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Show CIIIIJIHKN'S COltN Kit. TIMELY TOPICS FOR OUR BOYS AND GIRLS. Mlaa af Waallh tatolil" A (fora la lla It Again" Aa OMIra la Wulch F.tory Ainerlcnn Yuath Onglit la Aiplra. '"Thar la a I t'aaaut GIRLS WINNING MARKS tbousAud Pretty Story af rrlanit Maud. Tbs following anecdote of the Prin-cm- s Maud haa the distinguished merit of being true: Going shopping one spring morning last year, strictly incog., and attended only by one of the ladies of the household. Princess Maud was acocsted by a little street arub, wbo was the happy possessor of a pair of large, pathetic brown eyes and a tangled crop of curly brown hair. He was busily engaged in the absorbing task of earning his living (and perhaps some one oIkc's as well) by retailing fresh spring flowers, penny and tuppence a bunch." The princess stopped by him, and while choosing some flow-er- a she was a little startled by the lad saying in an excited and familiar whisper: "It's all right. Miss, I know yer; but I'll keep it dark and won't split on yer." The princess chillingly shook her head In denlnl. Yer, I do knows yer" (more emphatically): yer Princess Mawc-- 1 vlgg-'- d yer directly." Princess Maud was greatly amused and wa can imagine with what glee she would tell of the incident. brows; Curaes, prayers, and terrors, vows, 1a a hundred fathoms deep, AS IL- LUSTRATORS. Nllilrad' Ifowall Erabalilehea liar Father' Porau SsiMtklgg About tha Art a Stadaat I'oIobt of Xtm York Xbbioo. s HERE'S A mlna of wealth untold. In a hundred fathoms deop; countless There's store of the earth's rad gold In a hundred fathoms deup; Glittering gems fur a THEY EXCEL IN ART. watchman at his piiia'e door $1,103. The president lias fm 1. lijii.b, newspapers und stationery tree anti a stenographer is ulvaya on bund to writs his letters. The presidency Is a pretty safe life insurance, as the widow of a president who dire while In offi-- e haa a pension of $3,000 a year, LesHt-- what is usually raised by the people of the country. When Garfield died the sum of $luu10u,i was raised for Mrs. Garfield, making her independent for life. If the president dues not die In ofllcs bis reputation is so made that he can charge anything for after service. Take Harrtsou, for example; before be went to the white house he never received any abnormal fees, but now gets from $10,000 up for a single case and can charge $1,000 for writing a single page in a magaxine. lToll-Biua- (New York Letter.) 1LDUED 5 daughter vv7 v. V ' Howells, of Will-la- m Dean Howells, a c'ever art stu- dent of Gotham, Perhaps it should be said that aha Is a recognised artist. Dut the artists V? ,a -- haves way of cling- ing to the title cf student' long af- ter they can work independently. Miss liowclls has her studio in the very heart of the a:t students' colony. The cares of a miser's years, The "Colony Is that section of the In a hundred fathoms deep; city extending across the whole width The child of a mother's hopes and fears. of Central Park and down town as far In a hundred fathoms deep; as Fiftieth street. The Art League is in Side by side In the flowing tide, the cenler and the students group The idol of gold and the idol of prld around It. It Is the Latin quarter of In a hundred fathoms deep. New York. Miss Howells has a studio in her The sea king sits upon his throne, father's apartments facing Central In hundred fathoms deep; Park. She works dally with her brushAnd laughs as he claims all for his own, es, for art is her profession, as literaIn a hundred fathoms deep. ture Is her father's. Miss Howells, These are my riches, these my hoards, after a lung course of study In Paris, These the treasures my realm affords. Rome and London, began by' illustratIn a hundred fathoms deep, etc. ing her father'a poems. Her attracted attention, and the cleverness with which she caught the conception of the work made friends for her with Mr, iiarbaiild was born in Leicester writers. Ail artists cannot get the la IT III. Iu 1771 she married the Rev. tone of the work they illustrate, even It. Uarbauld, a French