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The Englewood Chief from Englewood, Kansas • 4

Location:
Englewood, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

OUR ST. LOUIS LETTER. k. GREA.T ENGINEER The mammy girl burs her necktie this country. The new machine will do the work for 20,000,000.

Mr. Campbell was born in Hamilton, thirty-nine years ago. nis attendance in a common school was cut SAM'S FAHMS. It will soon be to late to obtain one of Sncle Sam's free farms. Oklahoma offers most the last chance for the farmer invader to get a home cheaply.

Land that is located in a pleasant climate, and that will profitably produce corn, cotton, whtat and fruit, is worth looking at and working for. Write to G. T. Nicholson, G. P.

T. Topeka, Kansas, and request a free copy ot handsome folder just issued, giving full information relating to "Beautiful Oklahoma," and containing the latest accurate map of the country. Dusky wives can be had in New Guinea for an ax apiece. at the haberdashes. WHEN NATURE Needs nssistancfi it be best to render it promptly, but bne should remember to use even the most perfect remedies only when needed.

The best and most simple and gentle remedy is the Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the Calif ornia lg Syrup Co. Maple sugar is made to a preater or less extent in twenty -f our states. Beecham's Pills ouicklv rnrp sirV honri ache, weak stomach, impaired digestion, constipation, disordered liver, etc The Massachusets Ploughman says that Massachusets supports 125 agri cultural societies. There are 125 varieties of strawberries. In the Southwest a thief, nettv or otherwise, is said to have levied a Mexican loan.

Dr. C. B. Jndd's Electric Belts will cure in nearly all cases where medicine tails, bold on six months trial. Judd Electric Omaha, Neb.

Tbft crrwit. hrMrrn w.iw lil 3 tut 1U13SI3- SlDDi river at Memnhis i finicho it UkJAAWV AW cost $3,000,000. Mrs. WinsIotv'sHootuiazyrnp, Tor Children teothiDK, softcnt the kucj, reduces tlon. allays pain, cures wind colic.

25c. a bo'Oe. Tpbacco culture will soon bo more extensively engaged in than ever in the New England States. Miss Olea Bull, the only child of tho late Ole Bull, has gone on the stage as a member of Julia Mario w's company. Br.

C. B. Judd's Electric Belts will cure in nearly all cases where medicine fails. Sold on six months trial. JiuM Ele Omaha.

Neb. "Society of the Friends of Tros," is the name of an organization in France, its object being the restoration of the forests. Get a Good Start In Rusiness Lire by securing a thorough business education tit home, mail, low rates; Bryant College. Buffalo, N. V- The largest United States arsenel is situated at Springfield, Mass.

My wife has used Bradycrotine for headache with the best imaginah'e'results. I state this without solicitation, ft W. Mashburn, Abbe, tille, Ga. The blouso is one of the features ol the season's modes. W.

G. Chaffee, Oswego, N. has best and largest shorthand school on earth. The pugulist who gets knocked out is naturally not in it AFTER 22 YEARS. Newton, 111., May 23, 1888.

From 1863 to 1885 about 22 years I suffered with rheumatism of the hip. I was cured by the use of St. Tacobs Oil. T. C.

DODD JShort time only we will Beud oar Electric Belts and Trusses On 6 TUIAL. If You Wish Health Try one of Our Belts. ELECTRIC BELTS. ON 6 Free -ledical Advice and Treat- MnvTII' ment dariuj the eix months' trial. a Our new improved Electrio Belts are IKlALi.

Batteries and Belts combined; generates sufficient Electricity to produce a shock. In ordering give price of belts ($3.00, 6.00. $10.00, 15.00), waste measure, and full particulars. Aenis wanted. Butte City.

Jan. IU, 101 Within the last eighteen months ve hauo taken In over 1 1.000 for Jvdd's Electric Bels and Trusses, and have never had a single coin plain but have had many compliments pa.d vpou tbera. 1 M. Xiwbbo Due Co. Cures Lame Back, KUncyan U-' Cmp aint.

Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Ls of Yltalit and alJ Female Weaknesses. Address oudd electric CQMPiyt, Omaha. yb. THE GREAT SOUTHWEST! KANSAS! OKLAHOMA! NEW MEXICO! COLORADO! TEXAS! ARIZONA Unparalleled Services of Climate, Pro- ducts and Markets.

Write to Edward Huron, Special Im-misrntiou Aircnt, Santa l'e Rout 1000 Union Kansas City, for latest free pamphlets. THE ATCHISON. TOPEKA A SANTA FE It. passes through twelve Mates and territories, and, haviusr no lands or its own to sell, has jio object In unduly advancing the interests ol anv particular locality, or in giving other than perfectly reliable information. Its prosperity being dependent upon the pros-peri tv of the farmers of tue Great feouthwett, it is naturally willing to aid the deserving and industries immigrant seeking to establish anew come, by giving bim all the facts and data at Its disposal.

n. mnriT Months' A. landmark Being Removed Meeting of The Furniture Board of Trade Kace Meeting of the Jockey Club Base Ball as 4 St. Louis, May 16. An historical landmark of the city is being' removed, a wrecking company having commenced this week tearing down the old Planters House, one of the oldest hotels in the west, and a house in which many men of note have stopped while in St.

Louis. The" work of demolition is going on rapidly and there are crowds of relic hunters anxious to carry away some fragment of the house which has been immortalized by Charles Dickens and other writers of International fame. The wrecking company has been able to sell a large quantity of marble slabs and tiling, much of which is in perfect condition. The hotel is being torn down to make room for a larger and more modern building, which is to be erected at a cost including decorations and furnishings, upwards of two million dollars. The new hotel will be absolutely fire proof, and one of the finest in the United States.

Its name has not yet been definitely decided upon, the "New Planters" being suggested by some while others favor the name "Columbia Hotel," on the ground that it is being erecved partially to accommodate the tens of thousands of visitors to the World's'Fair who will spend at least a few days in St. Louis during the year 1893. The St. Louis Furniture Board of Trade at a large and enthusiastic meeting in-structed its delegates to the National Convention, which meets at Cincinnati in June this year, to secure the National Furniture Convention for St. Louis in 1893.

I It was proposed that every member of the Exchange attend the Cincinnati Convention, and that the delegation work for St. Louis as the convention meeting place in 1893. A committee was appointed to prepare a circular setting forth the merits of St. Louis in an attractive nnnner which is to be placed in the hands of every delegate and alternate to the convention. New York, Boston, Grand Rapids, Chicago, all principal uiniture points, have had the and St.

Louis now proposes, with its excellent organization, to bring it to the City of Conventions. H. N. Davis, who has made a specialty of freight matters, submitted a report showing tho excellent work that had been accomplished in connection with the Traffic Commission. Then on motion of Mr.

J. A. Rear-don, the following was adopted: Resolved, That tho St. Louis Furniture Board of Trade heartily indorse the good work accomplished by the St. Louis Traffic Com mission, during the first year of its existence toward training: for St.

Louis manj' advantages in rates and classifies tions, and recommend those of our members who are not members to make application thereto, and enjoy the benefits they largely, disseminate. The forty-eight days race meeting ol the St. Louis Jockey Club is now at its full height and is proving the most successful race meeting ever held in St. Louis All difficulty as to the paucity of entries is at an end, and so numerous have the entries become that the Jockey Club has been compelled to charge an entrance fee for all starters in order to reduce thenum ber going to the post. Prior to this change in the rules, thirty or forty horses were frequently started in one race and although the St.

