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Show waa, and there was no evidence against him, ao be waa never apprehended fur this theft. Johnson worked s similar dodge at CIIAUNCEY JOHNSON A MARthe office of the Adams Kxpn-s- comVELOUS BANK SNEAK THIEF. pany at 59 lir.alway. lie wn:;e until lunch time came ami watched the r flay kmni4 la Kew fork ciuiliicr ca he removed his office coat Xo Ua and Kilk thirty Yean la rriavu into a cli.iir, c:tp. threw t!-.a . aw tla la I'Niai at :;; out to lumdi. Tin n Jubunon and Crave. Mic.ikrd in, put i tlif coat a. id u;i, i hfhitid lju muck a at r. uo v TTKlTIVES saw down av pitli'1 Ho took ,er:.I an i.M man with a lu(u.-a;:!t,;; ns u.:i (if i)i lu.iui-gray bc.ii'il at. unlink ii.uil 1. ix utr tli - ci.it lir'urt1 tli( window dr.iv.ir, got up and c:p avviiiii, u:d of a Ji Wfliy iure Mint oil to I Hull. lie wa arr.c ii. In New Ytrk C.ity ncvr tried, as lit- - :..ui'i!iu,i',;i the other day. but a is not eiit:.;)!i C'u aooibcr occo.iun wi!m-thiThere v:: Iid.ii: u!i i m ji ked iii'ii ir : t li !"i.iii:f f.iimli'ir in cit-ruffiti v.!.(u t i:ad hi a:i l : i o f ir a too i1,,p:iill in In l! i hi in l In way In f.ini.-i- l .fr wi.rfli of Merit gar iled tin- dia- govi r:inu-i:-:!t lioii ii tii.it verc lying on Tli nit n monds in ili lie wu.-- in ver coiivicic I. t.i iniiii'd nut in Ik ('iMiiari-JuIiiihoii, a In 171 JohnK'iu was lu.'tr-inOn.; day o -- Tonli nr notoriety. Die I'if'h AVitiue hol'd wli-:i in Tlifrn is a hi'.iinlliiK uriler ut polie rt 1. d'Mi c..iv gui'.-- t k'.i p i 'l up to tli to aiT'Mt Julinwn w hea- I ; lie :i tuiitaiili to l'n !: it's vier In turns up, a.i liia pre.icuc? in aroiit.il ti hiii-- l lie pH"k;.a liirce where desk in mis a.ir pnt:y fair i.nMia-lin- n c! rks were at work, tank tnc p:iri;air that. ronii'limly's liank roll nr other III the wife. Johll'.iotl Wi; Iked buldl vn liia hie properly will be if the Kevci'iil others out of the safe, lie and tub n:i ;he oM man. imlli'e fiiilii to was Jia t leavng the place unoltTVi ii he was earried off to police Hluniblol over a waste jiap.-and queM tuned about hla when be Imaket and nttrueted the attijitlon if iiiDvenieniH. They were unable to make tha clerks. 1'or this nffalr he gut ten aniy charge asaiiat him when he wan in At another time a iiir.tlgned in the Centre street court, yearshox Slug Sing. about in tin containing wild be was discharged. bonds and stocks disappeared from tho vault of tho Marine National bank. Johnson was arrested, but could not ba connected with the I heft and was discharged. It was afterward, believed that he was guilty. Johnson and Henry Newman, win was known as Dutch Heinrich, saw the president of tne Central National Igink r'sclve a package of bonds worth lf5.-IHIn a broker's office one day and followed him to ihR bank. The president went into Ills office, laid the bonds on hla desk and turned around to take off hla overcoat. As he did so the li.inds disappeared, and ho did the two men, who had apparently keen waiting to apeak to him. In 1XS0 Johnson returned to Now York after one of hfs numerous sojourns at Sing Sing. He was penniless, and hla sixty years unfitted him for the clever work of his younger dayri. CIIAUNCEY JOHNSON. The second day that lie was In town he Johnson had not been seen there snatrhed a porketbook from a woman for about a year. During that tliuo at Twenty-secon- d street and Broadway. lie has been nerving a term in He waa detected, and was so weak from for a robbery committed in hunger that he could nut run and was I'hlludelphla, and has but recently been arrested. He pleaded guilty and went released. back to Sing Sing for another four Johnson Is one of the oldest and cool-r- st yean. Since then he has been arrested crooks in America. He la 75 yean a number of times In Philadelphia, add, and more than thirty yean of hla Boston, New York, Albany, and Troy