Protestant minwhile they draw well. Mies Howells' conducted who a in ister, large school, work appears regularly In the highest the instruction of which she Afterward class magazines and she has settled look part. She published a number of down to the profession of regular Illusworks, including poems, essays, tnles trative work. for children and political pamphlets. Another of the girl artlsta of New She died in 1823. The following stansa York is Allogra Eggleston, daughter of ia a poem called Life was much adEdward Eggleston. "MIbs Eggleston, mired by Wordsworth and Rogers, and Cat Ahead af Them. aid an i.fflcer o. the Art League, is frequently quoted: A writer In the Springfield ltepubl.c-a- n "ought not to be called a student now, tells a Btory of tbs boyhood of Judge though ehe still studies. She la a profl.lfe! we've been long together C. I). Andrews of the Connecticut SuThrough pleasant and through cloudy preme court. The story shows how lie, fessional. Her specialty ia children's faces. weather, when a freshman at Amherst, got Theso she does with much delicacy, "TIs hard to part when friends are dear; ahead of some hazing collegians. making them young, aweet and dimlVrhaps Twill cost a sigh, a tear; It was the custom then to emoke out pled. She was the first artist who ever Then steal away, give little warning, the freshmen. A party of a dozen or had the courage to put a pug nose upon Choose thine own time. more of the fellows would enter the a child's face, though all children's ''good-nighnot but lu same room of an Say unsuspecting hoy, light noses are pug. Resides drawing in line brighter clime their pipes and smoke until the victim work, which in Miss Eggleston's speJMId ne good morning. , gave in and offered a treat. When they cialty, she carves exquisitely. When came Into Andrews' room they were he was a little girl she carved an without their pipes and had no tobacco T Caanat A ITaril It. Idol out of a. rotten piece of wood. A young man was invited by a friend about them, but with a stern voire one Her father saw It end was Impressed la enter a place of amusement which, fellow handed Charles a dollar and or- with the correctness of the lines, for though very popular and by many dered him to go out and procure pipes the child had exuctly copied an Idol In looked upon so moral, would not bo an and tobacco for the crowd. the Metropolitan museum, and he told Charles went out. and soon returned her to Aipllft to him in his Christian life, and on. At ten her instruction e one cent's in art keep pipes and 3iis reply was: "No, I cannot afford It." with ninety-ninbegan. "lo not let that make any differ- worth of tobacco. What the boys did George Cable's daughter Is another of reence," urged his companion, "I will to him for hie audacious act, Is not the daughters of literary fathers who lated, but It le a fact that they did not have worked successfully with the gladly buy your tirkeL "You misunderstood me," replied the emoke him out that night. brush. Though married now, this snore thoughtful of the two. I was young woman ia a girl artist, emnot thinking of dollars and cents, but bellishing her father's writings and Kothlas bat tha Truth. to the magaof precious time, and In how many One of the most striking traits In tho successfully contributing snore profitable ways I could spend my Is In work the characbest zines. Her absochnracter of Gen. Grant was hie evening." Ho seemed to havo ter sketches which her father describee truthfulness. lute She says she "sees "O, well, perhaps you are right in the an actual dread of so graphically. deception, either In them while he reads. main, hut It wont do for a young fel- himself nr others. low to be prudish and narrow; he will Tho peculiarly quiet, studious dispoOne day, while sitting in hie bedroom snake a laughing stock of himself. Go of professional men pervades, sition rein the White House, where he had minds Just this once to please me." tired to write a message to congress, a with the touch of heredity, the lawof Dut the other replied manfully and of Daughters the daughters. An a servant. in