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Show Wtex e...-- portion of their food Is purchased, thm ASLEEP, FOR A YEAE. cost of the food for each hen' should not exceed 75 cents per year. If mora A YOUNG DUTCH CIRL BREAKS is given, it will probably make th hens too fat. If the value of the food ALL RECORDS. is properly estimated, the cost of the eggs can also be estimated withoute er German Medical Men at a Xoss to Ac ror, ir a lien lays out seventy-nv1 one be cost will in count for Her Slumbers May Be eggs year, the cent each, or 12 cents per dozen. II Victim or liypnotlsm The Queer she lays 15 Oeggs in a year, the cost Story. of the minimum number just mentioned. When one is near a large YOUNG DUTCH city, and prices are above the average, girl, Maria Coets- almost any kind of hen will at least keus, has- broken give a profit or pay for her food. In records In the all the West, where grain is cheaper than all annals of somno in the East, 50 cents will pay for a in lence. year; She has that one hen can consume and although the farmers in the West 65 days for slept do not receive as high prices as are so and. far as obtained in the East, yet they realize medical observa larger profits than may be supposed. can tion ascertain, Farm and Fireside. is in perfect health in Her home The Type of Son for Breedlngr. r ' B R Q.UCIX G A COLT. Explains Hl Method. Having Juet finished some of that kind of work I will give you my method. My weaning colts had never been bandied, and having run with their dams until midwinter, were wild as deer. To secure them until they became quiet enough to be haltered was the half-incproblem. Take about thirty feet h of rope; knot one end, so no danger of its being will be there out of your hand by the plungpulled On the other end fastof the colt. ing en a halter ring, then tie a taiot in the rope, leaving enough beyond It to encircle the colt's neck when drawn taut. The knot prevents choking. Now tie the end of the rope to the ring and you are ready. Bunch the horses by throwing out some feed in a large yard. Have an By assistant hold one end of the rope.noose soon can moving carefully you the colt. Let him circle around tountil his well tired out before going up head. As soon as possible take two s (Fig. 1) around his nose; fe. Wwcceaafnl Breeder - balf-hitche- Brati the Hackney. The Turf, Field and Farm says that this country is beginning to produce a type of horse which equals or excels the Hackney. This has already been proved, it says, and that no Hackney ever stepped into a ring and commanded such universal and enthusiastic admiration as Cogent, for Instance. He was a grander horse, in beauty, style, power, conformation and action than any of the many good Judges assembled ever expected to high-steppin- g In Hackney points he all Hackneys. He was sired by 'Mambrino King, from a French coaching mare, and while it is true that the style and beauty of Mambri-,n- o King render him eminently likely to produce such superb specimens as Cogent, it is also true that many others, perhaps his equals, can be found In the country, or developed by a0care-fu- l breeding. The desideratum is a horse of good size, proud carriage, high and striking but easy action, powerful behind to draw a load, and capable of carrying It, say, six miles an hour and twenty miles out and back the same day without distress. Tfaere Is money In sight in breeding these horses. The Hamlfns have a good start, but others will follow their example ,and there is a grand field here for small breeders and farmers. That Is the kind of horse we have been pleading for. one with endurance as well as speed. The horse on the track for quanhave struck 12 for all practical tity, purposes. Let us have the horse that can walk fast and trot fast, but also one that can take a load six mileS an hour and drive forty miles a day without distress. Endurance and speed enough. Home-Ma-de Hoot Cutter. The root cutter portrayed below was In use In Scotland thirty years ago and the past Bummer I made a trip of two months and found this same root cutter still In use, even where they were head cutting up roots for seventy-fly- e ee. ( ouf-Hack-ney- ed of winter feeders steers. Turnips are what they use chiefly in the way of roots, but the climate there Is very favorable for their growth, and I saw fields of thirty acres that certainly looked Immense. A. hard wood plank Stt feet long and 12 Inches wide has a quare cut out about the center and two pieces of wood, a and b, are fitted with knives, whatever size desired for th roots Intended to be cut, and bolted on the. bench. Four