life have been apent in prison. Time for stealing pockctbooks, umbrellas, and time again Johnson baa been ar- rinalt auma of money, nnd has served rested and escaped conviction becauso everal short sentences. of Insiifllelent evidence. New York, l'blladelphla and Albany are bis favorSQUAW MEN AND INDIAh ite damping grounds, but he la well known to the police of many other Three Maa gllllad la a Seminole L Troop Itaitnra 1'eerafc cities. He baa robbed banka and exthe Seminole nation from awb auma with of the large press companies the other day says the uprising same imperturbability with which he looted an umbrella rack or made off among the squaw men has been partly with the reticule of a country ahopper. aubdued by the arrival of troops from Johnson waa born in the United the First Cavalry. Two hours before TUates and waa originally a bookkeeper, the arrival of the military, the squaw lie la unmarried, allm In build, and mnn and full bloods had a pitched batd Indians moderately tall. Hla fare la thin and tle, In which three Mallow. He la said to have stolen more were killed and two squnw men Inmoney than any other sneak thief In jured. One hundred and fifty aqiaw Amcrlra. Before becoming an expert men comprised the attacking party and and half breeds Lank sneak he served an apprentice- chased 300 ship as a burglar. In 1852 he was con- through the streets of Wewoka. The trouble between the squaw men cerned in the robbery of a silk warehouse In Rondo street. New York, and or white men who have married Into the Seminole tribe has been In prog less was sentenced to live years' Imprisonment. At the end of bis term he went since the lust meeting of the Scmlrole lo Bethel, Conn., where he broke Into council, when a law wad passed orderthe Hatters' bank and gut away with ing the Immediate expulsion of nil For lev-er9.13.900. The money was recovered, and while nten from the nation. years It has been the practice of Johnson wont back to prison far live years. When he got out he white men to go Into the Scmlrole abandoned burglary, went to lliUadol-phl- country and marry an Indian sqniw. and launched out us a sneak. This, according to Seminole Indian One of the contrivances with which he laws, entitled him to eixty acres of worked was a long fine steel wire, land. The white men. being very formed Into a hook at one end. It was shrewd, h ire selected the choicest bit:! wo slight that It waa almost Invisible. of land and frozen out the On one occasion Johnson went Into a and half breeds. Hence the law of tho subsequent trouble. An Thnadclphla bank and stood In line at council and the d Indian police to put The paying teller's window. While the effort of force Into the council laws led to the In out counting teller was engaged revolt. Federal troops will prevent furmoney for the others, Johnson reached In with hla hook and pulled out a hlg ther trouble. tmnrh of 950 billa He repeated this two or three times, and was so success- MISS FORD SECRETLY MARRIED ful In eluding detection that he could liar lltaaUaml la llarbait (inuham of not resist the inclination to keep on. Aagaitla ('nrapany. llalj'a The teller happened to look up. ani saw It haa just come to light that Mira .a bundle of 9100 bills moving across tho Martha Ford, n the young 4eak apparently of its own accord. Qnkk as a flash Johnson withdrew his hook and stuck It Into his overcoat pocket. But the teller's stspiclons were aroused and he railed the porter, who grabbed Johnson and searched Mm, Hla pocketa were full of bank blits, and upon hla arraignment he pleaded guilty, and went to prison for three years and a half. Soon after hla release he transferred his operations to He w York city. He walked Into a hank there early one morning as the clerks and bookkeepers were beginning to arrive. Johnson went Inaldo with the others took a linen coat from a ixg, pvt it on, and