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mm) 'MP I i THE SALT, LAKE TElBUX, SCflM'DAY MOJStfflNfcfr, iDiiiOtiMBflft 29, iWUV. T If YOMING AND WHAT IT HAS ACCOMPLISHED I I i I mum X Dmlnc 1907 the Industries of 4 A Wyoming havo produced $63,878, J. BOS. an Increase of $5,075,000 over 1306. Tills production and In i. crease Is divided as follows: i Industry- Production. Incroase. 4 V. Livestock ...?:3,SS3.rDS $3,000,000 4 .i. Mining 21,000.000 1.380,000 Agrlculturo . 17,495,000 1,495,000 4. Manufactures 1.600,000 200,000 Ttaa ...?63,878,59S ?6,075.000 .j CHEXENNK, Wyo., Dec. 2S. Tho Stato of Wyoming may well point with pride to tho process which it has made during the year 1907. It has advanced along every line of industry, and in somo linoB steps have boen taken which will have an influence in tho futuro which is incalculable. Tho 3' oar has boon characterized hy prosperity and plenty tho per capita bank deposits of $132 indicato that and the financial flurry which swept tho nation near tho closo of tho yvear had ouly a passing effect on the Block men and farmers, miners and business men of this commonwealth. Nineteen hundred and seven ha9 boon a year of development on large lines in Wyoming, and 190S opons with fair promiso of much greater things to come. Wool-Producing State. Treating the industries of tho Stato in tho order of their importance, first comes stock raising, tho oldest and tho foremost business of tho commonwealth. Tho year saw Wyoming advanco to tho very top of tho column of tho Ameri can wool-producing States, where it superceded Montana, for years the holder of that honor. During 1907 Wyo ming flockmastcrs sheared from tho backs of their 4,484,931 sheep more (.ban 16,000 tons of wool, while Mon tana floclunastcrs from their 4,600,000 head of sheep sheared only about 15,000 tons. Wyoming's wool clip sold for Sliir .?7,S11,773. while Montana's brought mfr only $7,640,278. Wyoming's wool pro duction during 1907 of 33,637,000 pounds exceeded that of 1906 by only 780,250 poundsi, but prices so much more ad vantageous were obtained this year than last that tho value of the 1907 Up exceeded that of 1906 $558,54S. During 1907 Wvoming exported ; 1,366,700 sheep and "lambs, 77,699 less than during the preceding year, but the 1 income from tho 1907 exportations ex ceeded that from the 1906 by $353,130. ! At tho end of the year there remain in tho State 4.522,278 hoad of sheep, of the value of $20,350,301, as against at t.hc end of 1906 4,024,560 head, of the value of $16,104,3S0. Cattle Raising Profitable. Like the sheep-raising industry, cat tie raising was highly profitable 'during I Nervous, Weak, Rra-Bown Women Thousands of Women, Who Suffered For Yearn, Have Been Restored to m Complete Health by Stuart's Cal- Wm , cinm Wafers. H Trial Package Free. H Arc you nervous, weak, tired, run-down, Iff dispirited, easily exhausted In other H words, do you feel Hke a dlshrag at times? Do you ever have to stop right In the mlddlo of your work to take a rest'.' 11 . Nearly every woman has these iniscra- II! l!o experience, and many such sufferers n iofi relief In seeiet remedies, containing flp-. harmful drugs and cheap nlcoliol. If you Hli;,' are iloln tliif. stop It now, before you ' ruin your health completely, our eondl- r lion la bad enough without making it wor:e. Von need a tonic that will brace up the i; j.orvous system, cleanse the bowels, liver and kidneys, and enrich the blood. The l-st. jmn-st, safest preparation to do this Is .Stuart's Calcium Wafers. Stuart's Calcium Wafers arc not a ho--iet loniody. They do not contain harm ful drugs, nor do they lose their medicinal power as iuo.-t liquid medicines do, be 'iitise these wafers arc In tnhW or lo zenge form, which cannot deteriorate or evaporate. Stuart's Calcium Wafers contain t?ul-l-lildc of cjilclum. I ho strongest blood puri rvr known; also golden :jcal. quassia, eu ;t!pliiH. bi.-Uudoiu:n, and the vepctahlo ai-tc-rn.