legs for it to Btand on having been Inserted, a piece of hard wood, a, is cut toVome down on - the edge of the knives and this Is fastened to a board or handle, e, at- - "auto-suggestion- deep-milkin- take the bend of the lower hitch, pass It under the other from the top down- Judd Farmer. Stevensworth, Germany, is a Mecca for the curious, but so far no one has been able to give an accurate diagnosis of the ailment which has caused her pro longed slumber. Some of the physicians who have seen the girl say that it is a superlative case of chronic hysteria. Others de ." clare it to be Whatever it may be, her countenance has the hue of health, and her temperature and pulse are regular. There is no deception regarding the time during which the girl has slept. Her parents are more than anxious that the girl should wake, but all efforts to restore her to consciousness, to rouse her from her slumbers have met with signal fail ure. Several physicians of considerable note who visited the girl give credence to a singular story in circulation among the neighbors, which, they hold, may explain the whole affair. This story is t&at the girl's lover, now and for some time absent from Stevensworth, possesses marked hypnotic power. He is ftlso of an exceedingly jealous disposi tion, and Maria has more than once aroused his ire by carrying on innocent flirtations with young men of the vil lage. The night preceding the day upon which the girl's long slumber began, the two quarreltl violently over Maria's conduct toward a young farmer who had been present at a party the lovers had attended a night or two before Late on the night referred to a young man was passing Maria's home and heard the lover's quarreling. He made his way to the window of the room from whence the sound of voices came Maria, he says, was seated in a chair, while before her stood her lover. The listener heard the lover say to his The brood sow may be of a still larger and coarser type than the boar, if she possesses the other requisite qualifications. By all means should the dumpy or China build be avoided, but this does not mean that the otlier extreme is any less objectionable. She should be of a compact, firm build, but should possess size enough to be able to carry and support a good litter of pigs. To be a good brood sow means that she is a good suckler. The milking quality runs in strains in sows, as in cows ,and no sow should be selected g to breed from that is not of a Her disposition, also, family. should be of the best, as it may enable one to save many a pig that an irritable sow would kill. She should bo one of a litter of not less than eight, and from a mature sire and dam. An animal that is in any way defective or delicate should be excluded from the breeding herd, and in a sow, especially, are vigorous health and a good appetite necessary. With a litter of eight to ten pigs to feed, her digestive if powers will be taxed to the utmost, the pigs, are not to suffer. Tait Butter, Mississippi Exposition Station. 14-inc- h wards, then up over the ears, loosening the rope in hand as you go. An excellent halter, capable of holding anything, is thus formed (Fig. 2.) If, after being driven around for some time, he proves stubborn and will not follow, take a piece of clothes line, leaving enough rope to slip down over his hind quarters almost to the hocks (the knot remaining over his coupling), ran the two free ends one on each side of his neck through the halter, and on feeling the pull behind he will move. Never strike him, and as soon as he yields a little, pet him. If the dams are worked, the best way is to slip the halter when the colt is only a few days old, and tie alongside the mother; but if still unbroken, when there is lots of snow on the ground is a good time to work with the dams, as the colt is not liable to be hurt when It throws itself. J. Wilson in Orange , one-ha- lf Ground or "Whole Oats for Horses. Whether oats should be fed to horses in the whole or ground form will depend upon various conditions. These conditions relate to the relative cost of oats and' fodder respectively, to the facilities for finding or crushing the oats, and to the extent to which the work can be carried on. When fodders are cheap there is less advantage in trying to economize them. When there are no facilities at hand for grinding the oats or cutting the fodder, it may not pay to do it in a small way, and it is easy to see how it may pay a person better to do the 'work whole-- i sale than by retail. While there can be no doubt of the greater economy of food from grinding the grain and cut-- sweetheart: "I am going away and I shall be ab ting the fodder, and then feeding the sent for months. I have not the faith two mixed, the farmer must be the to believe that you will keep ia will be which of you the best Judge to him for Northwestern adopt. your pledge to me, so I shall make you plan Farmer. sleep until I return." The girl's face grew pallid, the lis Clean Water for Poultry. toner says, and she 6eemed unable to Watering a large flock of poultry can look elsewhere than in her lover's face be accomplished in a cleanly manner He could not observe that she spoke a by carrying a pailful of water to the word after that. In a few moments, poultry quarters and inverting it in a however, the lover started to leave the room and the listener fled. pan, as shown In the sketch. This prevents the fowls getting into the water, From this statement it is argued that while the water is let down as fast as the girl is in a hypnotic sleep, from which only the absent lover can release her. So strong is the belief in this story that efforts have been made to find the missing man and force him to return, but wJthout success. Sev eral' professional hypnotists have also been consulted, and one who has visit ,ed the sleeping girl declares that the story is more than probable When 'asked why, if she was merely under needed. A couple of sticks should be hypnotic influence, he could not release laid across the bottom of the pan, or a her, he replied that the influence of the hole made in the pail an inch from the person who may have brought about top, that the water may rise in the her present state was so strong with pan. With this arrangement there Is the was he to success unable that girl little danger of the hens upsetting the If combat it. is it hypnotism, he water dish, which, in cold weather, fully will to sleep until continue the makes much trouble in the poultry says, girl house. Moreover, in cold weather a her lover returns. What lends color to the hypnotic pall of water will keep warm much longer when Inclosed in this way an story is that the usual evidences which important advantage. accompany a trance or cataleptic state which may have been superinduced by Hornless Cattle. causes are entirely absent in A herd of horned cows was bred to various The girl has always been instance. a polled bull whose mother wofe this In perfect health, an utter stranger to no horns. These young Hornless heifsickness. She Is not what would be ers never had a horned calf. This termed intellectual, and, in fact, there shows how easily the horns may be is no physical reason known, so far bred away'and, although slow, this as she is concerned, that would be apt to contribute to bring about the present way is the best of all. Horned cattle require twice as much state of affairs. stable room as polls ,f or the young catThe case i3 rapidly becoming celetle of the latter kind can be herded In a' pen like sheep until. ready to firop brated, and is already a source of fruitful discussion in Berlin medical cirtheir, first calves. No chains, stanchions or halters; never disturbing one cles. The physicians who are in atanother as they crowd around the tendance upon the girl say that, judgfeeding trough. ing from the effect her long sleep has If we look through stock yards we had her thus far, she could conshall find the horns actually gone from tinueupon the same state at least an in of the stock brought there. long period without the slightWhether, this Is due to the chemical equally of dissolution. est danger dehorning, the saw or Breeding it shows that horns are no longer the Where Japanese May Trade. fashion. The chances are that trrey never will be again. It Is reported at Hang-Chothat the authorities in that city high provincial Keeping Sheep Too Warm, intend to lay lout a settlement for ' the Miny farmers would fatten a few Japanese tor trading purposes in acsheep in the winter if they did "hot cordance with the recent treaty be have an Idea that a basement ' barn tween the two countries. The spot chosen" for this purpose is outside the wasj essential to success in this business. The only advantage in a. base- principal custom house of Hang-Choment for sheep Is that their fodder can beginning north of the g be stored above nrd thrown down to and having a lateral area east them through a U?e. As for. the ex- bridge, west of three. miles. The people and tra warmth In a Imminent. It 'is well within these limits will be alenough for; other stock, but sheep' do living to lowed sell land to the expected not peed It. A shed which will exclude rain and snow Is better for them strangers