went to work on a wet of hooka In n few minutes th sian who kept the books regularly came in. What are you doing here?" he asked MRS. GRESHAM. of Johnson, In surprise. actress, daughter of the late John T. You're discharged." replied John-wo- Ford, was secretly married last Juno calmly. "I've been rugaged in your in New York to Herbert Gresham, of tlaoe." Augustin 1'uly'B company. On the day Johnson had the air of a professional after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Greshbookkeeper, and the other mnn thought am left for lxmilon, where they remainlie vraa telling the truth. One of the ed until about two weeks ago. Me. tank officers was appealed to, and with Geshum Is to play an Important role In considerable difficulty Johnron was "The Geisha" at Daly's theater. He lo that there had been some mis- an Englishman nnd ha been In Mr. He went away grum- Daly1 company for raveral yen.--. understanding. bling and protesting. Later In the day a shortage of 915,000 was found In the The first omnibus hns made Us ap tali (uni. Nobody knew who Johnson pearance la St. rvtersburg. A GREAT FINANCIER. -- fn o-- 1 . d 1 t. ug : app'-unii'-- - g w'oi'M-w'iil- ci.-rl- uil.-i.dnt-, lleail-4iiarie- rs r be-lor- e Fenn-ylvnu- i:i ed full-bloo- full-biro- al an-oth- or a. full-bloo- ds full-bloo- well-know- n, GOV. J0SIAII GROUT. - A Crai'kaii NEWt Y ELECTED EXECUTIVE OF m Hunlilrr. The wonderful lurro of the roots of CRSEN MOUNTAIN STATE. growing trees is deniouxtrated on a hill in Mill Vulli-y- , whore a laurel tree has a War ICvrord, AUo On. at tha split a huge boulder into three pieces. II. The tree is uf tbe type rum-.niIn liar, anil lln I.eivly Heroine a but tb're are l.ranr-l- lt HuOim a West many pans uf Califuruia, revcrul qurcr I blues uhoui it and Its aruar. KUiroiindiiiiM. The pln-- e wh'-rtbe irej grows h u must unti.c.uil nue fur 3 tli rpOJIAH (1 llOUT, epoch's, mhiih mituiai'y '1 newly elect. .1 g.r jl iK.:.',iii'. The l.ut uf the r,1(,r of the Diet live l.'ikitig nut In u l.:.rr,:i took Is a1;o M iu:iliii:i nate.w! C A', unikiu.il in ('u!i'urii!:i, mi '' unit of tin ;2' bor:i mi a Vcrnoi d:.v kui'iRii r.i.duriu,; which youait lung, at 112, .'proiiis ii.iii.'lly ythen- is js farm .M iy til and p'uit bis early uilli'idor.ilili- i: i;i. t ininbs it i:i.- uni!. The . f 1. uf !i bn'iiiii-i- l cirio;:-lj'urs in tho labori- - exact oils pursuits Inci; a fi'ii liiiiulri'il ft 'i 1 ou-i- i of tli li: i! dent to the life of to the t. of T.i!ii;iJ:a!.i. Tin- (v'M-- r ;1 a fiiuiicrc eon. Ho n;i;ieiir:iii( c uf il c ;n n is 1:1 u- t uniisu. '. a; tended dis'rict .uid uaJauMc tly T. is very old. At fir1 schoul in she winter and later went to glance it loui s lllio :: 11 o'ii;, but n mutt academy, where he was pursuing 1; nusutl ore. The upper branches ara Hs Ktudics when hc war of the relie!- - nvlntAd rii.i! t'lrnc. in all and Him broke out. He went to the front a of then are In largo -, at omt, enlisting as a private In Coin- n.'ility tile tree looks like iho.-- in the I of the First Vermont cavalry, Dire lli'i.iii'niiunii uf D.inte's "Inferno." wn.i elected sc'cml lieincnant when Ai (xan.liia iun of the tree and l:s j li tb' company was permanently urg.tn-ic'-shows tint the boulder is April 1. ls93. lie was mails a mo of the largest otur.es In the vicinity captain and the same date was seriousOd eunnol weigh le.