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Ashland Clipper from Ashland, Kansas • Page 3

Publication:
Ashland Clipperi
Location:
Ashland, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

BAD SMELLS- CLARK 30UNTY GLIPPER SPECIAL SANTA FE RATES. LEX1XGT0S. oods The copious rains receutly have placed crops in splendid shape; but unfortunately probably, the hard winds have whipped most of the leaves and rid low rrices, The A. T. S.

lias made the following arrangements for the sale of tickets at reduced rales on the occa- sions named below: Hutchinson Kans. May 2629. Kansas Musinal Jubilee, One farej for the round trip from points in Kansas. Excursion tickets to be sold May 2o -J inclusive, good to return until and including May 30, "96. Tickets good for going passage, commencing date of sale, and for continuous passage in each direction.

Kansas City Kars. Juae 9 12 '96. i i Annual Convention Kansas Christian i to the tank, halt and listen to the dis-Endevor Societv. One fare for the Put and ioi the complaint that "the round trip from points Kansas. fous, tie children', food Excursion tickets to be sold June 8-9 3 bf lc taken i tractor has no concern with their feelgood to return until and including! and onJy observe8 that lt is the It Will Pay Yoy to Read the Following: Best Colorado Potatoes per bu 45c Early Ohio seed k' li 45c Coffee per lb 20c Granulated Sugar 15 lbs Si.

Best Tomatoes 3 cans 25c Beans, White Navy 30 lbs Si. Rolled Oats 30 lbs" S1.00 Star Tobacco per lb 40c Best L. L. Muslin per yard 5c Calicoes, per vard 5c to 7c Salt No. 1 per bbl Sl.45 Evaporated apples 3 lbs 25c peaches 3 lbs 22c nectarines 3 lbs 25c Best 3 crown rasons per lbs 05c I will pay highest market price for Butter, Eggs and Hides.

My stock is full and complete in al lits branches. It will pay you to come and see my goods, and get prices before buying elsewhere. I will make special prices to Large Buyers from a distance for the next 80 days. E. E.

Wildman. tree opinions: "77i? CHICAGO RECORD is a model newspaper in every sense of the word." Harrisburg (Pa.) Call. "There is no paper published in America thnt so nearly approaches the true journal' istic idevA r.s The CHICAGO RECORD." From "Ncwspapcrdom" (tXew York). 7 have come to the firm conclusion, after a long test and after a wide comparison with the journals cf many cities and countries, that The CHICAGO RECORD comes as near being the ideal daily journal as wc are for some time likely to find on these mortal shores." Prof. J.

T. Hatfield in The Evansion (III.) Index. Sold l'j newsdealers everywhere and subscriptions received by all postmasters. Address THE CHI-CAG0 RECORD, 181 Madiscn-sL Englaad. Effort to Improve Condition In India.

Under English rule "local eelf-gor- eminent nas teen bestowed upon mo le of IcdIa 80 tDe board naa t0 look around ior means to pay lor water ana drainage setieraes and town conservancy; Use barrier dues are one of them, and the carters, who have just come in, are as discontented as the people of the town, who pay, one way and another, 2 shillings per head annnally for local rales, says the Gentleman's Magazine. "Four annas for each cart entering Singhpur, in addition to four tolls on the road from Panaunder! It is monstrous! How will they get food to-day for themselves and their bullocks?" Here some women, passing on their way nf the COVern- ment, and proceeds to rake in his dues. The district officers say that the in gradtude of the people is most discour aging; latrines have been put up, the filth is carted away daily to a distance from the town, street drains are cleansed, stray dogs are destroyed, oil lamps have been erected in the streets, water of gcod quality distributed to standpipes for public use, and they have a local board, presided over by the Taluq native revenue officer, and yet they are not happy. It la really too bad. Some of the people will positively not drink the water coming to them In metal pipes, and some still neglect to use the public latrines, preferring to resort to the open country outside the town, according to old custom.