-i lives and laxatives. These ingre-di-.nis will restore the normal action of the bowels, ilver and kidneys; Invigorate the nerves and brain; make pure, rich, hcaitiiy blood: drive away that tired, wornout. fueling and make you feel ten r-nrs younger. Vou can obtain Stuart's Calcium Wa fers In any drug store at only fifty cents n box. but If you have any doubts as to the merits of these wonderful calcium wafers, why send us your namu and ad dress and wo will send you a free sample pnekage. so you can give them a fair trial mid convince yourself. Write today. Ad dress F. A. Stuart Co., 175 Stuart Bldg., Wajhall. Tdlch. II I Quality in the I Stationery I I Tb.it you use for oorrc- j - spondeueo i n s t a n 1 1 y I stamps tbe class of the I writer. We have au ex- j ceptionally fine value in 1 I RIPPLE LINEN m& jj It sells in large pack- J I 'SCHRAMM'S I, I "WHERE THE OARS STOP" k 1907; but t statistics regarding the in dustry during the year are meager. Dur ing the year 248,000 head, of tho vnluo ot $8,000,000, wore exported, and at the end of the year there remain in the State 800,000 head, of tho value of $20,000,000. During 1907 15,000 hoad of horses, valued at $1,500,000, and 5000 swino, valued at .$50,000, wero exported from Wyoming. A recapitulation of live stock exports during the year follows: Class. Number. Value. Sheep 1,366,700 $ (1,401,825 Cattle 248,000 S.000,000 Horses 15,000 1,500,000 Swine 5,000 50,000 Total ?1G,041.S'-';'. Wool, 33,637,000 lbs.. 7.S11.773 Grand total ?23,S83,59S As to Mining. Second in importance of the stale's industries is mining, and the most important subdivision of this industry is conl mining, which, during 1907, pro duced $19,500,000 of tho total $21,000, 000 revenue from the industry. Wyo ming mines during 1907 produced ap proximately G,500,00C tons of coal, an increase over the production of 1905 of 460,000 tons. The 190S production will exceed that of 1907 by probablv 1.500,000 or 2,000,000 tons, as many new mines are being opened as tho yejr cuds and the production of old collieries is 6toadily increasing. The new year also will produce a new era in the state's coal fields, in that the practical monopoly heretofore exer cised by such corporations as the Union Pacific Coal company will be eliminated and smaller corporations and individ uals will havo an opportunity to suc cessfully enter into the colliery busi ness. This will result from the rate law, which will go into effect May 1, and -which prevents railroads from en gaging in the commercial coal busi ness. In anticipation of the W'W order of things, many small corporations arc now developing valuable coal banks in Swoetwater county and others are pre paring to begin work. Chief of tho new mines are the Rock Springs-Gibraltar, at Black Buttes, and the Bugas mine at Point of Rocks. New Oamps Opened. During 1907 a number of. now coal mining camps were opened in various sections of the state, chief of rhom being the following: Hudson-Indian mines. Fremont county, to produce 701) tons daily; Gebo mines, Big Horn coun: ty, producing 500 tons daily; Knot mine, Sheridan county, to produce 1000 tons dailv; Ryan mine, Carbon county, producing 200 tons daily; Willow mines, "Uinta county, to produce 500 tons daily. In addition to these, tho long idle mines at Almy. in Uinta county, were reopened and are now shipping steadily; No. ? mine at Kan na, Carbon county, was reopened and is producing. The construction by the Union Pa cific of a branch lino from Rock Springs -through Six-Mi Jc canyon and bovond, which was begun in Novomber, will result in six or eiht independent camps being established when the road is completed. Work on this branch, is at preseur, suspended, owing lo the financial flurry. State Coal Product. The stato board of equalization has made public the following statistics covering the lonuago and taxable valu ation of coal produced in tho state dur ing the year. ! District. Tons. Gross Value, j Southern district. Including mines 1 at rt o c k 1 Springs. Ilan : na. Cumber land Keinmer- or and Dia- mondvllle . . . 1,G27.778".SS $5,0 IS.n 1 1 .70 I Northern district. Including mines at G 1 enrock. Monarch. Cam bria, Muddy, C a r n c yvllle. Dlntz and Sher idan ..l.in.S92.03 l,S55.Oi54.S0 Total G.OIIO.SUa.ttl ?, 803,300. VJ Metal Mining. Tn metal mining, au industry us yet little developed iti this State, there w:is I an increase in activity during 1907. ' Iron led in valuo of product, tho output of the mines of the Colorado Fuel and I Irou company at Sunrise, in northern i Laramie countv, totaling 700,000 tons, I valued' at $1 a ton. The production I would havo. been greater at this camp had not a tremendous influx of water l flooded th? groat four-compartment I shaft