but .the selling of any other than to be cooped up In a basement land will be visited with punishment and lying on a pile of bedding whTeli on the offender. they are worKing into a manure pile, The barn basement Is necessarv for Foreign Fads. those! who grow early lambs, but for Some women of Vi ad- other; than breeding ewes it; enna recently appeared in public with vantage. single eyeglass or moncle of the English fop screwed into their arched They're Great Travelers. brows.; An effort to introduce the idea "Whut's that?" asked Farmer Co was promptly frowned UDon. pointing over his wife's shoulinus iar none of the new women of der tcj tlie magazine she was reading. York have undertaken to follow New, o the sun "It's a picter of one an '.' utterly senseless and wholly unspots' he .fashion. But the single exclaimed, reflectively, interesting "Byj Jing!"; "these here bacilluses seems ter be git-ti- n lorgnette has struck the metropolis and inter everything." Mexico Herald, Is the. decorative fad of the hour. j i ; l ' j ; nln-tent- hs w - ' --- W; asp Root Cutting: Hade Easy., A part by hinge. root and short fork is used to catch a moone But in the it hopper. place tion and one stroLe are required for Cached to the stool each root cut It can be done very quickly. The knives can be put Ind. to cut sliens of any thickness, as at W. C. Gibsop. Farm Superintendent National Home. Wis. The Coat of lisitKn. ir the Lens have a razc, anil culy a w, Kung-Chen- . . ultra-fashionab- is-n- - rn-toss- e!, m-rari- ; ";- le ophidian I oratm-upc- A New PoBtoltice. , has esThe United States government ' tablished a branch office in the great seed establishment! of the John A: Sal-ze- r Seed Co., La Crosse, Wisconsin. So large and extended Is- the trade of the Salzer Seed Co., that the government for their own convenience to i promptly expedite mail matter, located an office In their mammoth buildings.' The editor Is told that Salzer's great plant, seed and grain catalogue isjnalled to any one upon receipt of 5 cents postage by ad4 dressing them at La Crosse, Wisconsin. . The Gentle Professor's Act of Mercy Amply and Ingeniously Paid For. Edgar B. Haymond, one of San Francisco's barristers, have been a close stu- - Manifests Itself la many, different goitre, swellings,, running sores, boiL?? rhsnm and Dimples i arid dent of natural " h i story, and has suc. "QI. a man la wholly fra uwu4 i m ...is, m firAlr ceeded In gathering some very interestunta form. ' It tenaciously the clings last ing information regarding the birds, of is eradicate from tmi scrofulous of poison the air, the beasts of the land, the by Hood's Sarsaparilla. Thousands of te w0i fishes of the seas, says the San Francistestimonials teH of suffering from scrofula, on7 co Call. Incidentally, he has been able Inherited and most tenacious, positive to collect a few snake statistics. f ectly and permanently cured by "I once knew a case," said Mr. HayWhy 'Two Ears, mond, to some listeners last night, a was It saying of a wise man that "wherein a snake displayed not only we have one mouth and two ears in an unusual amount of affection, but order that we may listen twice as a great deal of couragej It appears that much as we speak. A teacher once quoted this remark some years ago a professor of natural to her pupils, according to. the Philahistory from an eastern university was Times, and not long afterward, The One True Blood Purifier. All firuggi$u . f sent to the southern part of Yucatan delphia to see how her Instruction was Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell to investigate the snakes of that sec- remembered, well '! she asked; tion. I might state that he was a very lis we have two ears it that ! "Why Hood's' Pills humane man, and frequently displayed and only one mouth, Frances?" it. One afternoon while walking over a " Frances had forgotten the philosobut she thought desert, thinking of little but the time pher's explanation, not a the very hard one. question he would arrive at camp, he heard a "we should not she "Because," said, peculiar rattling sound that seemed to. have room in our face for two mouths, Dim roin j&iissssss come from under a pile; of rocks. He at. and we should look too crooked If we r" once made an investigation and was had only one ear." ALUMINUM COOKING Utensils. huZT" rewarded by the discovery of a mas"No, no," said the teacher, "that Is tall, Denver AlnmlnumCo., 1609 Curti. You know, don't you, todon rattlesnake, which 'he was on the not the reason. I STAR GROCERY KB? NO CHARGE FOR PACKING iiffiSsg point of dispatching so as to put It out Rosy?" OE D SAY AO' "Yes, ma'am," answered Rosy. "So of misery, as the rocks had so fallen IJACHINIST Repairs of MINING, PRTNTfTI what we hear may go in one ear 111 that Machinery, etc. Pipe threading and ctAin, that a portion of the snake's body was and out at the other." ComYouth's elevators. Nock & Garside. Freight uiul badly mangled and torn.