card was brought by ffirmly: "No, the last time I went there officer on yers, clergymen and the girls of army duty at the time, seeing that officers cost me too dear, and 1 mads up iny the turn to art and want to study diswant be not to did president mind I could not run such s risk again. do not ask for reserved seats They it turbed, remarked to the servant, "Say In the art classes, but are content to "Explain yourself, urged his frieud. the president le not in. rest and wait for "Didnt get your pocket picked, did Gen. Grant overheard the remark, fall In line with the them forward. .your turned around suddenly in his chair, talent to bring One of these girls who took a course "It was a spiritual loss I suffered," and cried out to the servant: Tell "was the low reply. "Perhaps you will him no such thing. I don't He myself, at the Art League, working hard at the Chink me weak, but the Jokes and cora-:l- c and I don't want anyone to He for me." the cubes and fruit pieces, then at the songs I listened to that night seemed figure caste, was Elsie Clews, daughter to drive all good thoughts from my of Henry Clews, the banker.' Miss "WhBB." Clows' best work lay in her outJoor aaind for many days; and when once I The word whoa! used in calling on ketches. Her desire was to paint land.regained what I had lost, 1 determined Chat nothing should tempt mo to go a horae to atop is merely a variant scape, and she did it so well that the where my King would not load the and emphatic form of ho! formerly students crowded around her easel, as used in the same sense. This Is easily they will around anything good, and way." What a noble answer, says a writer proved, for Chaucer has ho in n.the sense freely admired. Art atudents are pecs- 8957). of "halt" (Cant. Talca." In Young Ieopie'a Weekly. How It When IV. had to use this Edward King would rejoice my heart to know that he actually turned It into very Klcg's son who reads this paper exclamation whoo! "Then the kyng, perceyvlng the Mad the courage to meet temptations cruell asaalle (onset) cast his staff, and with such a refusal! with high voice, cried whoo!" (Ex-cerpt- a Which Historlca," p. 221). wonno and tournament; How ! Walk. the itopped When a girl walks she should be der. Notes and Queries. trained to hold her shoulders well bark Bind to keep her arms close to her body. A Soar. The chest will then be thrown nut, not "John," said a father to his son. "I form an inward rurve. and the head wish you would get me the hammer.1 must be held up fearlessly. Some wo"Yes, elr. men go through life with the head held "Now a nail and a piece of pine little forward, reminding one of noth- board. ing so much as qu inquisitive tortoise Here they are. sir." out on a voyage of discovery. Will you drive (be nail Into the pino The foot should be placed on the board? igraund on the ball II rat. not on the heel was done. or quite flat. The latter way robs one It"Please out of all grare, and to put the heel first Is "That' pull itsir." sgsln. easy, too ungainly for wonfe. It Is Just m "Now, John." and the father's voice ugly to mines along on the toes; it MISS HOWELLS AT WORK, to a lower key, "pull out tho dropped looks as though the ground was over-heatliar In one respect. They are apparhole. nail and not to be trodden on. Even Every wrong act leaves a tear. Even ently untutored to worldllness, and when climbing a hill or mounting the If the board be a living tree, the scar neglect to the point of scorn a student lather dingy staircase of town-bui- lt who shows no ability for art. bouses and flats, the head should lie remains. Mies Mary Flower, niece of not held up, drooped, though you Is a girl artist. She has style, Flower, Water. To Purify were searching for a lost nickel. something highly valued In art work. process of purifying A chemical have the touch of drinking water has been worked out by Her family portraits A (Snod Thing to II Pimldfit great beauty, and her commissions have M. Allain, who does it with Iodine and In spite of the mouey ha must apen.. carbon. Ono part of Iodine In 100,000 been paintings for family