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“I Just has the Mostest Fun” . • : ' JK|S|| '■ *-. \#* »T % ■ . --M When they take my picture at Miss Boyd’s Studio There’s no Better Service Than that via the From Kansas City, Saint Louis and Memphis to points in the South, South tast and Southwest. The Southeastern Limited Leaving Kansas City at 6:30 P. M. daily, will take you to Springfield, Mem phis Birmingham, Atlanta, ’acksouville and all points in the Southeast. For detailed information apply to G. W. MARTIN eENERAL WESTERN AGENT 1106, 17th St. DENVER. COLO. OJ-JTO+O + 0 + o+o+o+o+o+LTOTy*i 1 Union Pacific Railroad |! * ’ ■ 6 6 o Low prices. Ten years’ * t credit. Ask for particulars. J T Address + | R. w. Barbour, District Hgent f o o •f 1023 17th Street, Denver. * o * -* pJ«C *J*O»}*0»|*0»p0»|«0»pO»{»0»i«O*FO»F0+0+0 ♦OJ-O^O^O+O+O+O+O+O+O+O+OH-O $ A Soiled Shirt £ + Is Soon Remedied. § 4* o o We take the dirt out J o of your linen without * o injury to the garment. * J We put cleanness into * ♦ the article that will give £ + pleasure to the owner. 9 J Our Work is Well Done, § £ and we deliver prompt- + o ly without disappoint o ment. + I Greeley Steam Laundry ° *l* O •b O O*r o o4*o•bO•b O 4* O *i* o o o•bo 4* Slone Contractors We want to call attention to the fact that we ate in the field for all business in our line. Es timates given on stone founda tions, reservoir work, sidewalks, and stone work of every descrip tion. Will take contracts any thing in our line and guarantee satisfaction. B. Whiteley & Son 1422 Bth-st., Greeley. Colorado Nursery Co. O. D. Shields and •). J. Noble, owners. Growers <>f Choice Nursorj Stock, Apples, I'lurns, Pi-iiijoh. Etc. Reference’*: Bank <•'' Loveland or Larimer ('on t.- Bank. TUGS. DKVENPOKT, Agent for Wi-ld (’ounty and Hwlev. JJOTICE OF FINAL SKITLEMiiN J. In the matter of the estate of William B. Plato, deceased. Notice is hereby given |that on Mrnday, the 21at day of S‘ptembor. A 1). I!M>:{. being one of the regular days of the September term of the Count' ('curt of Weld county, in the state of Colorado. I, Joel It Harvey, executor of said estate, will appear befote the Judge of said court, present my Hunt settlement us such executor, pray the approval of the same, unci ■will thou apply to be discharged as such executor. At which time and place any per son in interest inav appear and j.resent object ions to tile same if any there be. listed at (ireolcy. Weld county. Colorudo. August IT. 11* i‘'.. JOEL I). II UtVEY. Executor (of tho estate of William B. Plato, deceased. By JI. N. Haynes, his attorney. First publication in Greeley Tribune August 20. Do:!; lust publication September 10, 1903. DIET AND DISPOSITION. The Food We Enl llt»<** n Direct Sn- Itacucv I !»«»«» Our MuniliTi*. To say that food has a direct influ ence upon disposition is to tutor a com mon, dace dietetic truism now accepted and acknowledged by every one who has even a rudimentary knowledge of physiology. If one is inclinod to doubt this lot him cxjieriuicm upon the lowr animals. Food a pair of baby lions from the time they are born until they are as largo as a fox terrier dog on nothing but bread and milk, and you will have a couple of docile, gentle and loving itots as playful and harmless as kittens. Take a pair of St. Bernard puppies, the gentlest of all the canine family, and as soon as their teeth come begin feeding them raw meat, and you will soon have a couple of snappish, snarling, quarrelsome dogs. Inclined to fight each other and ready to pick a fight with every dog in the street. If the meat diet is persisted in they will become a menace to u whole neighbor hood. Is it any wonder, then, that some m* n and women are snappish, snarling and quarrelsome? We give much less attention to what we feed the human animal than we do to what we feed the lower animals. What docs the growling, garrulous, grumpy old scold, who makes life a burden to his family, eat anyway? On what does the nag ging woman-feed? Why not look into these matters? -Pittsburg Chronicle. Floor mill Teeth. A