of the Chicago mine and prevent i oil production there during the major J porliou of the year. Several importnnt iron discoveries j were made in the State during the ; vein; tho most important being in tlio Seminole iiionntaiun of uorlhom Carbou I eountv. It also beenme, evident during ! the vrar that the- Union Pai'ific con : templates the const ruction of u branch line tn the Tron Mountain district, forty miles north of Cheyenne, whero perhaps tho greatest deposit of titanic iron in the world oxisLs. The percent age of titanic acid in tho ore of this mountain has hitherto prevented profit able reduction, but Gorman chemists have evolved a cheap mcHiod of reduc i ing the tilnntic iron, and it is merely a question of time until an industry of great magnitude is located at Iron mount niii. Despite the .fuel that the smelter of the Pcnn-Wyoming Copper company at ! Encampment was destroyed by fire early in the spring and its rcoonstme l tion was not completed until near the ; end of tho year, about. $-100,000 worth of copper was Bineltcd at the plant, which until early in December was tho j only copper reduction works in Wyo I ming. A secoud smelter has been coin j plctod at the Independence mine, in the same district, and the copper pro duction of the Grand Encampment country during 1 90S is expected to run into the millions of dollars. Gold Fields of State. Tn several gold fields there ivas un UMial activity throughout, tho year, notably South Pass, Copper Mountain, Willow Creek, Camp Kirv.'in, Douglas Creek, Sunshine aud Lowiston, bnt tho grcnlcr part of the work was done in view of future production, lack of transportation facilities now malting profitable working of low-grado ores im possible. At South Pass, tho famous old Miner's Delight and Burr mines, both at times heavy producers, worn reopened during tho year, aud will in crease tho State's gold output many fold in 190S. An cstimato of tho State's gold production and tho gold Tallies arc counted in tho production of Buch Slates and not credited to Wyoming. The gold output for which Wyoming re ceived credit during the year probably docs not exceed .-HOO.OOO. In the Oil Fiold. In several oil fields, principally tho Salt Crpek, .Bonanza, Popo Agio and Brenning, much development work was carried on during tho year, but t.hc poor transportation facilities and tho I lack of a near market mado tho actual production of oil comparatively small. A recapitulation of tho mineral prod uclc of the Stato during the year fol lows: Product. Value, C-oal ?10,500.000 Iron 700,000 Copper 400,000 on 200,000 Gold ; 100.000 atone, etc 75,000 Silver 25,000 Total 521.000,000 In Agricultural World. Agriculture is steadily advancing in importance as a Wyoming industry and bids fair before a decaue has passed to far surpass all others as a wealth producer. Many thousands of acres of land aro being brought under irriga tion each year and during tho past year the success of dry farming lias dem onstrated that hundreds of thousands of acres of land heretofore considered val uable only for slock pasturing purposes can bo made to yield crops as bounti ful as those grown on the richest of the old fnrming lauds of the Middle West. Statistics covering agricultural pro duction in tho stare during J907 do not exist, but the estimates" contained in the following table may be consid ered fairly valuable information: Product. Production. Value. Wheat, bushels 1,130,000 $ 1.2S5.000 i Barley, bushels ..... 110,000 55,000 i Rye. bushels 100.000 70.00Q Oats, -bushels 3,500,000 1.S00.000 Timothy, tons 70.0U0 285.000 Alfalfa, tons fif.0,000 5.200.000 i Native hay, tons 330,000 2.300.000 I Other agricultural products 5.500.000 i . - - i Total S17. !!5,000 I As to Irrigation. Tho watershed of the continent, from whence flow streams to the Pacific ' ocean, the Gulf of Mexico and the Gulf of California, yet with nn arid ' climate, it is fitting that Wyoming ' should bo tho scene of trvnienduus ; tivity along the lines of irrigation. In every seetioi) of the Stale, along every i crock 'and river, irrigation projects have been completed, arc in progress of com . plction or are contemplated. To dntr ' 2,100,000 acres of land has been brought ' under irrigation ditches and at the pros- i cnt rate of progress a few years will ' see water on every one of the'lU.UOo.UDi) , irrigablo acres of the state. The ex- tent of activity in irrigation improve- ! ment may be realized from the follow ing information, which is supplied by the slate engineer aud which co;s' the period of"190b-7: Permits for new . ditches granted. 