Louis track is one of the largest and best in the country it was found dangerous as well as unsatisfactory to have it so overcrowded. There are over a thousand valuable horses in the stables at the Fair Grounds and the sue eess of the meeting seems to improve as time proceeds. Base ball a reorganized is proving very popular here this year, and St. Louis so far holds the record of 1892 for the largest attendance at, any game, the record having been made at a Sunday game between St. Louis and Cincinnati; the latter team captained by Charles Comiskey, under whose management the "St.

Louis Browns" won tho championship four years in succession. It is a singular feature in connection with local ball playing this year that the St. Louis club is made up of strangers in the city, pnly one member of the team having played here last year, while all the old local favorites play in New York, Cincinnati, or Boston uniforms. This is a reversal of the old order of things, but judging from the enthusiasm evinced the general shaking up of the teams was a good move so far as the finances of the base ball magnates are concerned. "IlansoD'n IUnelc Corn StaUe." Warranted to cure.

money refunded. Ask your druggist for It. Price 1j cents. Just Siipposlns. Supposing that our great forefathor, Adam, had begun to count as quickly as he that when his life vas ended his son commenced where the father left off.

and that he spent his whole lifetime, day and night as fast as he could, and supposing that upon his death he had enjoined upon bis heirs an eternity- of counting, and they had continued doing so so up to the present moment, their united efforts would not yet have reached the amount of one-quarter of a billion. A has been organized in New Jersey for making, cranberries into' o- and canning them. The One Ever I'rintf-d Can Yoo Find The IVord. There is a 3-inch display advertisement in this paper this week which has no two words alike except one word. The same is true ol each new one appearing each week, from the Dr.

Harter Medicine Co. This house places a "Crescent''- on everything thev make and Look for it, send thein the name "ie word, and they will return you lio Lithograph or Sample free. rie Turtle Dove. The turtle says Anstolie. hideth herself, most of all.

At the commencement of hibernation it is very fat. and during that season il loses iis feathers, though they remain thick for a long while." It ought tc be possible to confirm this observatior upon the Pacific coast of this continent where the turtle dove abounds. BUILDER" OF TUNNEL THE LARGEST IN AMERICA. Something about Joseph Hobson, Builder of the Greatest Submarine Tunnel, Which Unites Two Xations History of the Great enterprise. The man whose picture accompanies this sketch goes down to history as the builder of the greatest submarine tannel on the North American continent.

The man is Joseph Hobson, and the tunnel referred to is that which extends from Port Huron in the State of Michigan to Sarnia in the Canadian Province of Ontario, and connects the JOSEPH Grand Trunk Railway of Canada with the line operated under Grand Trunk management west of the St. Clair river, and with the Flint Pere Marquette, and other Michigan railways. The tunnel was built and is owned by the St. Clair Tunnel company, which was organized under special act of the Canadian Parliament. The length of the tunnel from portal to portal is 6,025 feet; length from portal on the American side to river bank, 1,729 feet; length from portal on Canadian side to river bank, 2,006 feet; length under river bed, 2,290 feet.

The tunnel is a perfect circle, with an interior diameter of 19 feet 10 inches; the segment filled in at the bottom for the railway roadbed has a flat surface from side to side of 11 feet 0 inches; the length of the cutting on the American side to the portal is 2,487 feet. The depth at the portal to the roadbed, below the natural surface, is 50 feet; the length of the cutting on the Canadian side to the portal is 3,116 feet, and the depth at the portal is 57 feet; the grade on the American side is 1 in 50, or 105.o0 feet per mile; the grade on the Canadian side is 1 in 50, or 105.00 feet per mile. Sir Henry Tyler, president of the Grand Trunk Railway company, conceived the idea of this great undertaking, and through his efforts the money to construct it was secured. The-practical construction of the tunnel, however, was carried on from inception to completion by Mr. Hobson.