A nativo hand-loom weaver, of whom there are many in Singhpur, told one of the col lectors peons, who told the head clerk. who told his superior, that the people were not ungrateful, but they were all queer anfi liked their own ways, which the Engfish did not understand; they did not notice the odora which the En glish called bad smells; they liked to take their drinking water from the vll i lage well, or the temple tank, especially the latter, which had been blessed by the presence of Vishnu; and they did not like the dung-carts parading the streets and standing in the market place. Least of all did they like paying a week's earnings every year to the local board when the cost of food was increasing. They were very poor men; what should tey do? A Costly rtn. Secretary Mcr-tcn was showing a reporter through the entomological bureau the other day, and this is part of what the reporter says he did: "I've got a bug In there that cost the government he don't look it, but he did.

It's a fact. One day an outfit of scientists started in pursuit of this bug. They ranged all over the hemisphere and stuck to his trail like bloodhounds; they ransacked North American all the way from the isthmus to Alaska. After the most remarkable adventures by Hood aDd field they treed their bug and took him prisoner. He was then brought captive to Washington, and he's right there now in that brick house, the highest priced bug on earth.

A round-up of the total expense of that one bug hunt came to over But W6 got the bug." Cnrfew Hell la Pomilar. The town of Peebles, Ohio, has decided to try the curfew bell plan so popular In the northwest, A large bell ha3 been ordered and will be hung in some convenient spot This bell will be rung promptly at 8 o'clock each night except Sunday. At that time every boy between the ages of and 18 end every girl between the ages of 6 and 10, unless accompanied by their parents or guardians, must be within doors, under penalty of arrest and a fine of not less than $1 and costs. A White Moose. The big white moose recently shot in the Maine woods by a Mr.

Sargent of Grafton has greatly interested naturalists, as well as sportsmen. It is the only white moose ever seen in Maine, and very few have ever been heard of elsewhere. The naturalists Ea7 it Is, of coursa, not siracge that there should be an albino moose, resulting from a freak of nature, as white deer and other albino game animals are not uncommon. But white moose are a great rarity. A Grarel Walk.

The gorgeous tales of oriental splendor tell of pathways strewn with gold dust, to be trodden by the sacred feet of royalty, and diamonds are the conventional psving material for the promenade of the princes in the fairy tales. It has been left to a St. Louis business man, says a correspondent, to construct a gravel walk, neither long nor strikingly beautiful, that is a modern, if comparatively humble, rival of these glistening highways cf fiction and fable, for it represents $15,000 hard cash. The manager of a St Louis coffee company is the proud possessor of this unique It Is composed of several tons of Brazilian pebbics. that came to him in an ordinary business way during the last few years.

This firm are heavy importers of Brazilian coffee. Before the berries are ready to be roasted for the market the sacks are opened and the contents carefully examined for twigs, leaves and other impurities, the latter generally taking the shape of small pebbics about the cizc of a ceffee berry. These came with such regularity and in such quantities that long ago the idea that they were accidental; in the sacks was abandoned and the conclusion reached that they were purposely placed in the bags to make weight The daily discoveries of these Brazilian pebbles, which are paid for as ceffee, will fill an ordinary bucket They are still added to the gravel path as they come in. Exchange. Fall nt the Mighty.

Edward Collis, who has been sentenced to prison for eighteen months in London for bigamy and cruelty, fifteen years ago, when he was a young soldier In the British artillery in India, at the battle of Maiwand, held his gun alone against a hundred Afghans, everyone of whom wa3 firing pointblank at him. and the act was described as a "deed of daring courage, as high as tha'. cf Foratius at the bridge." Spring crops look well. Wm. Jett staited for Alva O.

T. Sunday to act as itness in the famous Tapiu and Cory case. Miss Maud Brown is visiting with Mrs. Wm. Jett this eek.

C. Towner and C. E. Harden went to the sal: plains last eek and brought back 9,600 lbs. of salt.

Wm. Jett lost a Due colt a few days azo bv it faliing into a hole in the ground where an old stump had rotted out. It. A. Dorsoy and C.