portrait galla keeping up his position, the pres- of water, at the end of a quarter of an leries. This is a line of work much ident of the United States, according hour will free the water from bacilli coveted by all artlsta of all degrees of the Chicago News, usually make prominence and of both sexes. To go The Iodine Is then neutralized with soood deal of money during his term I The Is water hen farther and be admitted to the annual dium hyposulphite. ofllce. The salary amounts to 1200,000 Altered through charcoal, though, if It portrait show in the autumn is the very la four years, but this Is considered was fairly pure to begin with, tho pre- acme of desire. Dut this has .as yet been attained by few of the "girl artof whnt the chief caution le unclose. The water la limpid, less than The professionals, Koslna Emists. executive really receives. colorless and tasteless. n met Sherwood and her lie has the white house rent free and been aloue have to run represented It of this year the appropriation Furniture made compressed paper was 943.000. His stables are taken care Is being manufactured. It poasessM hare. Miss Jersamy liarte is known in a at tor about $3,000. The president's the advantage of lightness, and can h quiet way to Illustrators as a young molded lto any desired shay. private secretary gets S5.000 and nr. ; j tail-piec- es 1 Like her who can if she will. ehe works when she feels like with marvelous talent. Bhe in the same way, by fits and She is one of the youngest of tb illustrators, aud has an expressed ambition to do newspaper Illustrating, a branch of work into which all high-claillustrators are rapldjy coming. Good press work encourages them to offer their pictures to newspapers, where poor paper, bod presswork and cheap ink used to deter them. The exquisite press work of the last year which makes the newspaper rival the magazine haa attracted older artlsta than Misa liarte to the Sunday editor's room. Miss Margaret Kltlredge, daughter of the well-knoclergyman. Is a girl well along in art work. She paligs with much painstaking, and disposes of all the work site cares to turn off. Many of tha art students like Miss Klttredge, who have a coterie of friends, generously offer to show other pictures with their own, and so many a sale ia effected. Most girl artists marry too soon for their artistic prospects to mature. One of these, whose talents gave her recognition In a year, is Miss Mary Goodwin, one of the clever Goodwin sisters, of Savannah. Jumping in one short year from a modret student at the New York Art league to a general Illustrator, she was claimed by a large tewapaper for exclusive services'' at a salary that would support a whole family in comfort, even in Gotham. This young woman will become in November the wife of C. S. Hubbeli, one n of the of the art directors of New York. She will go to live In a beautiful house now being built according to their combined artistic tastes. Miss Goodwin's specialty ia figure work, into which she puts the r timeless style that has made her cider sister's fame. Three of the Goodwin elsters will winter in Paris, deserting the art colony of Gotham for a year. Though famous, they are all mere girls. vcjnan father, IV aud studies ftarts. aa best-know- . ed u ex-Go- v. two-thir- well-know- BRITISH GALLERY. B Callartiua of IurtralU of liars Arl.lvil lll.lurlral Fbuib. From Scribners: The British National Portrait Gallery now contains II I B Wba between 1,000 and 1,100 works (including sculpture and medals), hut it may yet be considered in its Infancy. It has recently been estimated by Mr. Sidney Lee, the present editor of the Dictionary of National Biography, that since the year 1000 about 30.000 persons have achieved in the United Kingdom such a measure of distinction as to claim the national biographers attention. Though it may be going too far to say that every one of these has established a claim to a portrait In tho national collection, which at present draws the Hue at criminals and mere eccentrics; and though such claims could not in a very large number of cues be satisfied, because no