He is a Canadian by birth, having been born near Guelph, fifty odd yeai-s ago. He served his apprenticeship as a provincial land surveyor in Toronto, and after having passed his examination as such, he was engaged for a number of years in private practice as a surveyor and an engineer, and in the location and construction of different lines of railway in Canada and the United States. At the beginning of 1870 he was appointed resident engineer of the inter-nation bridge at Buffalo, and was continuously on the ground during the construction of the bridge. On the completion of the work at the end of 1873, he was appointed chief assistant engineer of the late Great "Western railway of Canada, and about two years later lie was appointed chief engineer of the line. He still holds that position under the management of the Grand Trunk Kail way conipanjr.

Mr. Hobson is member of the Institute of Civil Engineers of England, of the American Society of Civil Engineers and the Canadian Society of Civil Engineers. EDWAKD A. OLDIIAil. ANGUS CAMPBELL.

Inventor of the Machine for Picking: Cotton. Any man who may have the brain, the tact, or whatever you may call it, to invent a machine that will save annually, may be safely considered a genius in the best acceptation of that much-abused word. Such a man is Angus Cam bell, whose picture accompanies this sketch, and who now ranks with the great inventors of the world. His inventive skill has created the only machine that has successfully picked cotton from the growing plant. This piece of mechanism is a marvelous triumph of median- "ANGUS CAMPBELL.

ical skill. The cotton-plant is loaded at the same time with ripe cotton, unripe bolls and blossoms. Mr. Campbell's machine picks all that is ripe and leaves uninjured the unripened bolls and blossoms for a later picking. Frequent tests have amply demonstrated its thoroughly practical character.

It has been stated that 8100,000,000 is annually required to pick the cotton of I short by his being apprenticed to a pattern-maker at the age of 16. It soon became apparent that he possessed inventive talent oC a high order, and many important labor-saving devices owe their existence to his fertile brain. He left for Chicago in 1880, where such a man could not fail to find a wide field of usefulness. Seven years ago he conceived the cotton-picker, and has devoted his entire time to its development since. For four and a half years he straggled on alone, with scanty means, endeavoring to put in material foi'm the mechanism to pick cotton his brain had conceived, and thus hamp-pered he made slow progress.

Since that time, relieved almost entirely from financial care, he has made wonderful progress, which has resulted in the production of what is now pronounced the perfect cotton picker. Edwaed A. Ol.dh.am. THE AUTOGRAPHIC PLAQUE. A New Fad of Fair Woman Which Costs Contributors One Dime Each.

The girls have a new fad now. It is called the "autographic plaque." Like all fads it has swept the homes of the young woman like wildfire, and has oc casioned no end of sharp comments by members of the sterner sex who have been mulcted of dimes. The "autographic plaque" is an in-' genious device of a china-firing concern, and its purpose is financial gain for this establishment. Pieces of cardboard 10x10 inches in size are distributed where they are likely to meet with a favorable reception. These pieces of card contain a circle in the center a reserved space large enough for a reproduced photograph.

From the circumference of this circle extend lines to a larger eircle, like spokes in a wheel from the hub to the tire. The spaces between these lines are for autographs, There are fifty such spaces, and it has been declared the proper thing for a girl to get the autographs of fifty of her male friends written within them. An unwritten law in this fad decrees AUTOGRAPH PLAGUB. that each authograph writer 'must produce a dime witJi his signature. "When all the spaces are full and each name paid for the girl has $5, and this $5, if sent to a certain place with the card and a photograph of the owner, will securca china plaque with the picture and authographs reproduced and fired.

It is a great scheme for the girls who have little or nothing to do, and signatures are greatly in demand. A SUBTERRANEAN ISLAND. Discovered in a Cavern by Some IVIn "Who Are Good Climbers. J. C.

Carr has just returned from an extended tiip through the counties of Atascosa, McIiillen, Frio, La Salle, Dimmitt, Zavallu, Uvalde, Edwards and Medina. Mr. Carr relates a most remarkable story of a place called "Devil's Sink Hole," located in Edwards county close to Ilock Springs in New Mexico. "I visited Hock Springs," said Mr. Carr, "and Col.