-- than 500 tons. ly wounded In aciion. He still carries The local ion of the tree is almost exthe bullet lie received In that battle. actly iti the miiMl-- ' of the crone and In 1SC1 bo rained n company for the about five feet from the end of the split. Frontier cavalry regiment, organized IhiM ri.'t In the rock Is about fifteen to repel tho St. Alban's raid, and was ii'ehes long and at one end Is only a appointed a major of the regiment. At fi w Inches wide. At the end where the at the close i.f the wap Major Grout re- tic Is It la at least three feet. To prove turned home am resumed the study of tfat it was the tree that caused the split law in the office of liiu brother. General is a crack in one of the halves of (trout, lie was admitted to the bar in the boulder showing that the force of 1S65, and practiced law in partnership tho growing roots was so much that it with his brother In Barton, VL, at the cracked the rock where It could not name time assisting in editing the Bar- move It. Miss Eastwood, a botanist of ton Standard. In 1S75 ue moved to the Academy of Sciences, gave as kfr opinion that the strange natural curiosity waa the cn'.y one of Us kind in the state. She says that in all her studies she has never c;en Its like here, although in localities where there aio summer rains the phenomenon is not unusual. And yet even under those conditions she never heard of a laurel growing as the one In Mill Valley does. In Miss Eastwood's opinion there must have been a small rift in the boulder to begin with. Possibly It was tight enough to hold water. In the fall of the year the reed of the laurel blew Into It and in the spring of the year came to life. The walls of the rift then acted as sunshades and also kept the water from being evaporated too rapidly, so that the young shoot was able to struggle through the long summer until the winter rains came. Or it may be that there was an unusually rainy summer that gave the tree its start in life. After the tree was a year old it JOSIAII GROUT. was enabled to take care of Itself, and Chicago, where he practiced hla profession for three years. He then moved then showed its Ingratitude to the rock to Moline, III., and was elected super- that had- protected It. San Francisco visor of Rock Island county. He de- Call. clined a proffered nomination to run ZANZIBAR'S NEW SULTAN. for congressman and In 1880 returned to Vermont, settling with his family In anhinmid bln SayTlii beni to Salt tho Inlonil Population. the Hinman homestead, where his wife Ilamoud bln Mohammed bln Seyyld, waa born. In Derby. After leaving Chicago Mr. Grout abandoned tbe prac- the new sultan of Zanzibar, la a puppet tice of law and turned hie energies to that will fall In with any suggestion the farming. He owns one of tbe largest English government of the islands has farms in Vermont. He was elected to to make, lie is better suited to the the legislature In 1872 and 1874 and the purpose of the British conquerors of latter time was chosen speaker. After the country than Said Khalid would his return from the west he was again have been. The latter entertained odd sent to the legislature in 1SS4, 1886 and notions of being a real sultan, and the 1888, serving as speaker the last two British do not like real aultans. Disterms. He was a state senator In 1892 patches from the island say the people and haa been and presi- are pleased with the new sultan, which dent of the Republican League of Ver- la quite easy to Imagine, Inasmuch as the sultan has nothing to do with tho mont people or the people with the sultan. A Texas Marine. The inhabitants of Zanzibar were pretMr. R. B. Zimmerman, of Warren, ty well convinced by the recent bomhas wh.'it is probably the highest swing bardment that whatever the English In Texas. The frame i made of pine thought good would be best for them. feet long, which are logs seventy-eigh- t set In the ground right feet, making tho swing seventy feet high. The cross piece Is six by elx inrhes, heart, and Is fastened to the top of the upright pieces In suck a way as to lie ns strong ns if the frame was all of one piece. On the north side of the swing is a feet high, at the top of pole forty-tw- o which is a pulley. The person who wishes to swing Is straped In, If he or he desires, nnd then takes hold of one end of rope, the other end of which l run through the pulley and fastened to a