portraits are in existence, there le still an enormous margin for the legitimate extension of the National Portrait Gallery, especially us more than one portrait of the same individual, if be has any great claim on the nations memory, may and should be welcomed within its walls. The three great historical loan collections of portraits which were exhibited at the South Kensington Museum in 18GG, 18(17 and 18C8 contained nearly 3,000 pictures, and this at least is far below the proportions which the National Portrait Gallery may be expected to attain. Yet, even at present, though the gaps In it are too numerous for mention in this article, the assemblage gives a good historical summary of the distinguished personages of British history since tho days of Henry VIL The times of the Stuarts are more fully represented than those of the Tudors, and those of the present dynasty than all of the rest put together; or, to state the matter more nearly, according to the official list of August 31, 1894, about 41 works belonged to the sixteenth, 1G5 to thi seventeenth, 194 to the eighteenth, and 349 to the nineteenth century. That Joyful Feollag With the exhilarating sense of renewed health and strength and Internal cleanliness. which follows the use of Syrup of who have Figs, is unknown to the few not progressed beyond the old-timedicines and the cheap substitutes sometimes offered but never accepted by the d. South. la ll Small It II. liar familas Kuiall Mil, "line an;l two n a limbed iarly call I minlli. aa ealllinttravelers bate mut at the I in my preneiit trip, for Instance, 1 Biiik-eil- . aiail. u buiiehl a railway tirkei hi Mil.rural He Sure It u aud iiroffereil the ugeullooked at me An. a a dance of M'rprlae. Id lliiniuhta uu.i luirl hern iimu." o I rend Mil hla iha-keInto liie allnped liiruullnriilljr t ie caaU drawA rarity that waa u d for of bualnemi. Athin er ami l he dally Course lie Jluiit hly. STATE OF OHIO. CITY OF TOLEDO. LITAS CUINTY. oath that he w Frank J. Clieney makesfirm of F. J. CheHie senior partner i f Ihe cf ney A Co., doing btedness In ihe f.iiyand aforesaid, Toledo. County and State of ONE that aald film will pay the sumeach and m'NHItl'D IXiLLAKH for CHM42 of mtairh thftt cinnot be cu" ftiry by th. ue of Sworn to before tint Hint HUbicrlhw! in till Gill duy of my A(SnilVW' A. W. OLKARIV. Notary TuMIc. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally ann mucon. Mood on th nil aria directly urfaces nf the cyatcni. Send for teat:- moiitid.. jr,pMFVr.Y CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by Diueg.rts. Ko that red headed ennslii of yours marman If" ried a Yen, won't ahv lead a mnnotunuus ell:-tuifPm't Triur Sjlil aid tank Imr t Life Away. If you wan: to quit tolucd using ea.ily ami forever, regain h at hi.iiiIukxI, lie nmdc well. .1 rung, iii.igiiflic. full of new life ntr! the vigor, take uirtktw weiik men strong. Many gr:i ten iHiunil In ten days. Over bNl.isai cured from your druggist, win. liny XoTo-llawill guarantee a enre. booklet ami aamiit-mailAd. Klerllug Itcuiedy l,u.. free. wornler-worki-th- e. ed Chicago or Xew York. blil Everything ! on wtieels now ndleclora rhle." u I have That's all right; bicycle myself." TO CTItr. A OM IN ONK DAY. Take loutailv llromo (julpiun Tablet. All Druggist ref und the money it it full to cure. c Strange Imw Jllnkliis bnclied out nf M on Id way to church." marriagelint to him that the girl Ye, he waa fond iif Just iry a lit" hov of ('a ..tire:, the fine: liver and Imwel regulator ever made. Mr. Jones, liluck colUus are enLlrely on: of style now." tirtu-loi- i have I got to have Mr. June, lug up amt hurled all over again?" inufi-aHe- PAY OF ENGLISH Avaraga Salary Sl.l Weak au.-- l t,' . A ORGANISTS. to Its Only IS a crmt.Y-qiillln.