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Show THE BOAD. ?A DOG ON 0WNEY, THE RAILWAY MAIL CLERK'S CANINE FRIEND. 1 " Starts on HJs Customary .winter Trip to J the South. A Canine Adventurer's Storj Has Some Startling Human 3 - Instinct. i : . WNEY, THE DOG tramp of the railis way mail service, still on his travels and was the guest 1 'last woek of F. C. Cullberg of Jersey City, who carried him to Philadelphia and then turned the protege railroad of the i the ooys costal clerks over to one of south. uwney the for bound and Will spend the winter spring in custom, his is as months, railpursuit of mild adventure on the roads of the sunny south. He will be a welcome guest of Uncle Sam's m at the health resorts of North Carolina, Florida and the Gulf states, for a few davs at each of y the famous sanitariums, working over the country with the of striking New Orleans during Mardi Gras festivities. It is Owney's j the 'present intention not to return to brave the rigors of the northern climate June. Owney is the most celebrated of all canine travelers. The express companies for a while foistthe public a feeble ed upon of this ever welcome imitation tramp, but the express messenger dog lacked Owney's adaptability to the exigencies of travel, and succumbed several months ago. Owney was born many years ago in Albany, N. Y. Exactly when he became a railroad tramp is not known, but it was longer ago than five years. He has traveled the length of every railroad in the United States and has seen the inside and enjoyed the hospitality of more than the oldest inspector of the service. He is a small dog with more srame than judgment, and it is fondly believed by his admirers that he would four-foote- P d . .n-io- ns LIFE Its Airy Structure shows That It Was Not Built for North China "Winters. This is a picture of a small and pretty Chinese residence in Canton. There are plenty of shade trees on the land side of this house, though the Chinese are said as a rule to be indifferent to trees around their habitation. If they need shade they seem to prefer to stretch mats on poles. China is large enough to enjoy a considerable variety of ciimate, and so airy an abode as this would hardly be found in northern" China, where the rivers freeze over m the winter months. Canton is as, near the equator as the south endof Florida while Pekin is approximately in the latitude of New York. If all the Americans in China were compelled tq live as the natives do and in houses of their constructing, they would probably, with one accord, move as iar south as they could get; for in the vast majority of houses, even where the winters are severe, there is nc artificial heat, except the little obtained from the fuel burned in cooking. is It so cold in winter in the houses of the common people of north China 'Jine-firine-r grad-fuallpur-Fpo- V PRRDi'Y CHINESE COTTAOB A se . grain fields, perhaps a large timber claim of young box elders and cotton-wooda garden, a roomy stock yard, and the sod roofs of many sheds for poultry, stock and machinery ; but except for a, wreath of smoke or the chance reflection of a window pane the dwelling would be overlooked. half It is often of the half dug-oorder of architecture, the back part hollowed out of the side of a low hill, and the front of the squares of sod, merely placed together and upheld by a slight frame of wood, with a door and one or two window-casing- s and perhaps a few rafters overhead. It is very small and low and serves the single purpose of shelter. There is a possibility even of its failure in this, and the trap door aslant at one side of the house proclaims the cyclone cave ordinarily the receptacle of milk and butter. Life in one of these prairie dwellings is certainly eretting close to nature and the primitives. To realize this one has only to fancy a man and a wife in a sod house, fifteen miles from the nearest village, in one of the sparsely settled districts of Western Nebraska. For days, and 5n some seasons, for weeks, they see no human beings outside of their own household. Even begging Indians and tramps are almost unknown in this country. Through the