C. Towner and wives went fishing Saturday. They re port lots of sport and a few tish. A. A.

Sliuler and family spent Sun dav ith Ed Warners celebrating Miss Cary Rushes and Mrs. Warners birthday. Lexington. May 11. 'SC.

Decoration Notice. The committee on general arrangements for Memorial and Decoration Serv ices, met on May the oth 18SH5 am! selected the following persons to act on the several committees. Ou Music. Mrs. Gordon, Mrs.

Bone and Mrs. Carson. On Flowers, Miss Bienglo, Miss Waliingford and Mrs. Crane. On Church Decoration, Mrs Stevenson, Mrs.

Rainsburg, Carl Curtis and Chas. Waliingford. On Declamation: Miss Brengle, Mrs. Crane and Mrs. ill Ainsworth.

On Entertainment: Comoradtfj, Snyder. Cassity andKtrin. On Transportation: John L. Pngh. Jas.

Rtifliii and Geo. Elder. On General Arrangements: W. C. Diigan, M.

Brown, C. Nunetuaeher. X. J. Mrs.

Shaltuck and Mrs Arnold. If any one of the above committiees find that they cannot act. notify lie committee on general airiiige-ments at once. W. C.

Di gax, Chairman. W. X. Wallixfokd, Secretary. Condensed News.

The price of tin Daily Chicago Record has been to St. per year. The Record will be a good paper to take during the coming cam paign. J. i'.

Harris of Ottawa was nominat ed by the republicans of the second congressional district at Lawrence on the S'h ii.bt. It look 112 ballots decide the contest between Harris. Buchan and Funston. At Methodist General Conference held at Cleveland, Ohio, there has been much excitement over the woman sullerage question. On the Sth i list, the excitement became so intense, that the Bishop presiding burst the gavel in trying to preserve older.

Senatois Peffer's resolution to investigate the bond issues of the gov ernment for the last three years, passed the senate mi the 7th inst, by a vide of to (. All who opposed it were democrats. A Mrs. Lyons of near Majlield, Ky. recently gave birth to live boys.

II. II. Holmes the most notorious nnin'erer ot the ninetenth century was hanged at Moyansining prison. Philadelphia on May the 7th. Homes confession recently for which he got and in which he admitted the murder of twenty seven people; but before his execution he denied the whole statement, and declared his innocence of any murder.

The Arkansaw Kicker gives Mr. Taubeneck a genteel "peeliu" hut week. It seems that Mr. Taubeneck desires to dictate to the peoples party just what they hall do, which of- coursi would do in the republican party but not with Pops. Dr.

Samlon the oldest Freemason in the world died in London Monday the ii. i. Miss Frankie Brewer daughter of Associate Brewer, of the V. S. Supreme Com died at San Antonio Texas Monday of consumption.

The Spanish General Weyler lias ordered the New York World correspondent to leave Cuba but the world says he wiil not leave. After all. love does not appeal to a woman's heart like cut glass. President's hair. The only vacant seat in the galleries when the house was called to order and the only one that was not occupied during the proceedings cf the day Is that which the rules of the house reserve for the president of the United States.

On such occasions it is usually filled by members of the cabinet's families or visitors to the city to whom pre'sident or Mrs. Cleveland send cards, but, although the rest of the galleries were jammed with people, this conspicuous seat was empty all day and afforded a topic of conversation. What Saloon T. Omaha Christian Advocate: How does whisky business pay? It gives the criminal lawyer plenty to do. It furnishes a job for extra men on the police force in our cities.