J. R. Sweeten, the post-masster of that place, after showing me over the city and through the new court house, which is nearing Completion, also other points of interest, took me to the 'Devil's Sink He told me that since my last visit, which was made about ten months ago, a party of explorers, six in number, spent one day in investigating the great natural cavern. Three of the party were let down into the hole to a depth of 175 feet by means of ropes to the first landing. By means of lanterns, with which they were provided, they continued their explorations, soon dis-j covering another large openincr.

They made their way through it intoanother cavern and then lowered themselves tO a depth of 200 feet to a second landing. They secured a fine footing and traveled several hundred feet down grade in a northerly direction until they came to the edge of what appeared to be a very big expanse of water, either a lake or a river. They found the water to be extremely cold. This second landing was quite a large tract "of ground, but was only slightly explored owing to the fact that it was danger-ously cold down there. They made their way to the top by climbing up the ropes.

"The explorers reported having found evidence of valuable mineral, and they took away with them specimens of the rock which they gathered up at the bottom of the cavern. CoL Sweeten says that from what he could learn from the daring party the lower landing was upon a mountain-shaped island which covers about two acres. It is doubtless surrounded by water, as the explorers found water at every point they went. I promised Col. Sweeten and others that I would return to that ple from San Antonio about August with an organized party, some ol whom must be experienced miners.

We will take with us a boat, refreshments, tools, lanterns and everything necessary for exploring the cavern." The Michigan A. A. has entered iti ball team in the A. A. U.

champion ship. COPYKIOWT S1M A spdl of sickness is due "when tho system's weakened, and the blood impure. It's what you must expect. But it's what you must prevent, too. And'Dr.

Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery prevents as well as cures. It invigorates the liver and kidneys, purifies and enriches tho blood, sharpens the appetite, improves digestion, and restores health and strength. For Dyspepsia, "Liver Complaint," and every form of Scrofulous, Skin, or Scalp Diseases, as Salt-rheum, Tetter, Erysipelas, or any blood-taint, it's an uuequalcd remedy. It's not like the sarsaparillaSv which claim to be good for the blood in March, April and May. At all seasons alike, and in all cases, the "Discovery" alone is guaranteed.

If it doesn't benefit or cure, you have your money back. It's the cheapest blood-purifier, no matter how many doses are offered for a dollar, for you pay only for the good you get. But it's the Lest, or it couldn't be sold so. JAPANESE) 2 A new ant! Completes Treatment, or Hup-posilories. Ointment CajisuN.

1so in and 1'llls; a PositiroCura for External. J.ittinfcl. filled or lileed-in Chronic, lU-ent or Herniary 1 ils. AnA many other Uisea's nJ fe.t.alo wrknss: it Is always a grrt benctfc lo li.o (j.n.'.l hvtU. TLe first discovery of a cure rond.ilii; orrtloi with tho Uaifo unne -ry hcrafii.

Ibis has never bce-i kr.own to It per box. for sent by in All. Way suiter from tbi terrible disease when a written ruaranKe 1 pTn with 6 boxeA. to refun-1 the money it not oared. Send stamp for freo SaaiHe.

Oir.iiUe lianed by It. O. AitNOLD, DruKC-. Kius City, Mo. and mil truists EWSS' 98 LYE Ea The froTt(irt purest I other I.yc.

it being a tine powtlor in a can jwiih removable ltd. the contents uro always rofcilr for use. Will make the bcl perfumed Hard Soap lu-D minutes without It la I ho licst for cleansing w.ima pipes, diitifcclinif tlnks. closets, washing bottles, paints, trees, etc. PENNA.

SALT M'F'G CO. Gen. A To. WORN NIGHT AND DAY. Holds the worst run ture illi nwundrr nil I'crfevt AiijiiKtmeiit.