day, while the man is in the fields, the herding usually falls to the woman's lot. Probably each takes a noon luncheon in a paper, to save coming back to the house until night. The woman attends to her necessary household duties, throws a gunny sack over her broncho's back, jumps astride, rounds up the cattle and drives them down the canyons to graze on the steep sides, or in a low strip beside a creek. What the sod house woman thinks about all day long in solitude like that it is hard to tell the mortgage on the farm, diseases among the stock, the prospects of the crops, the time when they can put up their frame dwelling, the hard, unadorned facts in the treadmill of her life; she makes new plans for the work, work, work, which is her sole law of exists, ut sod-hou- De-fo- re post-offic- es U( II II 111 .11 II Iff iff lujll. IrWLs WU PBtVAB BESIDEHTCK US CANTOIT. much patience to spare. Travelers have said tat the commonest question in north ffina during the winter is: "Are you cold?" "Of course," is the almost jnvsiable answer. r'. Man. TAverage In the mai of average stature the height of tte body is ten times the length of tluface; the face from the chin to the Mr is as long as the hand; the arm Is ioxr tmes the length of the face; the soleaf the foot is the length ofihe body, and six times the thickness the hand in the thickest place equai the thickness of the one-sixt- h sf v. body. A New Advertising OWNEY, THE BAIT, WAY MAIL CLERKS' DOG FRIEND. tackle a royal Bengal tiger. He views the ever changing scenery through which he passes oit of one eye. The other he left in Canada two years ago, after an unpleasant encounter with mother dog. Owney has the postal 2ar habit so thoroughly developed that he can rest in no other places, and sleep only comes to his tired eyes when he lies curled up on a mail sack. He wears a broad collar with a tinkling bell, and an inscription that tells in inquiring world that "I am Owney, the railway mail dog, whose dog are J 1 The latest aisertising device is to decorate shop widows with what appear to be big cacks in the plate glass. This is called a iecoration advisedly, for it is' put on tfth French, chalk and paint. Gray or Itaish lines,' radiating .from a center, Winga surprisingly likeness tof a tmak, and the device serves its purposeof caSising people to stop and look you?" Wants to Chape His Name. Little C09H, an intelligent colored hardware merchast in New Orleans, has made application to have his name legally changed. He is six feet high, weighs 220 poundsnd says his name makes people langithe moment they V see him. d?hty-fivevpoun- ds, , Ifext Epworth International Conference. The general committee has- located - the international conference of the Epwbrth league, for 1895, at Chatta- tiooga, Tenn. The dates fixed are June 27, .28, 29, 30. It was decided to hold the meeting in the south and Chattanooga forcibly presented the advantages of the historic surroundings of that, city, as well as good hotel and j railroad facilities, and has secured the conference. An attendance of 10,000 to 15,000 is anticipated. One open air meeting Will be held on ; Iiookout mountain. There are now 1,000,000 j members of the Ep worth league in the united States. ; tnted urider its present 8tyie 1 18 ' The firm of Messrs. Sanel J "Not Master of the. Uansruasre. and Kcbe; Jmnel A Yokohama Co., A foreigner, not absolutely certain which Marcus Samuel is JPan, oi of all the shades of meaning in onr is one of the leading alsQ ho ' English words, recently attended a re Japan trade. ception at Vassar college, at which the ' Saved Himself ana Oth young ladies of t the institution were "Uncle Billyh .Patterson, w died arrayed in all the bewitchir beauty of evenincr toilets. SaidAe to the in West Philadelphia; president: 'I have never before seen so grand a sight as those young ladies the Philadelphia railroad, was in their nightgowns." never hurt in an accident. . jleet- - m lying v- -; :. ' . ' A store keeper after his customers through ine Yinage paper as follows: "All peril sons indebted to 'me on account will i save cash, "and trouble by comma" in and settling