- The average pay of an organist in England appears to he only $5 a week, if the compulations of a certain English musical critic are to be relied on; but it Is said that places at this compensation are so much In demand that there is not likely to be any inIn Italy Blond Is essential nt this mason In order to kec crease in the remuneration. up the hual'li lotto und rcnl- -t the audilen change: the pay Is comparatively greater and lu tcnipensiuM uml exposure to dlaeiue germ. the opportunities for outside employment are more frequent. A cathedral lu a small Italian town offers the organist the sum of $280 annually, and for this he is expected to play for at least two services every day and spend some of his spare time in teaching the children In the church school. Three Th beat in fact the Oue True Blood Purifier. hundred dollars Is the salary which an English church advertises for an or- Hoods Pills ganist for a dally service. Some of the churches In towns of average size pay only $200, and others offer as little as $100. The beat of the English salaries Hnd for pricM. are those paid at the cathedrals, and JACKSON HAY Klivfj Imp Co.lten wokend sometimes a residence Is furnished also. viavi Tub hikI MWMheus relmni! iittSi.uMnymi. homo 'J), 1CU Arapahoe st These places are worth from $1,000 to Ofllco Workff. Albany Pan'i'llng $1,400 a year, and are scarce. liUxk. lnvw. PiNkrt m w h. in lniuwm iiniiai yi'it In comparison with the pay of good organists here these salaries seem ab- SEALS. hUBBERSTAMPSSSnStt surdly small, and it ia a curious thing ROlk$ A te 1 U. 1M 1 HWIMPtf HL f. U. Hot .il. that England should compensate its At'HIMST Iteimln of MININS PKINTINU Machinery, eh'. l'!ie threading and culling. church musicians at a lower rate thar M 1 relght I levator. Nock S banide. HI5-1- lath M. Italy. The actual figures may not b etc. W past nin list free. Conlower than the Italian salaries, but the sumer WUoil Him. Kith map SI. All laehage cotfecs a. cost of living Is so much lees in Italy and all kind nf edga tool. that the pay there is proportionately GRINDING Ilaznn Mall order rpteal attention buaiger Bn, Uarlier1 Huppll. im Larimer HI. higher. New York Sun. Sarsaparilla MISS CLEWS. Other New York art atudents are Jdisa Lulu Moury. daughter of Gen. Moury; Mabel Tidball, daughter of Gen. Tid-ba- ll, and Ellen Mahan, daughter of Capt. Mahan, of the United States navy. All are perfecting themselves for Illustrative work. Gen. Hueatis haa a daughter, Louise, whose art work will make her a professional, and Gen. Morris' daughter, Lindsey, ia another girl willing to work out her talent. Bishop Niles is proud of a daughter, Bertha, whose clever art work ia known, and Gen. McMaster has an artist daughter, Lillian, whose future promise le great. Promising "girl artists" whom Gothamites know are Mrs. Helena DeKay Gilder, wife of Richard Watson Gilder. She le one of the finest painters In the ranks. Others are Marie Colas, of Syracuse; Lydia Field Emmet, sister of Roslna Emmet Sherwood ; Ilta Howells, of Long Island; Helen Guile, of Worcester, daughter of Gen. Guile; Ida Proper, daughter of a Seattle missionary; Grace Knnking, daughter of. the celebrated Boston painter; Margaret Gunn, daughter of the Survey of Montreal; Mae Cralgln, daughter of Dr. Craigin, of San Jose, Cal.; Essie Collins, daughter of Judge Colllne, of Ohio; Mrs. Sprague Smith, wife of Prof. Smith, of Columbia college; Zclla Milhau, whose grandfather was Gen. Milhau; Laura Barrett, n landscape daughter of a artist of Staten Island; Ella McCullough, daughter of Gen. McCullough; Louise Mansfield, daughter of Commander Mansfield of the navy; Matilde De Cardova, daughter of the New York hanker; Maude Mathewson. of Detroit. well-know- Iljjflcnlc HIM. nothing about which all medical men' are more agreed than that the use of tea as a substitute for food is playing havoc with tho general health. The most nauseous physic may be given to children without trouble by previously letting .hem suck a peppermint lozenge, a pieco nf alum or a bit of orange peel. Statispeople tics show that the longest-live- d have generally been those who made breakfast the principal meal of the day. For beef tea cut two pounds of beef into slices and put in a Jar with pints and a half of water and a pinch of MIL Cover it over. Set it in a warm oven for three or four hours. When done strain through a sieve and act In a cool place, warming a small quantity