It make3 times thriving for the stone-mason, bricklayer and carpenter in erecting prisons, jails and asylums. It pays a large revenue Into the public treasury and thereby helps to support our magnificent school system. In short, it makes business. It removes the stagnation of things and they grow lively like the devlL Ilaanted Hoaso for Rent. The following Interesting advertisement appears appropriately enough a London sporting contemporary: genuine haunted house; one hour north of London and close to a favorite town; four reception and fourteen bedrooms; stabling, lodge and park rt repair.

Rent, 1CC." VFARLY SUBSCRIPTION, $109 A. T. S. F. TIME TABLE.

EaMward STATION'S. Westward daily. Lravea daily. Chics iro Sireator fiKleburir- Kort Mwlisun ar. i Kansas City I Iv lv.

i ar I.nwrnce.. Topeka Emjwrla. Wichita. 10:19 p. m.

4:15 p. tn. 7::) a. m. P.

m. p. m. a. m.

1 p. tn 10:45 11 Arrive daily except Sunday. daily except Sun dny. p. ui.

li:" p. m. JIHV, 1 (.: KA 4:23 a. in. rv-rby Huklp Viola Annen 7: a.

m. :15 9:15 10 11 10 31 i II ar) 11 Snt ve Koche-iter. PT Com: Wiimore Sitkii Ashland Mannin. I 12 10 p. i 1:24 1:40 2:13 2:4:1 4:1 4:2 5:15 (1:0 7:00 Take the "Santa Fe Home' for nil points "at.

west mm nouth the ftieteat and the uioft luxurious lrniu in the west. Leave 4 a. m. arrive in Chicago p. m.

of second day out. Arrived in Ja Anireie p. ii. of the third day out arrive, in Uaireston 9:15 p. m.

of eecond day OUT. For irenerni Information rates time card! etc. call on or address. I. A.

Ualn-sbcro. Local Art MAILS. Tho mall rolnst east win le made up at p. each day. C.

W. Ctasox. Postiuusner, AgMand. Kansas. Ripans T2bules.

You pet Fresh Bakeis Hread at Ways, Saturday. J. II. Riley is annexing another room to liis i'Wencp. Gns Rojrzpiisees was down from the fiat country IVednes'Ltv.

Why hoys ietiect the oW baud? Bit start it up. RIpan6 Tabules cu re nausea Judge aid Mrs, Price returned from Kansas city Monday. John has his winilmill back the bank in running shape now. of Mr. Coffei.bery with the Altaian Tjtylor Co, as doing the ciiy Tuesday.

Ripans Tabuks: at druggleis. The lailies of the Christian Church cleared about $21. on their strawberries hik! Cream. Way will have Fresh Rakers Bread nhippeJ in to-night. Call and get our Bread.

Will Riley the barber has gone lack east and it is reported that he will bring back a -lietter half." Chas. Ward passed through town Sunday on his way to the Terntory. He has been living at Denver Colo. Flenching by Rev. F.

F. Gordon at the Towner SchiKiihouse Sunday May 17th both morning and evening. Ripans Tabules cure flatulence. The ninth annual convention of the Kansas Christian Eiwivor Union ill be held at Kansas City Kansas June 9-12. One of the express companies is negotiating ith the notorious Frank James for iiis servi.es to guard its express.

Rev. F. E. Gordon ilt preach the Memorial sermon Sunday May 1 at the M. E.

Church. Everjbody invited to attend. The irrepressible O. W. Hendee, solicitor for the Kansas, City World was in the city Mo'iday and Tuesday.

Hendee is a hustler and the World is ditto. Waxted: Salesmen to sell very com plete line of lubricating oils and jrreases direct to the farmers and threshers. Apply Garland Refining Co. Cievland O. Ripans Tabules cure liver troubles.

We ill send free on application a laTge sheet of Unsolicited Testimonials about the cures made by Humphreys'' Specifics. Address Humphreys' Medicine New York. Dr. O. II.

Simpson recently sold a one year old colt to Messing of Ashland, for 200 cash. The colt was sired by Sam Stubb's fine stallion. Leader, Dodge City. Elder C. C.