up, as I have spent all the - uiuney and shoe leather that I intend r to- Take warning. Last notice." non-payin- i ! V--V- u; ( - IT , Sold an Hlitori' al in Col ton, Wash., goes ; Judge John C. Creal recetlt ; H The Final Notice. g . . ys and-Germa- Is a Phenomena m strength. Willie Holmes of UPorte, Ind.. is a Harvey Huffer, who committed suicide at Fairland, Ind., recently, had phenomenon! in stength, and if he among his effects a small box that he grows to manhood will undoubtedly always kept locked securely. , He surpass Sandow. Hthoughj but 4 showed it to his mother two years ago, years old he weighs remarking at the timj "Mother, this and easily carries 1 father, Charles box. contains my private affairs, and, Holmes, who 175 pounds, if I should die before you do, I want across the room, andioes other wonthis box and its contents buVied just as derful feats of streng you find them.' When found, his Sheriff of Lonn Town. hand was resting on the box, which Alderman and .'Sheriff Samuel, rewas still securely locked, and, it is elected to th shrievthought, cotnained secrets which wmld centlyis the youngest London of; alty, of his that g.reat probably unravel the mystery .death and, perhaps, the peculiar source city's magistrates, bei only 41 years of which the of Ids. conduct for several years past. of age. The business But the family took the box out, into young official is now the head was the garden, and, without opening it, founded in Londoafan and consti- committed "it to the flames. The neighbourhood is now; rife with divers mysteries' and unexplained schemes. of and men, too, become withered and prematurely old. Hair and skin take on the general tint of things about them. iTheir teeth drap-- l out without a thought of replacing them. And there comes a certain feverish look in their eyes a look of intensified expectation, a straining ' ' into the future. a assortment is of humanIt motley ity that takes the claims and homesteads on the opening up of a country like this, writes a correspondent of the Chicago Times. who have come to admit the claims of a single wife and family, confirmed pioneers who move with the advance of the railroads, people of refinement and reverses of fortune, many Russian emigrants, and a sprinkof all the other nations of the ling earth. After the first rush a sifting process sets in which soon separates them into three classes: Those who stay through everything and make the prosperity of the country, the nonprogressive, who never get beyond the original sod house, and the shifting transients who move at a sign of trouble and come back in time of prosperity. A woman's lot is the harder; she misses more things in such a life than a man does. If she is strong enough, mentally and physically, to endure it until they come into better things, she lives out her allotted time and unrewarded of this world. If she has a mental bias toward the morbid or melancholy, she is in danger of adding one to the list of the women of her kind in the hospital for the insane at Lincoln.The real pioneers, who survive everything, in the end have comfortable homes and have created some advantages for their children. They have lived in the sod house until the and few houseyear of a good crop hold necessities to be bought, and have had the small, bare, frame cotseason, if good tage built. The next L" fortune continues, a porch and an enare added, and in a few years it is fitted up. larged and comfortably is house left standsod old Often the some purfor one new the ing near sometimes of senmatter as a pose, or timent The second class, the nonprogresscaive, would be a success innothat doubt, pacity in any community, like that one this, in but especially ' and invention, requires resources, call "faculty," what New Englanders ; to keop up with the demands. blown When the, old sod housais over; or caves in, they put upa another thought on the same take the of an improvement They old house, the of Aon frame out, of it Jails in and mingles and'the rest t in a short Lij tn fh the nraino Hmfl not a trace of it is to be seen. an The third, the transients, are Ex-cowbo- A Box Mystery. ck se ence. Women, " Device. 