--, In the matpanion. AMFRIPAN Hnil.QP ter of taking the reptile's, life he hesi nuibiuvnii uvuvb moot, a par Da Notice. tated, owing to the pathetic and appeal Drs. H. H. Green & Sons of Atlanta, M IV) I P and wood Working Machinerr ing expression in the wounded crea I It U hand ) of all kin de bought and iolit so ture's eyes. It quite unnerved him, Georgia, are the greatest dropsy special- S.IIIMI IIachinery Co. 1529 Lawrence. Works 6 A Market in ists the world. Cure more patients he rolled the rocks off and awaited than the entire of physicians scat- ECONOMY FENCE army of results, which came in the shape tered over this beautiful land of ours. A Cheapest in market. Sendro.AKfiS3H for Catalog. 15th very pronounced gratitude. valuable outside medical discovery any "The delighted and thankful creature book or published opinion. A purely JOB & NEWS INK KSraiSrEs" wriggled over to him and rubbed his leg vegetable preparation. Removes all Colo. Printing Ink and Oo., 1810 Blake with a grateful air that was bound to dropsical symptoms rapidly. Ten days' last. The professor was moved by this treatment mailed to every sufferer. See STEAM AND HOT WATER HEATING exhibition, and, having some cotton in advertisement in other column. PIANOS AND ORGANS his valise, he bound up the wounded SS Music free. A Co., Reafton. Good Catalogue Knight Arapaho as and comfortable left snake the part Dobson "What made you give up that QTATC DDE Sampling Work as possible, and next day he left Yuca Albany you were going to have in your ama- O I A I L Un C Hotel Block, Denver. Pocket play tan for Guatemala and was gone ovr teur dramatic to ore all valuable actors Did the mailed frea. Khlpper, company? five years. On his return to Yucatan back out?" Write of for ourlist OUT An rADMO W "No; that wasn't the trouble; but cloeed propertietfor aalait rMnillO he again had occasion to pass over the ourFogge insisted on wearing a dress UiltHr leading lady 746 Equitable B'g, Denn sost. Co. The Trust Central with a train three yards long, and the stage desert, and greatly to his surprise, en- is only eieht feet bv six. so we decided to AQQAVCDQAD chemists, :Goodelh countered the same reptile a few miles have a monologue." Harper's Bazar. HOOA I CllO DOYLE, 1655 Champa St. Bamplei by mail and express receive promptrfattention. from where the previous incident had How's TMT occurred. The recognition was mutual. CUT FLOWERS Funeralet- -Designs, Colfax Avenu We offer One Hundred Dollars reward Floral Co., H. B. Kline, Mgr. 628 16th 8t Tel. i3& and the joyful rattler coiled about his case for of Catarrh that cannot be HORSES. We are the any only Arm west of th)Ml.' leg, licked his hand with a friendly cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. louri river that do a general commission buslnefi. & and indusO. F. showed J. CHENEY marked and tongue CO., Toledo, ia the oldeet firm in the state. Our facilities for landlrng hoi ses and mules are second to nine, We, the undersigned, have known F. lead trious appreciation. When the profeshandled last year. Auction sales Thursdari 15 beJ. the last years, and Cheney for ff you want to buy or sell let us hear sor took up his march again the snake lieve him perfectly honorable in all W. Buchanan, Gen'l Man., City St ck Yardl followed him, and even insisted upon business transactions, and financially to carry out any obligations made HARNESS. SADDLES.TURF GOODS getting into the wagon and becoming able firm. their by Etc. We make a specialty of Fine Goodj a regular occupant." WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, ind Best Ore Harness in the market, and "Look here, Edgar, ain't you going a Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. iandle no shoddy goods. WM. B. LLOYD, Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal- 1011 Fifteenth Street, Denver. little too far with that yarn?" inquired ly, acting directly upon the blood and a friend. mucous surfaces of the system. Testi- COLO. SEED HOUSE Office 1521 15tk,war"Not as far as the snake is going. monials sent free. Price, 75c per bottle. souse Garden field dec ennm ice tVazee.Den'r &flowerseed ull ourruLO) To continue: He finally got back east, Sold by all druggists. Sarden Largest lock in the state, etped Hall's Family Pills. 