Bentley and ife Mrs. M. G. Stevenson, Miss Nettie Baker and Eugene Pugh ail started on an outing trip to the Kiowa river Weduesday, to be out several days. Another good rain last Friday night has started vegetation anew.

A few more rains like that one and the corn cops will make good tileiug and wheat straws real good lead pipes. Let's have church social every week; the Christian church ladies gave one Friday evening and it rained; the Epwoith League gave one Tuesday evening and it rained ag iin. lie be perhaps fruit oil the south side of fruit trees. Geo. Theis.

Will Welden, Frank Arnold, Jim Murphy, Sheriff imes. Lot Ravenscraft and others whose names we did not get all went up to Dodge City this week to bring down cattle, Ashland can stand O. W. Hendee of The Kansas City World, or Dillday of the Wichita Eagle, eitherof them singly, but if they both strike the town at the same time we 'low the town will hide out. new windmill is being erected at the court house well.

The tower just reaches the eaves of the house. Of course the first north blizzard will tear the divil out of the wheel if it lucks well. Ripans Tabule3 cure biliousness. Mr. and Mrs.

F. G. Keith, and Mr. and Mrs. D.

K. Miller started last Saturday on a ibit Willi relatives near Galeaa, O. T. L'erry and Fannie Ken ii are bossing affairs at the Keitli residence now. Mrs.

illiam Funk died at her home in the western part of the county last Friday night, afier a protracted iliness. Kev. F. E. Gordon conducted the funeral services from trie residence and the remains were laid away in the private cemetry near the heme.

We are in receipt of a catalogue of tne Stale Univerr-ity for the year 185o-0. It has been progressing steadily. The total attendance this ear is 89-r which includes 09 men and 326 women. A catalogue may be had by any one appljmg to t. II.

Snow at Lawrence, Kansas. Ripans Tabules: one gives relief. Notwithstanding the inclemency of the weather the Epwoiih Leugie social at the Aldii.e Hotel seems to have been a success, as they cleared $20, and all seemed to have a good time, tjuite a number prepared to attend when it begun raining but did not attend. The League desires to thank the public lor their patronage. to Rick new drug nid jewelry store for fresh drugs, care fully prepared prescriptions, reliable patent medicines, druggist's sundries.

iire liquors for medicinal purposes. electric belts and batteries, etc. Jewelry, clocks and watches. Repairing done with promptness, work in-iiired. Silverware on hand or ordered to hi customer.

Also news stand, oil paiiitinns, oil, glass, putty, etc. school books and school supplies. The Wellington Voice tells of a fellow v.h tried to quit chewing to-tobacco. It says in two weeks he ate tl .30 worth (r ue, and for the next two weeks lie ii.ied ten cents worth of chewing gum, live cents worth of candy, a nickles worth of peanuts, am! live cents worth of cough drops per dny. During these two weeks he also consumed two large rubber erasers, nte the rubber tips from fourteen lead pencils chewed up a dozen pen holders and browsed 2 his mustache as high up as he could reach.

The voice says that be quit chewing because it was too expensive; but lie chews now. M. G. SteveiiMin has embarked in the furniture and pump business and will doubtless make as howling success of it as he did of the newspaper business hich he ued to vent his spleen and meddle with peoples private business till his party fired him; or of the real estate and collection business, making (nit) so much money that after collecting 100 from E. W.

Currier in interest for an eastern party and linising it he did not miss it for about fourteen months afterward when it was called for. And Mr. Dngan county treasurer can tell yon ahout the tax receipt which lie obtained about a year or so ago and hich ilr. Dngan says has never been redeemed, though Stevie is a Kansas redeemer. Musical Instruction.

