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Show JARM" AM) GARDEN MATTERS OF INTEREST AGRICULTURISTS. ' Sons Hints al of th Ilurib-aliure- , About TO Culllve-tlo- s llrlili Thrmif lllkallura auii I'lori-- . Moil sail cmlluro. uorlu side of tin bill about four inches deep; gather the branches in cluuis form with a wide Turk, rah lug it toward the top of the buth and pieti gently to the north, at the same time placing the fool firmly o:i the lar-- of the hill, and tie north. If the press hurd toiv-- rJ ground Is hard, or buiilies old, n second man may use a putaio fork Instead of iLo foot, iusirtiiig same deeply, close to south side of hill, uud press o.er slowly, bending tin- bush. In the root, until nearly flat on the ground. The bush is then held dowu with wide fork until properly covered. The top of succeeding hill should rest near the bite of preceding bill, thus making a continuous covering. This process is an Important or.e, but Is easily acquired with a little practice. In the spring remove the dirt carefully with a fork, and slowly raise the bush. With hardy varletiea, and In mild winters, sufficient protection may be bad by lay lug down and covering the tips only. Grapes, being more flexible, are laid down without removal of dirt near the vine. There ie no more Important work on the fruit farm, or garden, than winter protection, aud there is no work more generally neglected. Let It he done thoroughly, after frosts have come, and belore winter sets in. - 2 HE correct tint to dig potatoes la a nailer of fetldr1-abl- e concern to the potato grower, and especially If there of are 'symptom rot In the rrop. A of corrwpondcflt the Countrj Gentleman made Inquiry regard to .this following reply matter, waa made: "If the tithera hat begun to ahow the discoloration. of tba poUto wca- - 1 rot. It Is better to dig them at the vine are dead or nearly ao. tubers will not grow any more, ana oy ou" leaving them In the ground tl ones will be liable to be Infected by the spores of the fungus which are y or on the ground, but which na rains will wash down In the atHu . th bring Into contact with hateful worn. where they will do their If the tops are not yet dead, they crop only aerve to Increase the to tne them from which drop pores. next am. ground and which by the rain will probably be carried down and brought in contact with the tubers,. or thua Increasing the destructivewe could If the tops are not dead, and be sure of no more rain for a to leave weeks, It would, perhaps, do la not this but In the ground, the tubers U the desirable. a certainty, nor la It tubers are dug and only the 1,0 ones stored In a cool, dark, dry driei. the aurrace having first been Somerot. to be will not likely they p times, however, the rot continue Tnis atored. after the tubers are in to which th ' tode-velo- : ' is brought about In two or three ways. The tubey may be affected, but tho of defungua Is In auch an early atage Prod1'ed not has yet velopment that It a sufficient diacoloratlon to be.V to The rot In auch case will bo likely known develop and make Ita presence In due time. Agnln, there may be spores In contact with the surface of the potato. but which have not yet sent their If the germinal thread Into lta fleah.while yet cellar In the are put potatoes admoist or with moist lump of earth will cause hering to them.the dampnessand the poto germinate, these spores tato will. In due time, ahow signs of rot. In the third place, an affected tuber to a may communicate the disease sound one with which It la In contact. It la desirable, therefore, that they be stored In crate or In shallow bins, ao that they can be more surely kept dry and more easily examined and any affected one that may appear be quickly taken out Moisture is the friend of season rot, dryness Ita enemy. Last there waa little or no rot. There waa not rain enough to carry what spores may have been produced Into th ground deep enough to come In contact with the tubers. Thl season the case .1 different Are Wheat Varletiea Degenerating. The general failure of the wheat crop In Ohio thla year haa caused many farmers to think that their wheat Is "running out," and the desire to change Mini is more general than It baa been . for some year past, Judging from letters received at the experiment station. While there Is undoubtedly a great difference In the vigor of different varieties of wheat and their adaptation to various soils and climates, tho tests made at the experiment station encourage the belief that a variety adapted to the soil and conditlonn of a given locality will tend to Improve, rather than degenernle. It proper caro be exercised In selecting seed from year to year. To Illustrate: tho two varieties of wheat which bead the list at the Ohio station In a ten-ye- ar test. Valley, which has given the largest yield per acre, anil Ienqulte's Vel- -t Chaff, which hus given the heaviest