25c. and had for a traveling companion the Uly adapted to Colorado. Catalogue frse. DENVER'S new flr. "Dis here polities is gwine ter make snake, which was allowed to wander at Hotel he said proof "Is yer THE OXFORD Indies'European thoughtfully. will. As a matter of consequence the trouble," and Gentlwife. is. asked his "I dis'p'inted ag'inV" emen's cafe attaohed. professor and his dumb companion be Ebrya time I stahts in ter run dey tells me Baggage taken to tnd from the deiot fiee of I'se dahk hoss." "Let 'em go on, let 'em sharge. Kates r. aaonable. l ocated corner came the best of friends and it was a go she rejoined with suppressed indigon," azee Sts , block from Union Depot ind common thing to see the naturalist nation. VYe kin etan' bein' called a dahk hoss. ef dey had said 'yaller dawg' or walking out in the road with the snake 'brindleButmule' I sut'n'y would hev smote IEAK QRCANS QEVELOPEB. gliding along beside him. Wellnow 'em." Washington Star. here comes the real part of the story Prematureness and all exhausting dralai The Modern Way Write for description of our homi stopped. one night after the professor had reCommends itself to the cure for varicocele and nervous debility. to do pleasantly and effectually what tired and left the snake downstairs in was LUD4N MEDICAL INSTITUTE, formerly done in the crudest man- Times Blk., Denver, Reception Room the dining room he was suddenly ner and disagreeable as well. To cleanse awakened by the crash of glass, fol the system and break up colds, headAT lowed by the fall of a heavy body. He aches, and fevers without unpleasant ufse after the effects, delightful liquid rose up in his bed, only to hear a groan laxative Manuof remedy, Syrup St. James, of and the crushing bones. In a flash factured by California FigFigs. Syrup Comhe bounded into his dressing gown and pany. DENVER, COLORADO. repaired to the room whence came the had hair "Hello, Kissam, Huggins your Curtis Street, opp. Tabor Opera Uoiuc, on of sound strife. Imagine his horror cut?" Kissam "Yes, dear boy. I found a American Plan, Absolutely cut wheie tLey your hair while you house. Rates new, striking a light to see his- pet snake- place reasonable. wait." Huggins "That's good. A barber coiled around a man's bleeding body, shop Is usually a place where 'they .cut some which it had lashed to the stove and other man's hair while ycu wait." Life. E. E. BURLINGAME S was hugging violently. On the floor Hurrah for Pennsylvania. ASSAY OFFICE al;dboSaetmo was a burglar's dark .antern and a kit to are of The farmers Pennsylvania of tools, while the snake, in order to Established In Colorado, 1866. Samples by mail M. M. Luther, East express Trill receive be congratulated, prompt and careful attentia display its presence of mind, had his Troy, Pa., grew over 207 bushels Sal" AND SILVER BULLION tail out of the window zer's Silver Mine Oats on one measured GOLD Refined, Melted and Assayed or Purchmd. "What for?" inquired a listener, in acre Think of it! Now there COIA breathless excitement. thousand farmers going to try and beat Address, 1736 and 1738 Lawrence St.; DENVER, Mr. Luther and win $200 in gold! and "Rattling for a policeman." COMPANY PA V 8 THE FReiCHT they'll do it. Will you be one of them? OnTHE new steel horse Thlm. Will their 26 300 is Silver shift. just s of ton rock Then feet there boist King Barley, and reliable as an engine Iteach can be Workings Girls to Close Stores packed "ju2 cropped on poor soil 116 bus. per acre a jock cn go. iiu 90tu DSr MBl The working girls clubs of Massachu in j nlnfihuliniik 1895. Isn't that wonderful and corn m wrought Iron and steel and will setts have set themselves to the task 230 bus. and potatoes and grasses and before breakino. Over dU m some running 6 years without of closing retail stores at 5 o'clock dur clovers, fodder plants, etc., etc. Freight nfllw J UU1MUS . " oo,wink "e' ,m to on all March. The at seeds and boistt east, is west, prices, February January, cheap points ing organization is a strong one and em- north or south. i"'l"Ef braces the Amaranth club, Roxbury; U::iu;ijm!i!:'!:!!i!;j!i::::jl fffc If yon will cat this oat and send Boyleston club,Boston;Cambridge Girls' club, Clover club, Boston; Dorchester it with 10c postage to the John A. SalGirls' club, Fall River Working Girls' zer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis.," you will tndanW Bend for an illustrated circular to THB their mammoth catalogue and WHIM CO.. 1222 Curtis St Denver. Oolo. club, Friendly Workers, Boston; En receive ten packages grains and grasses, Indeavor club, New Bedford, and many r- . i .flT nn j J Sarsaparilla ? ZJjSll Denver Directory. umm -- ' 1415-1- 7 . 