1.7215; land to be ir rigatcd under these permits, 1.770.21s ' acres; eventual cost of irrigation pro- ' ieets now under way. 35.(lti(i,0i)0: .total j length of canals authorized. 3,579 miles; approximate cos( of canals alone. 1).- 189.S21; approximate cost of reservoirs under permits. $-1,000,000. The three greatest projects for the reclamation ot land bv the ditch sys tem in progress in Yvyommg during 1907 are the two government projects. : the Pathfinder, which will reclaim 200, 000 acres in Wyoming and Nebraska; and the Shoshone, which will reclaim i 160,000 acres in Big Horn county, i and a third private enterprise, the Ore- ) gon basin, which will reclaim 250,000 ' acres in I3ig Horn county. About 15,000 I acres has already been watered by the Path finder project, .'10,000 acres will be ' watered by the Shoshone project during the coming year and a largo acrcago will also bo watered by Wio Oregon Basin project during 1908. To go into irrigation development in Wyoming, during tho past year and for the coming year, oven in a general way, is out ol tho question in an arti cle' of this length. The work is so tremendous that it can not be sum marized. Merely to mention a few of the larger projects, there arc the Eden, in Sweetwater county, which Will re claim 120,000 acres; the Hanover, in Big Horn county, which has reclaimed 20,000 and will reclaim 25,000 more; the Big Horn, in Big Horn county, which will eventually reclaim 20,000 and is already watering much of that aroa; ( the Paint Rock, in Big Horn county, which will reclaim 20,U00; the LaPrelc, i which will reclaim UO.OOO; tho ,Sahani, in Johnson county, which will reclaim I 25,000; the Fettcrman, in Converse coun ty, which will reclaim 12,00U: the In dian, in the Wind River reservation, which will reclaim 15,000; tho Sara toga Valley, in Carbon county, which j will reclaim S8.000, and the Lovell, in Big Horn county, which reclaims 15,000. j Dry Fanning. In 1900 a group of Iowa capitalists discovered that in southeastern Wyo ming a -little community of fanners wore growing crops without irrigation ' and that surround iug their farms was j hundreds of thousands of acres of ' range land either open to entry under i the homestead law or to be purchased at from $1.50 to $2.25 an acre. These BUILDING AND PLANT. Above cuts preaent an Idea of tho exterior and Interior of our aplendid now factory building lln ished last summer. Tho main building is 60x100, thrco floors, all well lighted and arranged for our ub; the one-story wool room in n:ar being 27x50 In Dine. Since moving in AuguBt wo havo added to tho equipment of our eoveral departments now machlnory of the latent types, anil con now truly bonst of having tho Best Equipped Mattress Fac tory In tho West. Wo aro specially proud of our new Garoctt Felting Machlno of the latent Im proved type which Is used for carding cotton into elastic felt. Whose Mattress Do You Sleep Oj shrowd Iowans formed a corporation, quietly bought up tho cheap land sur rounding the first successful dry farms, spent $150,000 in advertising, and in "J 907 the dry farming boom, one of tho most romarkablo incidents of Wyo ming's history, was born. Farmers from Iowa, Nebraska, Kansas and States farther East jumped at au op portunity to Bocurc cheap land and be fore long the Towa speculators wero selling tho land they had bought for an average of $2-an acre at $15, $17.50 and $20 nn acre. During 1907 half a million acres of dry land in the country bctwoen Chcyenno and tho Nebraska lino was acquired, either by purchase or by location, and on this lnnd. vir gin prairie a few months before, farm ers harvested 25 bushels of whoat aud 12 bushels of oats to tho acre. The scttlment of the dry places is contin uing at an astonishing rate, and dry farms tiro now scattered over an area of 800 square miles. In other sections of the State the dry farming idea iB being fried and what heretofore has been land considered capable of culti vation only through irrigation bids fair to become as prolific of crops as is tho Mississippi valley. A list re cently compiled contained the names of