4 Who NCoulda't , Appreciate Kindness. un-prais- ed , - t plan,-withou- : i , "i i heard Washington. a good deal about kind prison keepers," said Mr. Curtin, when the others had finished, "but I never met one myself who was the equal of an old fellow who kept 'the county Jail in the village where I began practicing law. He fed the convicts so well and housed them so comfortably that they became greatly attached to him, and he could trust them to go about at will."" He used to hire them out to the farmers in the neighborhood during the harvest season and turn an honest penny for the taxpayers in that way. Early one morning, while I was sweeping, out my office, I r was approached by one of the convicts. 'Young man," said he, "are you the lawyer?" l. "I am," said I. 'I want you to get me out of jail on a wrjLt of habeas corpus, and I want it right away." Well, hold on, my friend," said I. We have got to have a reason to show to the court before we can ask for a writ." I've reason enough," he exclaimed The cruelty of the keeper there makes life unbearable." "Oh, pshaw," said I, "don't tell me such nonsense as that. There never was a kinder keeper in charge of a jail." "Judge for yourself," he insisted. Yesterday I was working out to Mr. Walkinshaw's, fand we had a big lot of hay to get in, for the sky was full of rain clouds. So when the jail horn blewyfor bedtime I stayed and helped get the hay under cover. It was after dark when I got back and would you d believe it? that cuss of a keeper had locked me out! I had to sleep in the street and caught rheuma-tism-i- n my bones. It settled things in my mind. I'll not stay another night under the roof of a man who'll treat me like that, says I to myself. So, Mr. Lawyer, I want you to get me out before sundown, do you hear?" - ; feeling. quickest tunnel jtriving of the kind. Four drills were used in the heading, mounted on tunnel columns with arms, two drills on each column. About fifteen holes, nine to ten feet deep, were drilled by each shift, consisting of five machinerun-ner- s and their helpers. Literary Di , ie M V in regulating the bowels mild tuHhods are pref erable. IFor every of the liver, stomach and bowels. these tiny, sugar-coatenills are.tuost effective. about their They goj work in' an easy, and de-range- Hos-tetter- i d are promptly relieved and ultimately cured by this genial specific, which is also a comprenatural way, ana their hensive family medicine, speedily useful la gooa msfs. unce scuor. cases .of dyspepsia, biliousness constipation, they ate hi ways in sick headache, nervousness, rheumatism and Being composed neuralgia. Against the hurtful effects of sudthe of choicest, concenden changes of temperature, exposure in wet trated "vegetable exweather, close application to laborious mental ithey cost ranch tracts, nmre than other pilla pursuits, and other influences prejudicial to health, it is a most trustworthy safeguard. It found jru1 the market, fortifies the system against disease, promotes from forty to forty-o- ur appetite and sleep, and hastens convalescence ar4 fttt up in each after debilitating and flesh wasting diseases. sealed glass vial, as Woman may have a sphere that is bou- uniKSu4 vjrougo ' made P11-.- . less, out sue strikes an Impassable barrieVW??4 ' Plerfsant Pellets cnre bfllousness, wck when she comes to a barbed wire fence. and bilious headache, jdizziness, cositive-nes- s, ( fm-v- i WI" jil How's This! We offer $100 reward for way case of catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's catarrh cure. F. J. Cheney & Co. , proprietor Toledo, Ohio. We the undersigned, have kown P. J. Cheney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their or constipation, sorir stomach, Idss of ordys-ccwi- a. appetite, coated tongue, indigestion, windv belch ines. f heart-burn- .' and distress after eating, and jkindred and erajtgements of the lyer,j stomachtherebowel. Put up in sealed glass vials, fore always fresh and reliable. Whether as a laftative, or in larger doses, as a gently these little but searchinglcatbartic, acting " are Pellets As a "dinner pill," to promote