1627 , Sa; 1508-1- 0 ffloe, Decora-lion- s, 1 3,000 fiorayoii.-lo- hn - 1516-1- 8 tools.-etc- 17th cne-La- ll well-informe- d, 805. STO m New first-clas- - - are-thirt- y eommog-Hn- n 1 If cluding above oats, free. others. Ella Wheeler Wilcox declares HI ASTI-3EV2- A w.n. The following elucidation of the Monroe doctrine appeared in the examination papers of a candidate for a teacher's certificate: "The Monroe doctrine was a doctrine promulgated by President Monroe, in which he proclaimed that if any nation makes war on the United States it shall be considered a hostile act." WRITERS OF BOOKS. VTa t 1 1 Coldl Grip,Cured Bronchitis,andCoughs andbySevere useoi the effectually quickly Powder & Cigarette Katnow'sAnti-Asthmati- c FKE& that Write for valuabler literature physicians. aad bignfh package has our she believes in the doctrine of rein of the carnation, and that inhabitants of the world believe in it, too. She thinks she was a cat, once. A New and Wonderful Discovery. It may be encouraging to young au In the wide field of sufferings, nothing is thors to know that of 165 books pub more distressing- than a severe attack of asthma. Without warning, in the lished in one week during the month of spasmodic If voui drueeist refuses to get them for you appIT midst of apparent health,; difficulty of breath- direct to October, a representative house in New ing comes on aridthefor many minutes, someKUTNOW BROTHERS, times for and hours, pati0nt gasps fights 82 A 54 Lafayette Place, New York City. York took only forty, leaving 125 un- for breath. His frame 5o.J countehis quivers, Simple packages ef Powder or Ciganttai ? three-fourt- hs t- Trade-ma- - touched, It is said that Jules Simon's real name Is Suisse, and that when his first book was written, Victor Cousin advised him to change it on account of the number of Swiss acting in the capacity of cont cierge in Paris. Alphonse Daudet's home is in the Faubourg Saint Germain, and the street in which he lives is a quiet one, whose sparse shops have not! changed their style of window dressing since the death of the Due de Berri; Rhoda Broughton is still living at Oxford, a stately, charming woman, just beginning the autumn of life. She rarely goes to London now, but is al-tways pleased to welcome her literary friends to her home in the classic old university town. Victor Hugo's statue for the Place Victor Hugo will not be ready before 1900. At that jtime also will be Dub- lished two volifmes containing some unpublished papers written at Guernsey, and the letters which he wrote to intimate friends during his exile. 1 i j he . nance is bathed in moisture, distress of the most painful character takes possession of him. Any one who had never seen a similar attack would fear that death must be at hand. After a time, however, breathing mes-easier, and finally gets natural, but before that happy state is reached again, he suffers tortures. A preparation of most carefully selected herbs, consisting in gathered the Swiss Alps and Scotch mountains and skillfully combined In a dry state by Kutnow Brothers of New York, ia much used these attacks. This preparation is also put up Inancigarettes, so that a one patient can ward off attack by lighting of them and inhaling the smoke. Kutnow's Powder and Cigarettes are enfree from dangerous ingredients, and tirely can therefore be used without danger by Large packages $1.00, MAIL postpaid. OKI'' beco- e Anti-Asthmat- ic everypoay. A collecting agency in New York is run by women exclusively, which seems to disprove the adage, a woman's work ia never dun. ; for them- - them' AiXtzvf 1X5 .Uthem. U Jt lctanrtAT-- nWa d plant They are tne seeds every- bv UJc the world. largest Dlanters in re 50 square tVb.etb.er you plant . 6DOUv VOU Krt Afrmnnri urM. Annual for 'W. have crtwn most valuable doom. Xbe Ferry'a mart and gardeners eyer gic away. Mauea w. CO. O. M. PERRY A. Detroit, Micb. Stockmen's Saddles and Harness, Manufactured by the old, responsible firm of ' HERMANN H. REISER. 1528 and 30 Blake Street, Denver, Colo. Are unsurpassed in quality. Parties In need of Saddles and Harness goods, will find the re' above firm prompt and reliable in every in the state, spect. Prices are the lowest Send for their of goods- considered. quality new Catalogue. Louise Chandler Moulton says there Is no way to be original except to be born so. How many who strive to original need a ' . second birth. ! . I Cough Syrup. Jaatei flnll VT M Best lull U- . W. N. U Denver. When writing to that you saw the advertisement - "J L 17 nlea8e Pf |