team of horses. The horsea are started off and the swinger Is pulled to the top of the pole. When the top la reached he drops the rope and Is at once launched Into space, sometimes going as high as 100 feet on the opposite side from the pole. One turn at the awing la generally enough to satisfy one for that evening. Since the erection of the swing Mr. Zimmerman's house has become a resort every evening for tho young people of WarIIAMOUD. THE NEW SULTAN, ren. and parties frequently coine from Mohammed bln Seyyld will doubtand other and towns to neighboring Hyatt less rule acceptably to the people and In nn "the swing." Dalevening enjoy the British war ships In the bay, las News. ('Milling tha llnna Car. tllCTrl IiiTOntlonx. StmfT When the car horses throughout ConInventions of bicycle sundries are necticut cities were retired a few years Just now apparently the most profitable ago with the coming of the trolley, peodirection In which mechanical Ingenuiple wondered what would become of the ty can be directed. All the really mer- 600 care that they bad dragged so long. itorious devices on the markets for No one would have guessed then that wheels and wheelmen are selling well a brisk demand far these old ears and return fine dividends to their ownwould spring up In one season and ers. And the most remarkable feature would almost completely exhaust the of the case Is the fact that these prove supply. Yet such has been the rase paying Investments from the start, and this summer. The ears hare been sold no losing system of introducing them for summer shelters in rural districts Is necessary ns In other businesses. for hunter's camps, for lodges by soliOne of the must remarkable Instances tary lakes, for cabins on house boat, of this state of affairs la the case of and. most of all, for the homes of a popular saddle made of aluminum campers on the roast of Ixmg Island and leather. It was Invented less than Sound snd Its Islands. A Norwich partwo years ago and has boon on the ly nt Scotchrap. on the Thames river, market hut a short time. Yet this year have arranged four horse care In tho the sales nave already reached form of a hollow square. A canvas and there are more to come. On swlnlng covers the courtyard made by this 80.000 the inventor realized 50 tbe cars, and a tall flagstaff rl.dng from cents apiece, or 9 10,0" i, a tidy little the center compl' les the pi. a:itig t. One if the oars i used ns sum, which would bo considered a fortune by some people, r.nd does fairly a kitchen and workshop, and the others well for an annunl lueume on a bicycle are lounging, sleeping nnd nvepttuu sundry. Cblcigo Tribune. looms. LATTER FOUND EARTH i : y - ji a d.-.i- tl. p.ii-io- e d. e - nt 80,-00- 0, Ib-ss- e The t ow Ate the Iting. rinz tbit t Kiipp'wnl to hive ipeul umny a y.iir l;i ;i r.ivv'i Kiuinacb s wiit tin ii'.ber d.iv lu I: nwiier. x youug lady IKW tile JIIIIII1! Two f J'llir-- 1 licit tier. i:id.v i.r.:!i. x li.nrv Hli.i It I.ilt1 ill tilt lt.iril J.Vl.ld lit1 kl'tr'i ium! . J i;t jiilt1 1.1( rfiitp m:i1 I'Mii. Wit.. i !itr "iiii ItnpT. ki if'i p ri..u I Ii: uliit-"Iil'i 11"'. I't- nat yiveu lip H.v t.iI day apif..! linu-lf..iptlii. . I ; .1 a Iwiipli: J. tn. aii.l r:, 1. I.:- iv )I riuu. : (if wn- - L t.i.l ; ti in it liu rii.p wl.h . iity'ii vu.'Mv.il i.u it. w.i, it in Cummer-f. ur.l in ns sit ii:i.'.:;v. A culil , 1 rent - lu.-..- y MOUNDS. EARING on the cthnniogb al aspect Is tho f.nl liia'. pipvs have Lien futia I nn many dif-- fi lie - i.-- out lad rvfrMli'.iig to tbe taste, icti gently uu kidmya liver lint bowels, nd jnultiri-lciranslug tbe entire ryuii'in. dtapeii ooids. rum hnidui'lie, fever, habitualMintivunlpiriuu ud buy iry I box 10. Si. W rent. Sold Slid uf ( C. C. iiuxrauteni lu vuie by ill urugglsll. THE ANCIENT Ailatlf Ortgla fr felxtorlf! Migrations of lbs fhlasM Is tbs Shnru 1 Amsrlrs An Intporlsnl Kinds - In Obiii and Htilra lr' 'f won-lerfu- l Fvldanra of 1 .'' IN Ci 8 reU Candy Cxlhirtlr. tbe most nwili'il discovery of tbs sge, pleis blliiHi-iiL-- fl 1 t- A IliHwehold KecMStty, ETHNOLOGY AND PIPE, TREE THAT r.Li"- A ROCK. UoUllrll kauiMon or I stir oral iicr.