digestion, firm. take one each day after dinner. To relieve nothWest & Truax, wholesale druchists. To-- the distress arising front f ledo, Ohio. one of "Pellets." these little ing equals VV aiding, Kinman & Marvin, wholesale They, are tiny, druggists, Toledo, Ohio. Any child readily takes them. Hall's Catarrh cure js taken internally, grannies. Accept no substitute that niay be recommended to be "iust as good.' It may be acting directly upon the blood and surfaces of the system. Price, 75 better Jor the dealer, because of paying cents per bottle. Sold by all druggists. him a better profit, but fie $s not the one Testimonials free. who needs help. si! Hall's family pills, 25 cents. A free sample ( 4 to 7 docs ) on triaL Is on receipt mailed to any address, post-paiThe man who gives weigh to his feelings of name and on postal card. address finds them very heavy. Address Woxtp's Dispensary Mbdicai. Plso's Cure cured me of a Throat and Association, Buffalo, V.iYl Lung trouble of three years' standing. E. Oady, Huntington, Ind., Nov. 12, 1894. A philosopher who had married an ignorbeant girl, used to call her "brown cause, he said, she was sweet but sugar' unrefined. OLD . It tbe Baby is Cutting Teetli. . Opprobrious Epithets. "Wojen," the opprobrious epithet which the Chinese apply to the Japs, belongs to an interesting class of names bestowed upon nations by more or less unfriendly neighbors. Such names are found in all parts of Eurppe. The name Welsh is merely the uetonic for foreign people, and in America the people who called themselves Dakotahs were known to their neighbors, r the Ojibways, as Sioux or "enemies." It is said that the word Esquimaux is a French corruption of the Chippewa or Cree phrase Ushkiumoog, or "raw flesh eatery." 4 sngar-cdate- Bottles Double Size AT sure and nee th&t olid and d remedy, Hits. Winslow's Soothikq Strup for Children f eethlng- Be Creameries. Creameries scattered over many parts of the East are making considerable change in the conditions of farming. The dairy is becoming more and more important, and poor farms are enriched by the presence of many cattle. The creameries buy milk by the hundred pounds and farmers like the simplicity of this whole-sal- s trade. Meanwhile there is a constant interest in creamery prices and local newspapers publish quotations from time to time as news items.' A verdant young man is described as one who is liable to cut grass with a bicycle. TRY IT FOR DYSPEPSIA. " Looked Other remedies may (WEIL Win cure Sprains Hruises etna a YOUR DUCE "James," said Mrs. McSpurlock, H. WILSON, BABMESS AND SADDLES "Alvira," exclaimed Mr. McSpurlock, candidate for sheriff, in a voice of agony, you've been reading those RCIinC GRAIN DEMITP ULll f Lli re LEAD CO. BOGUE 181 Q Blake Street, COLO. DENVER, NOVELTY 1520 MILLS- .- MLITTLETOIL FLOUR, har-.'tZ-i-.Y- M Do fTIiOUJO. WILL BUY WHEAT, CORN AND OATS. IK on m E'S ASSAY OFFICE And Chemical Laboratory. flill order to introduce our line of JEWELERS IA.NP PHOTOGRAPHERS, Standard Noveis to the public we will, end yonr sweeps and waste containing gold Restaurant Waiter - But and lunch, silver for treatment. Prompt return! for a short time, send one or all of th you've already ordered a breakfast, and highest cash price paid for gold and silver bullion. Address 1736 and 1738 Law following books FREE on receipt sir! Patron Yes, but it was breakr rence St., Denver. Colorado. fast time then. of 12c stamps accepted) for each, OFFICIAL STATE- DD AIIM Dflfll Friend-j-- I wonder, Ethel, thatj you THE Colo, is the only com- DnAllU DllUlV book to cover postage, packing, etc.. allowed that, Frenchman to kiss you of book. Sent post paid for $1.50. plete brand THE STATE BRAND BOOK PUB. CO. in the conservatory. Ethel I couldn't 1625 Blake St.,fl)enver,iCoIo, Gcoj Print foot Paper, Handsene Covers! help it. Friend k Why couldn't you? Ethel Because I can't speak French. REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE Hills Who was that you just suDt. Of Dublie John F. Murray, . has opened an exchange bureau in Century Cook Book bowed to? Hulls Why, that's Jenks, j lnstruct'n, C&bin . rooms Tom'sr Uncle H. B.Stowe. Equitable Bldg. Collections. the great fiction writer. Hill Never Reveries of a Bachelor Ik Marvel. heard of him. What has he written? from KJKM Al- - K TKO0 BLE Last days of Pompeii ,JI l Bulwer Suffering , Lytton Hulls Testimonial s for patent Lalilub of any form should investigate ;, In I Ext tb ished 186. Ji -- ; - -- ' ex-sta- te 210-11-1- 2 1 medi-cine- s. . . !,. , Beyond the City . Dora Thome . . j What sort of a fellow is Will Norris? Kitty You know his brother Jack? Tom No; never met him. Consultation free. Lady in office. 