Miss Mary L. Drummond will give instructions on organ and piano, and also in note reading and voice culture. Terms per term of Vi lessons on organ or piano; extra per terms for vooal lessons with blackboard exer cises. Nutice to Taxpayers. Yon are hereby notified that the Board of County Commissioners of Clark County, Kansas, wiil meet as a board of equalization at the Count Clerk's office on the first Monday in June 1S93, to equalize the valuation of all real and personal property, at which meeting all persons feeling themselves aggrieved can appear and have ail errors in returns corrected.

seal E. II.McKowx. County Clerk. Something Interesting and Instructive. Elder A.

P. George, JNormal Sunday School Secretary will be with us at the M. E. Church during the afternoon and evening of Monday May ISth. Let everyone interested iu Sunday School work and those who at present are not, come out and hear something that will increase the interest of those now engaged in Sunday School work ani create an interest in alt who are now unconcerned: At 2 o'clock p.

m. Normal Bible Study, bring Bibles. 3:15 Suggestion council for Teachers. 4:30 Childern's This talk will interesting to the children and iu crease their interest for the Sunda SHohi! Georpe 7:30 A idiessbv Eider A. P.

Let every body 'come out i this address, old and young. It will au eveuing welt spent. 51 a I the the in "A FL lUIie 1J. iicacta uc Sv.u iui going passa3, commencing date of sale and for continuous passage each direction. RUBBER-TRADE BOOM.1 Manj Modem Improrementa aad Btaoh Kronomy.

One of the most lnterestlngof current vents, from the view point of the electrician, is the newly developed production of rubber in Lagos, says the Pittsburg Dispatch. In 1S93 no imports of this article were recorded as received from the colony, and last year the imount was only $23,970. By a single steamer which left Lagos at the beginning of last month, however, the value jf the rubber shipped to Liverpool wa3 The new Industry has taken hold of the inhabitants of Lagos indiscriminately with tho rush of a gold craze. Numbers of clerks, small traders and others even, it is said, professional men have packed their traps and gone into the interior to take their chance in collecting and manufacturing the The native owners cf the forests have sarewd aoDrexuation of the bearing of this unwonted excitement, and are insisting on the payment of royalties. Some cf them aro even entering into tho business of preparing the rubber for the market.

Prices in the interior have been considerably advanced, and there is no longer as much profit as there was at first in purchasing and transporting the product to the coast The fear among electricians that an artificial rubber would have to be re-corted to in conse-quence of the increasing scarcity of the natural product has, for the present, at all events, been allayed. In many rubber sources tho wholesale destruction cf trees by the natives has been slopped and odd hinds of rubber ere cropping up from unexpected quarters. Several new sorts, together with the familiar little black balls with white center, come from the we6t coast of Africa. A new product comes from Madagascar. Ii has a horny appearance and contains much earth.

Nothing certain is known of its botanical origin. Fj jm New Zealand have been received packages of a rubber which very elastic, but which does not I cutting up well. It is the product of the banyan, and the rapidity and facility with which this tree reproduces itself is an important factor, in view of the wasteful methods still adopted by the natives, who practically destroy the tree In order to obtain the rubber. Improvements snd economy in the manufacture of rubber have also been effected by the use of more emcient machinery, and especially by the adoption wf large rollers. So far it has not been possible to completely eliminate the sulphur contained in vulcanized rubber, and all processes for th manufacture of old rubber are more or less unsatisfactory.

A French Status to The French bte.ii to be ahead of every nation in the honor which they pay to great rien, especially great men of science, and tliis honor is not confined to their countrymen. A number of Etreeta in Paris aro called after eminent foreign savants, English and other, and monuments are even erected to 11-lusirious foreigners. For instance, the municipal council of Paris has decided to trect a statuo to Sir Isaac Newton, and iu doing so it honors itself. With many of our famoHS men of science, deid or alive, waiting In vain for public recognition in this noble manner, it is hopeless to expect the lord mayor or the county council to reciprocate the compliment and honor the great of France in this way. London A Great Clock.