average weight per bushel, are both varletiea which originated or were first distributed from southwestern Ohio, fifteen to thirty years ago. These rletlea are not proof against all unfav- -' orable conditions, and every season they are excelled In yield by some other sorts, but no one sort has yet been able to overtop either of them In the points mentioned In the average of a long continued teat. Farmer'a Carden la llrtolirr. Not a weed should be left In the berry garden this fall. Destroy noxious seed and Insect eggs by burning all weeds, dead brush and vines thus saving much labor another season. Let the ground be clean and apply a liberal dressing of fine manure over the entire surface. Having nursed the Infant id ants Into vigorous growth and protected them from Insect enemies and disease do not now neglect the moat Important part of berry growing. As heretofore stated. Winter protection Is an absolute necessity for growing small fruits successfully In a Northern climate. It should be practiced In every locality where the temperature reaches sero, or below. Even In localities where plants show no Injury, and among those considered most hardy, the vitality Is often affected, and the succeeding crop very much reduced. The best winter protection for blackberries, raspberries and grapes consists In laying them down and covering lightly with dirt. If plants have been well mulched In summer with green clover, clean straw, or coarse manure, as they should be, less dirt Is required by using this mulching. In laying plants down (the rows running north and south I. commence nt the north end, remove tho dirt from tho l ulur In flie llsnln. What one chiefly needa to study In (he color cffecte of our flower gardens la gradatlbn, says a writer In Harpers Bazar. It is to plant our comparatively email apaces so that one tint may lie eoflly against another, each one leading up to or melting into Milder and deeper and more compact bloeeom, leaving fringes of color to mingle and lose themselves In lighter or darker tints and tones. If this gradual Intensification of color Is possible In wild masses, and with only one tint to deal with, It is still more easily possible with the various colors which are at r, the command of the who can control a greater variety nnd bring within small space flowers nnd species from all distances and lands. One can produce the effect of giada-tio- n and Intensification of color by number of tints instead of brfudth of space. Just as a painter, within the small circle of hla palette, can arrange toads (he infinite gradation which from the upper blue through all the clear light green apacei which lie between It and the orange and crimson parallels of a sunset sky; and certainly if he can do this, we can produce within the bounds of a garden wall. In tints of nature's own manufacture, something akin to the sweep of culor of nature. Of made ey the painter-han- d course these color effects must he changeable ones, for flowers vary with the months, whole tribes of them electing to blossom In June, and peibaps other tribes in July, and others naln In August and September, or even, like come to their the chrysanthemum, crown In lata October weather. 8n (or this reason, if fur no other, we must know our flowers well before ws attempt to Juggle with them. IVe must understand their times and seasons, and not undertake a gradation or a contrast with flowers, one spcclis of for Its which may have chosen June ' season and another have elcctrd to bloscom In September. In thio assemblage of friends, where we wish to get the most beautiful result of friendliness perfect harmony we must take careful thought about our Invitations, and try to pair the habits and preferences of our guests. flower-gardene- Stnva Slim In Saw York. A seed firm In western New Tcrk is sending wagons through the country advertising seeds, and offering to put up round or tub silos for farmers, says Rural New Yorker. One of our renders descHbcs this silo as follows: The silo they erect Is built of pine about two Inches thick, grooved or matched. On the ends of the staves, where more than one length Is required for the height of the silo, a piece of Iron Is uaed, by sawing into the end of each piece. They use heavy iron hoops and screws that may be tightened as required. Coni tar la used In putting it together, and a metal roof a loo. A silo 13 feet in diameter and 30 feet In height Is put up for $72, which seems very reasonable. .We are investigating this manner of doing business, and shall, doubtless, have more to say about IL As to the value of tub" silo, reports re largely In its favor. Here la a note from Irof. Clinton of Cornell that Is worth reading: This price for puitlng up the silo of the dimensions given ean be lowered by any farmer. There Is not the slightest neceiwlty for having the staves grooved. The success of the tub olio is unquestioned. I