrm It Si If (f If If 1 If 1 U.

1 1 a a 4 1 uc riuiicci oiaic odun,.

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About The Burlingame Enterprise Archive

Pages Available:
9,322
Years Available:
1895-1919