30 Londoner Block, 1630 Arapahoe Street, Denver, Colo.? Poems and Yarns The Wife's Secre AEETHE BliST. ALL KINDS7 TTHE Tom well! Will, is just as "him as' you can possifrom different ' Kitty Oh, bly imagine. -- v' . -- , lUGKER SHIRTS I t She MADE TO ORDER OR READY MADE. MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT AT TE I TION. THE TUCKER SHIRT Co., lOOj 10th Street, Vest-Pock- PUR-NISUI- - Address - ; zf,. . M Conan Doyle j Bertha Clay. . . Riley. li M. E. Holmes ictioftary . . . . Biltlffye-J.- W. . Webster The Gem Songster, with wore aitf music complete. 1 j et HARRISON jBpQK CO; 88 West Jacksori St.tiiicago;. .. vend zc tor ca.taiosuo or, uuout . o. First-clas- ; : 1 dishome" from--' school, stop at the store the rumor of a contagious land get me, a stick of candy and a any ease in the neighborhood-alm- ost of soap. Father What do'vou Out. Sin- - eerves- as an excuse to start wnt.ot a sttek'v of cabdy? Motheravoid asking- any one'opmion so he 11 ""member the soap. 'Xhat's to stay. for will be advised j W - '. ; I Oata-logu- es Free. Dwnvar Mad? Co.. ; - - -- fethey AN NOSE WOIIKS & MFG. CO. Lawrence StJ, P. O. Box 8L Seals Stencils, Rubber Stamps and Electric Supplies. E, E. E. BURLING AM EAR,! 16th s 1115 ALL KINDB BOUGHT AND SOLD. G. jJE.1 ADY;, 1620 19th SOLDER not be' deceived by worthless imitations bat order prices. direct from ns end get lowest wholesale MUEL-LEfree. Allitoods stamped. FEED Catalogue 1413 Larimer Street, Denver, Colorado. Goods sent for examination). Zoobloblezeet. City Boy "Are you sure?" "Oh, yes; I've heard the conductors call it out, often.;" "I wish you would mark down that lot of ladies' shoes," said the merchant. "Yes, sir," replied Jthe experienced clerk. "In price or size?" Patron,' angrily Bring me some EYE 68 and of MtNING, PRINTING MACHINIST Repairs etc. Pipe thread in? and cutting. Freight elevators. Nock & Gajrside, 1415-1- 7 18th st. The best $30 doubl (. oncord Harness la Colorado for $18. With breeching, 3D, .double team harness with brejehln? street? Cp. 20-ac- HARNESS $15 single ba?gr it; i ness for $8,6il. plants Colfax Avenueseeds, Floral Street, Denyef. SALE in 10 or PR 1 1 IT ILA AMnFOa II U tracts with perpetual water rnUII rlghu 30 per acre. C. E. ComstojSk, 9w 18th, Denver -- i y GAME AND PROMUNGER A CO, OJ THSOiT DISEASE. Maek !!lock, California it 18th sts. Correspondence free 130 Team Harness, with Breeching for $20. 25 cowboy double cincha steel horn saddlo for 115. Best harness and saddle in the state for the money. This is no humbug, for you can see what yon are getting before paying for same. Send me an order and if goods are not satisfactory you can return same at my expense. J. M. WILSON, 1749 to 1751 .Larimer St DENVER, COLO infernal newspapers." SMILE STARTERS. Visitor Have you any new studies this term? Boy Yes'm; I'm studyin' yellocution. Jones What's the big policeman for. Brown clubbing that little-ma-n Because he's little. Dick Hello, Jim. Where do you work now? Jim Work? What yer givin' us? I don't work. I'm a plumber's helper, I am. Stranger What's the name of this U. T?T ATXrT7TC h JUV J W r. K .S lULYKJy J. : - JBdcfcache POULTRt. to SHIP Denver Directory. Commission Merchants, Denver. and .lke It. "when are you going to reform and join the church?" " 1- PRICE. ell-trie- , ;ri us ; ; ,. "00 anti-bilio- d, d, ; T: g, mu-cuo- us , an is island in the .' Hermit of MohUnkus. "river near Leavenworth. c!Tl(. The. ilenrnt of acres.. JNow it nas oKA i;;;: coal a parries shotgun, but no ammunition, nrises 1.460 acres. mug' mostly on beechnuts and