have just visited one that has been In uao the past year, and the ensilage kept perfectly. The dimensions of this one are 13 feet diameter by 30 feet high. The charges made against the tub silo that It will fall to pieces In the summer I found utterly false, for this on was standing In guod condition. I shall recommend the building of tub olios as being the best and cheapest for the farmer." The Home Rutter Market. After all the home butter market that la of the greatest Interest to American. The annual increase of population,. If y that population be In a position to its wants, means an Increase of more than 3 per rent demand each The expansion of the market year. to such an extent will probably consume all the butter and cheese that ran be made, provided that those articles be good and honest and have the conflIt Is sup-pl- uence of the would-b- e consumers. The supoly of pure water for our barnyard: I very little regarded. Cows are compelled to drink foul or brackish water, or that which is tainted from the ynrd. The effect Indirectly must be Injurious to ourselves by poisoning the milk: but think also of the annoyance and suffering of tho nnlmils. ttrr- Some of of Nfbn$k. In ths honey ccn.ca, and Is coming la tie finest Cniled States U:jr volume every year, from Nebraska, says a contemporary. Though only In lta infancy, bee culture in Nebraska is getting each year, mors Important. and In lh95, 3U0.0U0 pounds of strained honey waa marketed in Nebraska at the average price of 10c a pound. In California, first among the slates' in the product of honey, the number of beehives by the last computation of the department of Agriculture was Cb.ouo, and the product amounted to 3,000,000 pounds of trained honey, 2iM),000 pound of comb honey and 30,000 pounds of beeswax. California has nearly 15,000,000 fruit trees, besides 2u0,000 acres of Vineland; but Nebraska may, at the present rate of progress, overtake it for with an area of leas than half that of California It had, by the last agricultural census, 4,000,000 fruit trees, besides grape vines to the number of 1,000,000 and fruit and flower nurseries cover 30.000 acres. The claim Is made by Nebraska horticulturists that the nectar In the trees, flowers and clover lands of Nebraska gives a clearer, more staple and more marketable honey than that of any other state, and this Is coupled with the declaration that on every farm of the stale where honey is not produced, from 300 to 500 pounds u nectar Is annually wasted which migb. be saved If bees were kept. The cost o! honey culture la nominal, the outlay being limited to the purchase of the queen bees nnd the hives. The work of tending bees and saving the honey Is light. The claim Is made that the Mil of Nebraaka Is especially well fitted for honey culture In connection with tbs farming and horticultural interests of the state, and certainly the farmers ol Nebraska are in no respect backward In the matter of tree planting, in which they have been, In fact, the pioneers. Arbor day had its origin m Nebraska. It was suggested as a day ol Universal observance for farmers by a Nebraska man. It first received official recognition from the Nebraska atatc board of agriculture In 1874, when the second Wednesday of April was selected as the day for tree planting, and thlj day la now a holiday by act of the legislature in twentjr-oii- e of the states, being a legal holiday In Colorado, Kansas,Xorth Dakota, Miuuesota. Wisconsin, Wyoming, Texas, Montana l.lah, Rhode Island, Idaho and Nebraska. Forty years ago Nebraska was t treeless prairie; now it bus more thar 5,000,000 trees of more than 100 varieties. A state law exempts from taxation for flvg years Jp Nebraska fluO oi valuation for .each acre of fruit trees and $50 for each acre of forest treei planted, and at the last celebration o Arbor day In that slate there wen planted between sunrise and sunset 1.600.000 trees. With the lncreuse is the number of fruit trees and of flow-era- , the possibilities of bee culture, lot which the climate of Nebraska Is especially well fitted, are constantly being enlarged. bc-ld- es I'ks fur I. hipping Fowl. I hdve shipped a largenumber ol fowls to breeders and farmers in all the western and southern states and never had but one injured, saya Caiman's Rural World. For one Plymouth Rock cock I make the coop It inches wide, 18 Inches long and 2( high; for two or three hens, 16 lnchei wide, 16 high and 24 lung; for cock or two hens, same width and length but 20 Inches high. The bottom It inch stuff with one strir tight, one-ha- lf across each end and one across the middle underneath. Sides, ends and tops are made of plastering laths placed one-ha- lf inch apart. No cloth, pasteboard or paper is used. The only bird I ever failed to land safe and Mund at Its destination was placed in a cooj lined with cloth and open only at top It met with disaster In a warm exprest car and arrived looking weary and sad and Mon after It turned up Its toes. um lath coons to conform to (be new reduced rate rule of the express companies and to secure good ventilation A fowl that can't stand ventilation l of no value as a breeder. In a properly constructed coop n fowl will go tc the farthest corner of the countiy u safely as to roost. Unsuccessful Spraying- .