Comfort ml Patented iii.provetnvnta. tltus-trntr-rt catalogue mni ruli- for cut cnt eourlr G. V. HnfSfc 74 llroad- w.iy. N- 1 oik City rTERTEL i i r.i a Rhlpped Anywhere r.n Trial.

Catalogue Free. 00. K7 St. QJIKCX. I U.S.A.

FAT FOLKS SEDUCED fji-omedioa I Ill I nn nfffffx. Ssiriotlv Fcrxl fc. for Hf-nlnrn irf 'Kiirnoi iMrs Ir. SNTDEa.McVickor'Tlns.-..i-f Iilue 11V Please mention th's lpr. BED BUGS.

graces? owant the KAUEcf every Sulierer li'm M3 TS f5S 164 A IC.T1 A Ij I. Ml IIS with UubberlUnds and Feet. New Patents and Important Improvements. A Treatiso Of Pastes with aJ Illustrations, 55 sent free. A.

A. II A JC Iv 701 Brondwnyt New York. A sure prif Our Corn Cure. A Kltiic cure I I without lain. A Itnutii.

lor lru; gils and AKt-- K.olc 2 t-; fr I'littifniur or lid ior Nn Cll AKi l-ltos. Kana. I tf.is pars fur un Lord's I'rayer I houvtuir Ci.aiin unci Kumpie copy of our IM-p Matfziue. T. J.

vcl Ou; sw Louis. Kaiia City iluiues IIous. MOTEL rluninrjn fln. Uoonii. 50c, and i.

'221 Mulli rt. Kansas City. Mo W.N. U. Wixfieij, Ks.t Vol.

5. No. 21 Vben answering auy or these advertisement please mention this puiwr. Six styles Cushion and Solid Tires. Steel Drco Forcings p.n 7 oearins ia an iurmiij IURB DUTCIICtt'f IKAI SHOT is annihilation, il curia up na 4iG duct a le.if dcstioys their esrasi.

prevents rcluin and is a sure r-untee for I.t:Kl IN PEACE. Ii U-tM end by VlZV.lHi.. UUTC'llKAi Hl.Alban, Tu HASTHMfl a Bp. HAPOLD HAYES, M.D.. .3 TIO I AIN STItKKT.

Bl'FKA V. If 1 To Slay or to be Slain. To attack the dragon of disease and annihilate him before his deadly talons grow, or to allow him to attain dangerous maturity and destroy us that is the question of paramount importance to all afflicted with organic ailments. Among these, disorders of the kidneys and bladder are of the fatal order if unrestrained at the outset. Their growth is rapid, their culmination death.

Dright's disease, ordinary nephritis, diabetes, catarrh of the bladder gravel, suppression of the secretion, cannot bo tampered with or disregarded safely. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters is a superb depur-ative tonic, giving the due impulse, without excitation to tho renal organs, besides strengthening and regulating them in common with the rest of the system. It infuses, too, vigor and regularity into tho stomach, bowels and liver, successfully counteracts malaria and rheumatism, and is a pre-eminently tine tonic for the aged, the enfeebled and the convalescent. Leather goods come in the daintiest colors. Tin: khs-iisy cejre.

The Keeley Company of Kansas, which controls the" ritrht to use Dr. Leslie E. Keeley'B Remedies for Drunkenness and the Opium and Tobacco Habits in the state of Kansas, with a view of covering their territory more effectively and causing the benefit of the Remedies to be more widely 6pread have opened Institutes for the Keeley treatment at Topeka, Leavenworth, Kansas Citv, (Kan.) Winfield and Marysville. These institutes are so located as to render them easily accessible from every part of thestate. The Keeley Company of Kansas have been unusually successful in their practice, hav in ir treated over 40'J cases of alcoholism and opium habitues without failure.

Their staff of physicians are well known practitioners who have iraetlceu the cure of nervous and narcotic disease T'1- at wight. Chestnut culture Pennsylvania. is recommended in State ov Ohio, City Tr.edo, Lucas County. ss Frank J. Cheney mak-es oath that he Is the Bentor partner of the fixin of F.