-- t 11 11 - Ui-- ; ; IW ( an Save You Time. i I'.u'iii' mfl!."i' Tli. ml time N (iiii Li'-- f jiimi 11 u : i :y d.i icti?" . fy 11 tn cp tiii.p , iii. '.i;l lT.ii S'., ; up c.i'. punii Cim. AJy. lip-nc- ninny marry liu iM'ii. pu bu-'.-- !i v. I 1.: 111111111 biu cau'l intimidate 'Hipy lll.i-X- e o. - tin- Vtn'-riei- eii-'itl- n 1 1 ly mis-tiena- ry bt'.-!u-r- it- . Mrih-n.oiii.i- ib the Mis.dssipld nnl of Mexi'O. sum' wliieh are carved in :ha fo::.i t.f l'un.aii Li ad of mi tim.iis-'likaliMiaipu'ian type, hays of F con ai'er the discovery t li.e qiisiiiui uf the eriyiti of Its ii iialiii iiiis icti.liie a fertile weirer Jf ionj-.litra).ii:iT pcciiiatlve DD.tk-ir- s. I'rnhnhly Grig 11 in Garcia, a w liu had fur twi '.it y years lived n .'him !t Amcricj, was t!:e lirct " re-- 1 the gfiirml opinion that they wt re I new fin e of liciaga rprung from the to sii.wiit fer :(i;l they inhabited source. Ho published .hem un II hi viev.'H on ;li question la a work "The Origin of the Indians of the New World" (Valencia, 1007), wherein he expresses himself as opposed to the latoehthonoiis character of the inhabitants end points out reasons for thinking that the eonn'.ry had been peopled al-ty Tartars and Chuiree. Brerewoad in hi.; "Diversities of Languages and Religions" (1032-5aligned the American people un eastern ar.d chiefly Tartar origin, lint Hugh Groliu argued that North A tunica was peopled from n cktidlatvlan s'oik, though probably the leruvlana were from China. Fuming to more recent times, may be mentioned Rtof. Smith Barton cf Pennsylvania, who. In his "New Views of the Orlg'n of the Tribes and Nations of America, contends that they are descended from Asiatic nations, though ho is unable to point to any particular source from which they have emanated. And JolinDriafleld's "Enquiries Into the Origin of the Antiqultites of America'' lend iiim to the conclusion that the Mexicann were from the riper nations of Hindustan and Egypt and that the more barbarous red men were from the Mongol stock. Alexander von Humboldt during his travels in South America gave tbe weight of hie vast knowledge and shrewd observation to a con-Icratlon of the subject. In their habits of life, in their arts and leading ideas and in their form of government, in their personal appearance, as the yellowish hue of their complexions and the Chinese cut of features, more particularly os noticed among the tribes of Peru and Brazil, he saw Indubitable evidence of an Asiatic origin. Everywhere he discerned indications, not of a primitive race, but of the scattered mnn an Ut of a civilization early lost. It is to be earnestly hoped that an Inquiry so full of deep interest may not be allowed to die out for want of organized effort to examine and establish the prehistoric connection of thess early inhabitants of America with the old world, possibly with tbe earliert dynasties of Egypt, before the ravages of time and advancing civilization have effaced all traces. These traces are still visible and within reach; they are revnuled in the buried cities of Central America. In elaborate inscriptions of Mexico on the massive stone-wor- k and Guatemala and In other decorative masonry of a people who have left behind no other vestige of their existence saving the outcast we.ndererB who still haunt the forest and the prairie. The question, then naturally arises, may not the Chinese nnd other nations of Asia in their prehistoric migrations to the shore of America, have carried with them not only a knowledge of the tobacco plant and Its use but also the seed of tho plant? Certainly they would do so at one period or another with such things as could be conveniently carried for the supply of their own immndlate want. A knowledge and use of tha tobacco plant in China before the days of Columbus is established incidental mention is made of tobacco In their national records of the year 1300. II has been tbe custom of every writer on the subject to decry all attempts to seek for the origin of the habit in any part of the old world. Dr. Cleland. In his learned treatise on The History and Properties of Tobacco" (Glasgow. 