- On the subject of unsuccessful spraying, the Experiment Station ilulletln says Wo sometimes hear of unsuccessful results from spraying, but these experiments show, while all diseases cannol be Immediately and totally eradicated that continued spraying will cause th fungous diseases mentioned to grow lest each year. One intelligent frult-growsent word to the station that he hat carefully sprayed according to directions, but that there was more scab or his sprayed than on hi unaprayed trees. A careful examination of applet from his orchard revealed the fact that they were badly burned (probably by Impure chemicals or too strong a mixture), hut there waa no trace of fungoui disease In his fruit. Mis-Mfl- rl ei Four Good Rules. I have four rule! In the cow stable: Cleanliness, gentle ness, dry and quick milking. 1 havt taught one or my children to milk at twelve years old by letting her gc ahead and start the milk and I follow and finish, to there la no danger In polling cows. The milk Is taken tc the creamery soon as drawn, strained Into eight-qua- rt cans, and after thirty s:x hours It la skimmed, and the cream stands until it Is ripe. Then i Is churned In a barrel churn, and soon as the butter has come Into gran ulated shape It Is washed with pur spring water, salted with the best Hig ginV salt, put Into bricks or tubs, a the trade demands. C. V. Stolteubcry, -- An eastern siockman says he used to grind corn and other grain for pigs hut that years of experience hart taught him that the most he got out of it was hard work. J Til'' ODD (MH'N'KF mld. d to j the British A l).Olhll-4- l What did tin editor say about your asked tho young uinu'a friend. itoryV" -- 1 don't believe be liked it very well. Well, there are difference In the faculty ns well ns In the ability iu route. The same man's taste will vary according to cin iiuiMaucos." I suggested that, and lie agreed with me. 11c said l but If u man found himto self on n desert Island witb nothing read except my story uud n back nuin-Im- t illy directory, be might read my story." Upper Egypt, a city was venerated ss U. (., and where ruins still remain having paintings relating to the adoration of Hebrk. At the MUth B Hr. gaud Cultivating Hatter side of one temple the remains of Hies - storm V Itwrd frinn tar Above large pond have been found, which the t load -- A (fmiarkabla JUaiiMiry probably served to satisfy the amphibious Instincts of this adorable monster. A Crueudile Muuioiy. During lie reign of Ptolemy II. C. 330. the worship of the ... X D E R the trees crocodile reached Its highest point. The ill where the method employed In making crocodile TO (THIS A COLO IN OSB DAT. branches a- - mummies seems to have varied with j Laxative llronio fJutnlM Tablet. All ' mtlm quiver taste and means. While some are ex- Druggisis refund the umary if it fails to cure. &c Murmur s melody others, as In the of Italian allrnial At the ninth congi-mtender sod low, quisitely bandaged, were simply dipped In a In Flurrm-- l'r. TumOuriM called atteullou case, present butterwithin the lent By.Where the solution of wax Bnd pitch, which ren- ti the Manlius fad that flies sport with them perfectly bard, and by which the sunbeams ders the young progeny are securely fixed Under the realHileiui mah of the that shiver lawn will of the buck. Tbs in the hollows 'fret Major And shift o'er the Is one of the parts a hole In llie ground. finest specimens of a ii.iw watera that mummied crocodile known. It was prebabble and flow sented to the British museum by tho Ah, hero are delights that our wordo Egyptian government; cannot measure; Tis tranquil from morn till ths sot of the oun. Cultivating BatterlHee. For here crowning tills In a region Recent experiments in the applicaore more or lew effected by catarrh. KT-ouwcatarrh by Impure blood. Care of pleasure tion of both heat and cold to the egg, Remember the wood. purifying by 16 There comes not s murmur of lorvie and pupae of butterflies have to 1." produced very interesting results. In this manner specimens of some vaThe phrase haunt the throng like a rieties of butterflies have been made to Imitate, In color and form, other menacing specter To cast oer the soul a deep shadow varieties found In nature. The appliof care; cation of beat causes a hastening of Insidious it lurkr, like a patient growth and development. Variation I the best-- in fset theOn Tree Blood Purifier. of moisture and dryness also produce retateles. mild, effw Dilia tire. To claim All druggists. Hr your time aud attention