J. Cheney doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE 11UND RED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cuke. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December, A.

D.1886. A. W. ULdSASO-N, SEAL j- Notary Public Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally and acts directly ou the blood And mucous surfaces of the system. Sand for testimonials, ret.

P. J. CHENEY Toledo, 0. tSysold by Druggists, 75c. Millinery eccentricities exc te comment.

no longer Eight doctors treated me for Heart Disease and one for Rheumatism, but did me no good. I could not speak aloud. Everything that I took into the Stomrch distressed me. I could not sleep. I had taken all kinds of medicines.

Through a neighbor I got one of your books. I procured a bottle of Green's August Flower and took it. I am to-day stout, hearty and strong and enjoy the best of health. August Flower saved my life and gave me my health. Mrs.

Sarah Cox, Defiance, O. RELIEVES all Stomach Distress. REMOVES Nausea. Sense of Fullness Congestion. Pain.

REVIVES Failing ENERGY. RESTORES Normal Circulation, and Wasms to Toe Tips. OR. HARTER KLCICtNE St. Louis, Me Voune We Offer You a Remedy chieh Insure Safety ta Xifocfllotherand Child, MOTHER'S FRIEND C6 ft Hobo Confinement of its Fain, Horror and Risk.

Afteruslngonefcottlaof 'Mother's Friend" I uttered but little pain, and did not experience that weakness afterward usual in such cased. lira. Akkib Gags, Lamar, Jan. 13th, 1S91. -PenLb.

Pres. charges prepaid, on receipt ot price, $1.50 per bottle. Book to Mothers mailed tree. BRADFIELD REGULATOR ATLANTA, A. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.

represents a healthy life. I Just uch life as they enjoy Throughout its rarit-us tccoes, Whs use Small Bill BEANS. Panel picture 7, 17, 70" anil sample dose, 4c Address Smith's tilt BEARS SmaTt. 255 fiRKsrirn If. T.

rise's Reirca7 Cutarrh i3 the Bost, Eeriest to TJbp. and Cheapest. L4 snit! hv drcrriEla cr bent by mail, fel 50c VLT. Z-jeltlne, Warren, Pa. nCPIC EVERYONE SHOULD ALWAYS tTSE rClld rnT No.S.li.

130.239. 313. tWantad. St.coa forisu B3 nQ OS xdollr.r,$3.;5forIS53qua h0 lartc-r Prices fur Kiu.lhrr kind. lfarcqi.irl.

Send stamp for taticnlars V. Skinner, rraee Blag, Main. Boston, Hats. Laws and Advice Free. Sf ft.ii(JCi5 0 years.

Write us. A. W. BaCOSHIta SO.S, Usrlauti, O. A WufaUfUa, D.

C. "August Flower" Nik Jl 5 J8b Kg CtT Wnmpn Millions of them use Pyle's Pearl-Vlty VV OlTien ne for eaSy washing and cleaning instead of Soap. It's natural they should be the first to know the new ideas. If Pearlinc is good for them, it's of far more value to ttt whose work is harder COUfltry Women I Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you, "this JC is as" or the same lrline." IT'S FALSE 1 3 CA, 1 V- Pearline is never peddled, and if your grocer sends you some-thiBginplaceof Pcarline, do the houest thiag sendit back. 3os james York.

LOVELl DIAMOND CYCLES rnr LadiM and in Pneumatic Diamond Frame. 1 Bieyele Caialera Jltt. i.wl. mciuamg rcoais. Strictly SIGH Send 6 cents in logno of Guns, suspension sacsie.

GRADE in Every Farficuiar. stamps for oar lOO-pase illuntrated csta-1 Hifles, RcTQlvers, Sport! rir JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS 147 Washing V-SS i i i 1 i ii ir; FA.

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About The Englewood Chief Archive

Pages Available:
480
Years Available:
1888-1892