The ancicut city of Rouen, France, id very earliest specimen of iarpci- varieties of the ancient triumphs. It was made by Jc-i i'e 1 alair-s, and was finished and p.t going iu September, 1389. So per-in is this ancient time ecordii-s machine thit, although it 1 eon regularly striking the hours, -Ives ar.J quarters for more than half 'years, it is still used as a emulator. The case or this early horo-iopics! oj-iity is six feet eight inches height by five inches broad. For 323 years it continued to run without a 1 enduiLfri.

being provided wiih what the old-time clock-makers called a "fo- hOL" Throwing Mad. words wiihout meaning are used a person's vocabulary must be bounded by his knowledge. Many years ago I ws3 teaching a class of poor chil- dren in the school connected with the Church of St. Paul's, Cerent Garden, One day I exhibited a picture of a hay field with men carting hay. I asked the children what the men were throw-; ing np into the cart.

They answered, without a moment's hesitation, "Mud:" It then occurred to me for the first time ihac these children had never seen a hay field or the carting of hay, but the scavenger's cart, carting mud, they were quite familiar with, and hence they spoke within their knowledge. Notes and Queries. Tha Maid of Orleans. Two miniatures of Joan of Arc by a contemporary artist, now in a private collection at Isenheim, in Alsace, are said by M. Gatrio to be probably por-y-a rr V'o ct Orleans from luTa.

AMERICA'S STANDARD YEAR-BOOK. Bigger and Better Than Ever Before. 584 PAGES. 1,500 TOPICS. Tellu Everything Yon Want to Know When You "Want to Know It.

VERITABLE CYCLOPEDIA OF UP-TO-DATE FACTS. An Invaluable and Unrivalled. Political and Popular Hand-Boo k. READY JANUARY 1st, 1896.. PlICE 25 CErJTS.

(Foetpiia by MaiL The World, Pulitzer Building, New York. Don't Go Without It This Presidential Yea DR. Liwr-Moie, Tc. the akin dear cnt v- plosion. CJ pTwarstfonc ar-1 jvrff tiiija or kr 50c ti oend ior Circcuai.

Encyclopedia H. C. MAYSE, ittorney-i-ak-La AND XOTAIiV PUBLIC. ASH LAX KANSAS. -4 ABSOLUTELY KACEISE MADE TTH OK OCIl can aril you machines cheaper than yon caa i get elsewhere.

Tho KEtV la 1 ocr cheeper ceil as the CLIMAX, IElEAI aut ot-ier Ilieb. Ana Fnll Ntekcl Plate-. Sewins Maciiiaca for $15.00 and nr Call oa or an cut or rvrite us. Yl' want your trade, and If prlcea, terra mri mnzlvr Wtll Wla. T7e Wll have It.

challenge tfco world tc J. produce a CEXTEIl $50.00 Sewlc machine for $50.00, or a better $20 Sewln-SZochine for $20.00 thaa yoi can bay frota ns, or oar Agents. TES EEW E02S SEYTI5G HiCHES CO. OSiSTit. Jtiss.

Eoctox. iCi'ss. CiiA-io. In- rr. Ho.

1ai.tt. I wu, Cal. atla.l4,uu FOR SALE T. N'ew Home Sewing Machine Co. olO X.

St. Lsuis Agsncy for CAVSS.T2. TRACE MAT; 3. CZSICM PATEMTS. CCPYS1CHT8.

etsJ Frr frfr-rcntlne ani re Handbook wrte to MUSS Ct So! Kew You. OMcit bamaa for pntrntx In I.verr vatrm. fakpn out I brought before tM ikXiha by a notice siren Iree ot coarse iu Uia iat 'rtn cf ot rcfntic parw in the fcp-en-ixliv iiustrr.t-:L No iiiVUint man thviU Vexklr. 3.fN rear; S1A' tlx nvcths. AMr.

Sir.v'V SiCifl 60A? i r.wpv i-. fir t'i. toil t. wittit rar-d. Al fir 25 Cents.

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About Ashland Clipper Archive

Pages Available:
11,371
Years Available:
1884-1922