perceptible effects on the growth and flood 8 a share markings of the insects. The general So here's for the wood, where in leafy results of the experiments go to show seclusion WINDSOR that, by the application of artificial We miss the reproaches of duty un- conditions of temperature, some of the done. DENVER. natural forms peculiar to certain BeAnd ungsllantly hide from the doubt nsons or to certain localities may bo First-Clas- s Hotel in the City Only and confusion Imitated, and forms may also be proCentrally Located. Which rage In this battle o'er 16 to duced which occur only in exceptional 1." caseo and from time to time in nature. Wa.hinston Star. Moreover, through this method of cultivation forms of butterflies can bo produced which do not at prevent ocIlrlgand Hm. The little bee lias been held up as an cur In nature, but which. It is though, example for ages, and in the main she may have existed upon the earth ot her good character tome past epoch in its history, or may thoroughly for virtue and industry. It gives one be destined to appear through tho a shock to learn that these little in- gradual unfolding of natural processes sects occasionally fall Into temptation, In the future. (American Dan.) and that the means of their downfall is Perlfect Service. Table Unexcelled. similar to that which is the ruin of Tlia Maklag of Cuius. men and women. RATK8: 3 Oil to S3. 50 pnrday. In Buchner's It is difficult to realize that before Psychl: Life of Animals, It is stated B. C. 700 there were no true coins, tha: The only TURKISH RATIIS in (he ctate. Hunt in I hr Went, couuerled with the that thievishly inclined bees will, in Ingots or buttons of gold and silver The Bend for llluMmed IhhiIc. fiee. Windsor. order to save themselves the trouble were weighed at every mercbantllo J. A. WJGlilN. Manager. of work.ng, attack well stocked hives transaction. of Asia The Lydians In mass-s- , kill the sentinels and Minor are credited with having been Tie Bat rob the hives and carry off the first to cast and stamp with an the provisions. After repeated enterdevice small oval go'.d Ingots ot prises of this description they acquire definite fixed weight, an Invention s taste for robbery and violence; they delayed, but of Inestimable In the recruit whole companlcG, which get strangely to industry and commerce. importance oi-mere more numerous, and at The I WORLD of intellect bright, length tbey form regular colonies of Greece saw the import of the Lydian brigand tees. There is one variety of invention and adopted it quickly, and bees the Sphecodcs which lives ex- every Greek state, nearly every city. clusively upon plunder. That drink- Island, and colony, established a m'.or, ing In excess frequently leads to crime generally at some one of the gr.a: The mil UUAXD SLICKER Is wamuted water- Is as trim amongst bet as amongst temples, for all early coin types are rehaa human ccmmunlties, for it been ligious in character. They bear symfound tpa: thievish beea can be pro- bol! of some Brand" I not oa it. Meatm- hays.lumenIf tha)TJh god. as a pledge of good iw. A. J. TOWER. Breton, Mu. duced by giving working faith. The offerings, tithes, and rents bees s mixture of honey and brandy of the worshippers were coined and cirTHE COMPANY PAY THE FRCICHT to drink. The bees soon, too soon,' ac- culated as money. their mmooiw bow atm homaThta. Will thus be- pn Tomples oT rook SUftrhhilL hoiit Sion aaft IJntunthan whl-a as (in It na be neka quire tas'.o for this beverage, came both mints and banks. Our word sod leliaM a jack m la ha cos ahml ot has the same disastrous effects upon money is said to have been derived W I. dulrhm la biaak. iar cent. Iwad wroaaluinuiuHlatmlaadwill them as upon human beings; they be- from the Roman shrine of Juno Jlone-i- s, before linwkiu. Uw Mli m without ooa come and irritable, and wu nuauui I year the earliest Latin mint W omk hone djllua oloip-- n. MU 113 lose all desire to work; and then, when iti liii this early as 25MI 6QME STRANGE, QUEER AND CURIOUS PHASES OF LIFE. u t Phlli-(lelphi- 1 is, s ' yes d HI 000 s Sarsaparilla e, HOTEL, fficial TO UCKER ig they begin to feel hungry, they tack and thunder the well-suppli- hives. fa, M, i at- The Laughing Tlaat of Arabia. The laughing plant grows in Arabia, and has been given its name from the effects produced by eating ita seeds. nd a as Hco.1 for a lllmtnuad eimlor to Tl The plant is of moderate size, with WHIM OO..LS!CartUSulaaiw.Cola. bright yellow flowers, and soft, velvety each of which contains two or three seed small resembling black beans. The natives of (he district where the plant grows dry these seeds and reduce them to powder. A small dose of this powder has similar effects to those arising from the inhalation of laughing gas. It causes the most sober person to donee, shout and lough, yith the boisterous excitement of a madman, and to ruxh about cutting the most ridiculous