when required. Ilarlnc tha Family. "What's gone with all the boys, old man? of law. "Well, Dick's "And Jim? er the "Jim's "And Ben? Ben's politlcianln'. "And Bob wheres he?" . Well. Bob ain't nowhere not I can't beat no lamin' Inter his head, u af he don't go ter tcachln' school, r editin of a newspaper. I reckon Ml him ter congress!" Atlanta There is probably to goe-pel- tn' v Denver Direetory. MU $U'i-tl- $ 7 Small lea Machlaaa. It Is pointed out as a singular phrase maof the manufacture of chinery that while abundant provision has bran made foHarge consumers, requiring an output of say 50 or 100 tons, no attempt haa been seriously made to turn out small outfits, ranging upward from a one-to- n capacity. There are many relatively email consumers who would gladly avail themselves of the advantages which a email plant would offer, and who. In the aggregate, would probably amount to considerably more than the limited number of establishments that need and can afford to pay for machines of ponderous size. Few companies have apparently given this aspect of the matter It is noted any particular attention. that the large manufacturers have been obliged in many cases to cost about for other kinds of business to help them keep their shops at work, and have thus drifted Into lines quite foreign to their equipment. The turning of theta surplhs resources into a branch devoted to a minature class of the product for which they were designed should commend itself to the trade. Small Ice machines are clearly destined to become more and more important accessor' i to modern conveniences, and the firm ilut will be first prepared to offer them will reap a good business reward. A 'striking proof of this was recently afforded when a New York paper gave a description of an ice machine intended for domestic use that would supply a whole family with ice for a year for the Insignificant sum of $1.40. Thousands of inquiries rained In from all parts of the country, and there was widespread disappointment when it transpired that the machine was not yet on the market. A lltfrary DENVER BRUSH H. UlMllM Of 9V97 liM Tl(r tluaVncH Aiiun'liy KUir'iktU tondforetUliwi (LX HEADS. DEER HEADS. RUGS, A. T. Allen. Taxidermist. IKW WMSmbi and HctalL Larga-- t lock, iatort itim la tka Wm. Mall r.lnri SiIm Tfca Howland promptly. Mllllaavji lb. Ihmw. LYK AM) KAK INFIRMARY'. Tb arrvicr uf two of liravar'i very beat eye and ear apeclallats EIIKE and a small sura charged fur the rcniPdfns furnlahrtl. The eyea examined and all tlefet'lN corrected. Illaaace accurately adjnatetl. Caaee requiring anrglcal In- MILLINERY, terference aklllfully handled. Arapahoe. Elegant fine quality balr; 21 in. long, f2.70; Zl In.. (3.50; 2.1 In.. $4. Krnd aample of balr and money order and receive awllcb by return mail. Exact match guaranteed. Kiiltaua Toilet I'artor. l.VJtt California St.. Itenvcr. PERFECT FITTING SPECTACLES). Tranitta, Levels MIcroacoee and tSupplle. Denver Public Works, M. K. SMITH, NCIIMMT. ORES SOLD ON THE Denver, Colo. public market. THE COMPANY PAY Da ih!r muemmoo-pn- THE FRKlCH X Will bp atollmm Thtm i mck MU fast aarh shift Ia iMrt a tufa ilawaa aaaiaa It can ba parkml anywharanr a )rk aaa ga ho cog whoaU rliitrimala brook. Ml iar cent tad atml aud will hood rough! a fora tAoklaa, Ovar KU la ana ona ruaaiag fara without nna Wa naha hor1 dollar's as proa l THIt FOR PEOPLE THAT ARE SIC OV duet Dont Feel Well." Nurprlaa. it!" exclaimed "Who would the old man rapturously; "here's John turned out to be a writer for the papers. "Do tell!" "Hits a fact! Here's a paper what ays he sells bacon cheaper an' cheaper, an they Jest can't boat him on flour, an his nam- - signed to the wbeie piece." The devil cannot tie abut up in the pit while the saloon door is open. 104d SWITCHES! HES! LADIES-SWITC- ".".SHIVER to na. arathaOn PILLS Thing ONLY ONI FOIV A DOSE. SSOs SraugiBta fiampl.t frew. OotaaiiA Mad. Cc llil'n msos.tcuR'ecp -- SBUBSPlSlSo. 4nisnrafa. ESS SUMPTI $5 Yol. Mil. N. . 4i t;?T f. Denver. writing to advrrtlaer. pleaac iu;)- - tii.it aaw the adveriMenient lu this paper. yon IV. N. YVbeu |