OliG farmers from other States who hud settled on dry land cast of Cheyenne within a period of a few months, and one man counted 102 new farm-houses during a single day's drive through the Luther district. Railroad Construction. Aside from the double tracking of about 100 miles of the main line of the MATTRESS DEPARTMENT. lt iri uo longer naoesHary for ycu to nend to New York or Cincinnati or anywnore clue for a llrst oIosh elastic felt mattrHH. Our now Garnott Felt ing Machine enablos us to produco just au lino a cotton fell muttreas au can bo obtuined anywhere in tho country. Wo manufacture a full lino of other kindH of raattroBBOS, too, Including tho fluporb and inde structible hair mattroHses that laut a llfetlmn, tho wurm, soft, light und fluffy kupolc or allk lloss, the ordinary cotton and tho soveral choapor grndos of wool, cotton top and ovcolBlor inuttrcoeeo. When ever you tlnd our tag on any of these mattreHsesi you may depend upon It that thoy nro tho bost to be had for the money. q? Get One of Ours Union Pacific, there was no extensive railroad construction in Wyoming dur ing J907. The building of short Hups nnd progress made on longer lines in construction, however, gave the Stato more than .100 miles of new trackago dining tho year. Thirty miles of the Laramie. Ilahns Peak & Pacific, which will ultimately connect Laramie with the North Park country of Colorado, was completed ; the Saratoga Si Encamp ment, from the Union Pacific at Wal cot I to Saratoga, a distanco of about fhirty.fi ve miles, was built, and the road is now being extended to Encampment, twenty miles further; the Big Horn branch of tho Burlington was extended from Worland lo Kirby. a distance of fifteen miles; a branch line of the Ore gon Short Lino was built from Kom mcrcr to tho Willow coal field, a dis tance of fifteen miles; a two-mile spur from the Northwestern to the Indian mines near Hudson was laid; a two mile branch from the Burlington to tho new coal camp of Cooi was completed; the Union Pacific began the construc tion of the Athol-Borie cutoff, which will be twelve niilcs in length, and of the Rock Springs-Six Milo branch, which will be twenty miles long, with several laterals from one to three miles in length, and the Burlington began grading for an extension of its fine from Kirby to .Thormopolis and into tho central part pf the State. During 1908 important railroad work is expected to occur, including, possibly, an extension westward of tho Burlington's Guern I scv lint.; the double-tracking of an- other 100 miles of the Union Pacific, Mill 'I Mil I 1 1 HMH1 HI ii IM ' II II I llll III H SPRING DEPARTMENT. Tn thlti department aro manufactured, a lurao variety of woven wiro springw and cots and a high grade of spiral coll springs which we huve named tho "Monarch." After all has boon said that can be in favor of tho low-priced coll spring, tho fact ritlll remains that there is nothing that can excel a weli-mado, tino-moshed. woven-wire bed spring in points of comfort, coat and durability. The fruinou of our uprlnga are made of Oregon tir, thoroughly sea Honed and specially prepared, making them light and utrong. Our product from this dupartinont has Het the Mtandard of excollonco In this lino on tho local market for years. No noods at ratall; whole sale only. -There None Better. tho completion of tho Laramio, Halms Hi B Peak & Pacific and of the Saratoga & mt I Encampment, and the construction of a Mm fifty-milo oloctric lino known as the M Wyoming & Northwestern, from Gry- 8, I bull, in Big Horn county, to tho oast- I S cm boundary of the Yellowstone Na- W g tional park. H Miscellaneous Statistics. I E Tn closing, n few miscellaneous ata- ak tistics relative to Wyoming will bo of K IS iutt-resl: Tho State's population is mlm 125,000; there is $15,200,000, or $132 ff per capita, on deposit in Wyoming ! IB hanks: the bunk deposits increased K $750,000 during J907; the area of tho 1 II State is 97,890 square miles, it being ' 1 tho sixth in size of the Union; a rental I of $I'J9.919.;M was derived from Stato 1 ! lands during the past year; there aro B i '15,000,000 acres of Wyoming subject to H j entry under Hie Federal land laws; tho HI assessed valuation of property in tho SfaU is $0-J,-119,177.9S, au increase of ; ; $:!,! 