capers for about on hour. At the expiration of this time exhaustion sets In and the excited person falls asleep, to wake after several hours with no recollection whatever of , his antics. the trains of the Barllngtou Storm Viewed from Above tba fbia.la. Professor John Wise, the emineut American aeronaut, who lost his life in making a balloon ascension on Sept. 28, 1879, given the fallowing description of a thur.der storm which he once The view viewed from the topside: of a storm cluud from above Is one of the most interesting sights ever beheld by mortal man. A storm viewed front abovo the cloud has the appearance of ebullition. The upper surface of the cloud la bulged upward and outward, and has the resemblance of a vast sea of boiling, upheaving snow. Immediately above the storm cloud the air Is not so cold ss it Is in the clearer atmosphere above or In the cloud ltaelf. The falling of tho rain can be distinctly heard, making a noise like a waterfall over a precipice. The thunder Wealth of Leading Nation. heard above a storm cloud Is not 'cud, and the flashes of lightning appear like Popular Science says that the wealth streaks on intensely white light on or the leading nations of the world. land, cattle, houses, furniture, the aurface of the vapor. railways, ships, merchandise, bullion, - A Kemarkabla Memory. etc., and the proportional totals la as One of the Chicago railways has a follows: United States. $S4,120.0W,OilO; man In Its employ who has s remark- Great Britain. $47,000,000,000; France,0; able memory for cars and car numbers. $42,000,000,000; Germany, $31,185,000.-J0Russia. $25. 445, 000, 000; Austria, It is his duty to keep account of the 119.275.000.000: Italy, $14,815,000,000; . are that come Into the yards. When a train whistles he steps out on the Spain, $12,580,000,000; Australia, $6.866.000.- 000; $5,035,000,000; Belgium, platform without either book or pencil 0; and takes a mental nota of the cars Holland. $4,900,000,000; Canada. la Sweden, $3,641,000,000; as they pass by. While doing this he 0. $3,180,000,000; Argentia, does not hesitate to engage In conThe combined wealth ot Great versation with any arqualntanre who and all Its colonies Britain may bo near him. After the train has doubtless change the comparative figpassed he goes hack to his office and makes s complete and accurate record ures Mmewhat. of the train, beginning with the first Thl Cal Had Rraoa. car and ending with the caboose. As a test of memory, he can begin at the A writer In the I.ondon Spectator caboose and record the numbers the tellr. of a cat which found a pet whits other way or he can begin in the mid- mouse that had escaped from the nage. dle of the train and work both way's, The eat carried the mouse Into giving car numbers, names of reads to house, placed It on the floor and which they belong and their relative marched out. Common mice bad never He has never been treated that way by the cat. and position in the train. been known to make s mistake. It seems that the feline knew that ths Albino mouse waa entitled to consideration. A ('rormlll M 111111117. The varied and interesting collection of mummies, mummy oases and fune- Olileat V.'nodi-Itnlldlng la the World. The oldest wooden building In ths real furniture contaiprd in the Hrithili museum has recently been enrirhed by world Is said to be the church at d, in Norway. Tj was built In ths the acquisition of an enormous crocodile mummy. This creature measure elewith century, and has been protectthirteen feet In length, and Is well pre- ed by frequent coatings of pitch. It Is served, having a swarm of young cro- - i built of pine, nnd In fantastic Roman-etqu- e eodiles on Its back. The famous fellow design. I -f- ed-pods, As regularly as clopks Route maintain dally service between Denver and Omaha. Denver and Chicago. Denver and IL Joseph. Denver and Kansas Uly. t Denver and RL Louis. Two trains dally. The favorite la the Veellbuleil Flyer. which leave Denver at 0:30 p. m. dally. For speed, comfort, perfect equipment It bos no superior gray-color- $4,189,-000,00- Rou-man- $2,545,-000.00- auy-wlirr- The local ticket agent will vim the Burlington Route If yon ask for them. Ask for them. G. W. YALLERY, General Agent. Denver, Colo., 1030 17th 8t. famish tickets wo-il-- e u'i? I Thompson's Ey Vlfatir. WHISKY nDIIIU Pdas UriUMrsis. Bn s. a. noouav, itusto.o. PATENTS, TRADE MARKS of Rxawlaattaa sad A4.fr aa tn rt-bllSrad (or "InTWilaiY Oald,or How teUeta OTARKKLL A SUN, Waahlngtaa. IL OL ralaaS." FOR PEOPLE THAT ARE SICR or duet Don't Feel Well, UBS1 LIVER PILLS era the Oa Thins mom. ONLY ONE FOR A DOS El SSe. tree. Bor-gur.- $t Drussina SraplM nailed Besanke Med. Cs. l'hila. miffffisraL Tvlii hr flm. Louith bjTupi In Kil1 SUM Good. fa. Ci rtniiftfltfi. P-TI- til W. X. U. Denver. VaL XIII. Xis 4U When w riling lo advertisers, please say ihai th advenlaeinent Id tble paper. you iaw |