herbs. been found on it.' i over-eatin- . Lin 185S . une-qualed- " f.u is what yot$t need'rhen youT liver becomes inactive.. Iff what you get when you take Dr..Pierce pleasant Pellets; irec irpm violence luey reana the griping that come with the ordinary best tnedical pill. authorities agree; that ; - . ? Gentle Corrective A ch i j . Before a, Full Head of Steam Is gathered by that tremendously " destructive 's engine, malaria, put on the brakes with Stomach. Bitters, which! will check its progress and avert disaster. Chills and Tdver, bilious remittent, dumb ague and ague cako hard-hearte- to-morro- w n-ft- I weU-lnforiu- horn-blend- gest. i overlooked thi Importance of permanently beneficial jerfect and wer satisfied with translentj action; but &ow that It Is generally Isntmn that Syrup of Figs will pcrinaneiitlx cure haUitual people will constipation, not buy other laxativesj ivhlch act for a time - but finallx Injure! tbe system. ; , ,v j Is after reading the' patent medicine It advertisement'that ne experiences that tired People ht t Time. Ira Oldrn . three-and-eee-half-in- ill U I The giraffe hsa neror t.rvn known to ut-t- er a soend. In tut rsjoct It reaenibl a young lady la n street wltcu a gentleman gives her LU Beau iafj J Rapid Tunnel Work. The record for fast tunnel driving Is believed to be. held by the East River Gaa Company in the construction of its tunnel under the East, river, New York. In one week-thday shift made forty-eigfeet six inches "and " the feet six: Inches a night shift fifty-tw- o total of 101 feet. The heading Is ten feet six inches by eight feet six inches and Was advanced in full section. The e rock is very hard gneiss. This is remarkable work, considering the peculiarly difficult conditions of the location, and is claimed to be the " . 4 " , . No anecdotic recollections 'of , Governor Cur tin would be complete which did not include some of his own stories,, dp:nver. I have'a beautiful girl visiting All Class. OlUpxawxsmx AD AND STE AMS SIP. RAILRO the ttuv"-niTCi out hicll these! here me, and I want you to call I L Tickets to alt points. o' Write for Kentucky farm upon llM UUI vuo xaito you , . . 1215 17 th at., Denver. ; r are He meet her. and U says. j uischof, Delight-prices. ,C evening Lincoln was born. There W ,,.10,m cres men tnai gets w edl Shall I tiring any one with me? of it. The purchrser is A. fever of Silver, Gold, Mckel, Copper,!-tintermittent like the; s it's a spa jialty.; the He i. PLATING plates just ss. isn't woxlc it 000 She for no; Oh, necessary. oncet idso pro.rtt, t,0W him . on i'criv and Bend for prices. Enterprise Plating Oo,, 1629 17th. back just comes .i, t do? will m a But what, you to A spell of dry will convert, it often forever after." Mother Johnny! On your way Q H CCT F II ( Q 0 Pisn"a. Organs land Ismail: oi potato OMLLI hlUulU Musical llistpaeata. Land Worth 0!ln? weather, the appearance - . n o . . On a new farm in Western Nebraska the house is a very inconspicuous object. The eye wanders over immense fr !jm i -- . In the dog days in America the usual question "Is it hot enough you?" often gives annoyance to sweltering folks who haven't TifrM. M tl MIU .1 Latest jU. S. Coft Uepcri i ' ' he-wa- s put fHksQmmfk NEBRASKA. WESTERN Highest of all in Leavening Power. STORYi the prince of yarn spinners. How the Men Toll and the Lonely Lives; for of A friends were talking one of the Women It Takes no End of group about thet reformatory influence of Flack and Courage to Endure, But day kindness in prison discipline f says They Are Generally Rewarded. V ve Kate Field's that taey usually wear all the clothing can on. they - CURT,N erf7a Prisoner Te& CAVE DWELLERS OF MODERN J HBhUrTHER He IN A SOD 1S37 Champa HAY AND FEED. . j 8t.- - Gel our CASH CO., Denver. before buring. prlc& COMMIS3IO.N ; Patenis,FRd8parks, Examination and-Aa asjto U Patentability or How to Get IuTntion Send for InventwslOuldo, - dn latent" PATH'S 0TAEB3IL. J) ASHnTOTC 33. Q. ilTVPP At Eoa for locatinji gold or eilver. MlilDlliLu ore, lost or hldderU treasures, $25 complete; extr t. for platlugi when so ordered - M. D. Fowler. Houthtnfftoa, Ct. vv 1 ' ' : |