95,975.1 J over i90G; tho bonded debt 1 of the State is $1S0,000, which is being t I paid at the rate of $20,000 a year, and , the Slate's income is approximate!' ' m $700,000 per annum. ( ;1 Itegardlesfi of so-called, panics orpres- ' idcntial and other politics, or of any ' other national factor, W.yoming pro- ) j H poses to, go ahead growing in 1908 o JB its own ttceord. n 6 1908 record will bo J p better than that of 1907. That will bo 1 ' IL KJin some. KT All coal $5.75 per ton delivered. I ff CITIZENS COAL Co. , M i Both phones -19. 153 Main St. 1 K ITHE .WINTER COURSES AT THE AGRICULTURAL j COLLEGE OF UTAH BEGIN JANUARY 19 1908 J I The Day Has Come When Every Farmer Must Be a Student or Drop Out in the March of Progress 1 ! p AGRICULTURE (from January 7 to .January 32. 190S) Agronomy. Irri- BREEDERS of puro bred sheep, hogs, horses, cattle, poultry; raisers of S gat -on and Drainage. Animal hidustrv (including Dairying). Horticulture ,. clean apples, peaches, garden truck; dry farmers who know how; irrigators I ; R and I'Vitit Growing. Insect Pests, Veterinary Science, Poultry Culture. ,,; who understand; all these havo the New Idea. j J03ESTBY (from .lanuarv 7 to March 23. 190S) Silviculture, Timber ;,. n T. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE is co-operating with the 1 gj Physic. Mensuration. Lumbering. Grazing. Surveying. nrod"c0 nou.-h "stors to tako caro of tho government land. 1 BJ i i J no course m Forestry is outlined especially to tram more thoroughly men m I 83 -MECHANIC ARTS (from .lanuarv 7 to March 2S. 190S) Carpentry (ole- .j already in the Service, and to proparo other WESTERN men for tho work. 1 I . p. lncntary and advanced), Forging (elementary and advanced). " Jji This furnishes an opportuuity for men to enter tho Service at good salaries. B 1 3 TinM-FTTf' arts i frnm l-imi-irv 7 in lnninrv " 1)0?1 Foods fcook- 't SKILLED MECHANICS everywhere command big wages. Tho College 9 f, I ..s saui' -'dzsLx. i ff'rra &l as sse& I 1 J ,r , -mncx i. i EVERY WOMAN IN UTAH should tako a coarso in Domestic Science. 1 f r COMMERCE (from January , to April , 190S), Bookkeeping, business d sj,e should bo able to cook and sew. As a leader in tho homo sho should I J i .FunnE, Commercial Law. Penmanship. i1 know the simple laws of health, sanitation and household management, jjj 3 mi n i - . ,.,.,. r ;,.,;.. ',;! Sickness is a penalty for ignorance. The housewife above all other persons S 1 . These courses are nil practical. ou . an u sec cry tern of ifor nation should be intelligent. Tho College kitchen combines in an admirable way Iff 8 given. There arc no educational, requirements. ou may work at what ou I ThoURUt aa Work. It wiU do the busy housewife good to attend tho Col- 1 M 3 choose as long as you choose during the course. Hoard and room can be ob- u , K ( - irr.pk. H im lained for $:i.50 or $-1.00 per week. In addition to the experts on tho faculty, l -gc, ocu lor a ie. -weens. m jtft W who will conduct the work, a number of men of national reputation will talk, THE AIM OF THE WINTER work in Commorcc is to prepare mon 7 J ' fa on their respective lines, to tho students. An entrance fee of $2.50 is and women not only for regular ofiico work, but also lor the broader fields B b ' charged; there arc no other College expenses. of business management. I j f WRITE FOR AN ILLUSTRATED CIRCULAR. DESCRIBING IN DETAIL 1 lit S ALL THE COURSES. I ' V j THE AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE - - LOGAN, UTAH) j SALT LAKE MATTRESS AND MANUFACTURING CO., Inc. Ij F. EBEimAR Located 531-535 West Third South St. Both Phon aM Treas. ffl J I j i WW UPHOLSTLRY UEPARTMENT. " "t'j'l In this, as In our other departments, we employ ' M?. only the most slclllod and reliable woilcmen. Iloro ' arc mauufucturod Hox Matlrossos and Dox Couch- 3 jv vu. .Special ritcllllios are found In this department ' tit. for tho munufnolure of cushions ot" all kinds, hi- J A cludluK thoao of tho llneiit leather. k Fra Wo mtiku a specialty also of re-upholstering ' r?3 and ru-eoverlnj; parlor and library or office furnl- , L.ty uire. Wu carry the llnest and most cxtensivo lino rial of upholstery cover jjoods In the city, samples of which will bo tfhown unywhere at any time on ro- d quest and estimates given on work of this char- ?" actor. Do not fall to call us up when you havo " KrYtf anything' of this kind. Ur Patronize Home Industry i 1 i