1840), dismisses the inquiry as the growth of wild assertions by eastern travelers, or, at best, a mere tradition of the people among whom they traveled and "obviously of no conceivable weight, from the love of antlqnity which Is so well known a mania of the Inhabitants of oriental countries. This summary treatment may be convenient but It is not convincing; nor is it consistent with the open spirit of fair Inquiry which should characterize all endeavor to arrive at truth or to extend the sphere of knowledge. After all, then, we find ourselves In presence of the not improbable hypothesis of an eastern origin for the tobacco plant and the habit of smoking its leaves. Let It be conceded that In this we have an Instance, among many others, of the Chinaman's way of forestalling the rest of mankind; that It was he who long ages ago first planted In American soil the perennial weed which Europe today prrrrnts to him as a new indul-gdndiscovered by western enterprise. ! 1, in in uf OLiii. in valley uf l!:o nn-.-- t 1 : : , ' : The I'lii.in l'n.-r and inti "TIk N.iiinMi Ins! i'ied "Vi'Im! .ivb h p.iid c.il1."!;. fie ba ism; g'vlsis the idip.iriy. b liilil lllil i tl. i; '!i' "1111111 ltiil.-s.Iliniine. "r Spnr'ii "and i'll". 'C.i ".i,'i." l.i Cnil.ire in Id.i,:n." t Ifi".. i'il ITrh S:.. and pi I'.iii a; il i:i f:i.!. nf J y;. !l- - ' Y ;l!h iniitf'irtiiii - "I.-iiii-- i 11 i.f .,V ir I'iiixit. tin ap'iit. lii'u. addri- - . Ady. a.. are llip inidniivb.ily dayi aud t ilmii; i i wn mi sunimiT Joy we harp 0 iiiin-luu cash fill coal. Tupsc M.'ni-nlia- spi-ii- When b'dlnii nr enatlve, cat a Caacnret caibarlu', cure gnarantii'd. 10c, jc. sandy Here li a new Ink buttle, STlbb tn k(ip nut be lit." "You haven't jut mu warranti-- l to keep out tbe mucilage irnsb. have you!" war-unti- Plow out f 1 the time when you aliuulil k" Kuidltlnn of yimr iicalih. Avtild bluod wttn "I ; wirifytrg and rariuhiiis your Hoods Sarsaparilla Putin. In fact the One True Blood Ibe next do nut nuae pain e gripe. All druggtota.S5a , HOOd S PlllS HOTEL WINDSOR DENVER. Hotel in the City Centrally Located. First-Clas- s Oniy ni (American Flan.) Perfect Service. Table Unexcelled. BATES: S3 BU to S3.BO per day. The only TI'IIKISU RATH In thr atate. Hie flnmt in tin Vit. I'liiinvctrd with tbe lumk. fire. VViudaor. Send fur J. A. IVIGijlX. Manager. illn-'nii- rd -- Mil -- THE- Ms Co. Dry DENVER, COLO. A FXI) Adimt far Xttr 3 Jty Fall Catalogile. trr f 1 t'lyla in Vrw -- CLOAKS, ETC. . All Mail Onieri (Hied xime day. ' half-civiliz- SOH T et Mm WET. BR FISH BRAND SLICKERS WILL KEEP YOU DRY This yimsiihi'wa cut koxri CANDY CATHARTIC, the Ideal laxative and guaranteed consticure, eent FREE pation on receipt of five Address stamps. MTVHI.IXS BHXBI 1. tub. mni MihI, 1. CMMT, 1 Denver Public Sampling Works, M. E. SMITH, PRlfiiBiiT. ONES SOLD ON THE PUBLIC MARKET. T JI Hill OCnVCf, ColO. MtCared. I U III rariL laanHt t. tn U71, Ikn and bast cum. Pan , He. Mxaae. qulnry. Ulr SURE CURE ixtiuiH. mil FOR ua uua PILI k o, niu PENSIONS, PATENTS. CLAI Jl'h FtimrtpM IB u M O R R I S. AT, luatim t. Li RASIUNGTW C. gu2icnp Nbum ee ertab-lishmen- Flae Flare to Igve. nf Baltimore, Vt ia as IflylZJc p'acc. There are Six voters, and itch roe can boll four or five offices. Tne town " M. A. N. f. llruver. Yol. 'ya When wrrlilnc to advrrtl.fr. piraw rou saw the advertisement lu this |