valuable letter from a correspond ent drew attention t• * an important and admitted cause of the national degen- j oration of physique which we have striven to emphasize in these columns, j The roller mil! has undoubtedly di minished t!i«’ dietetic value of our bread. The entire wheat grain is of value -the lpisk iwhicli is a valuable; Intestinal stimulant), the brown ex- ; terior and the white central core. Ex cept for certain invalids white bread , Is an .indefensible absurdity. Better is brown bread, consisting of all but the i husk, and best is a whole meal broqd, | assuming such to be obtainable. The deficiency of salts in white broad is unquestionably related to the deterior- j ntion—also familiar to our readers—in the national teeth. We may illustrate this by an argument from Sir Thomas I.auder Brunlon. “Why has America the cleverest dentists?" Answer: “Be cause she has the best flour mill mak ers.” The better the mill is. the finer the flour, tho poorer the bread, the worse the tooth and the* better the dentists. Perfectly simple!—London Chronicle. Iloiv tho roreelnipnot Whm \nnto«l. Everybody knows the pretty little forgetmenot and likes the flower more perhaps because of its name than its beauty. I-low was it so coiled? The Germans account for it by quite a pa thetic romance. It seems that once upon a time a knight and a lady were walking by the bank of the Danube when the latter asked her “gallant gay” to pluck for her a tiny blue flower which she saw growing iu the stream. No sooner said than done, but the knight, overbalancing, fell into the river, and owing to the slippery nature of the bank and the weight of his own armor was carried away by the cur rent. As he threw the flowers ashore to his lady ho cried out with his last breath, “Vergiss mein nicht!” (“For get me not!”) And ever since the flower has been looked on as the em blem of fidelity. A Lang Veit Want. Dr. Holmes had an odd liking for in genious desk accessories in the way of pencil sharpeners, paperweights, pen holders, etc. The latest contrivances in .this fashion- probably dropped down to him by the inventor angling for a nib ble of eommendatiou—were always making one another's acquaintance on his study table. He once said to me: *'l'm waiting for somebody to invent a mucilage brush that you can’t by any chance put into your Inkstand. Jt would save me frequent moments of humilia tion.”—Thomas Bailey Aldrich in Cen tury. Not hints to S]»«‘iik Of. The little blind girl was writing a composition' on the rabbit and. never having seen a.creature of any sort, in quired of her teacher whether the rah bit bad a tail. “Yes, it small one. none to speak of.” answered the teacher. This is the way the little girl intro duced the matter into her composition: “The rabbit has a small tail, but you mustn’t talk about it.” FI n I*. The Teacher—What were Noah Web ster’s last words? The Scholar- ! don’t remember just what they were, but I know they all begin with the Z.—Yonkers Statesman. Tin? I.nxt Dance. He—May I ask you for a dance? She—Certainly, the last one on the list. He—But I’ll not be here then. She—Neither will I. Too l'revlon*. The Anxious Mother—Are you sure my son has appendicitis? The Eminent Specialist—We can tell you better, madam, after the operation. —Life. wiiichr “Quietly, you know, is the silent partner.” “At the office or at home!”—Cincin nati Commercial Tribune. To get a nice polish on eyeglasses moisten with alcohol and polish ns usu al with chamois. By this means all grease Is removed. A WESLEY INCIDENT. ¥,.*,1 Mctlioiiial l.n> l*rc lo«vc<l In u Year lit T The societies met on S n. ver at ■! •* hour ot oliur nr!, when i it her Wesi< otliei erg> i pi? th • hour in pr.-ty>*r and r, veication < r exhortation. Ucrtation before tl* society j pr. aching before it was o: ■ but to Wesley it seemed a | step. While in Bristol he learn, : iu 1731), that one of his j Thomas Maxtield. hail been 1 1 lM'fore the Koiimlery society 1 ried up to Loudon to sit op it j mother, who since the don ! husband had been living In the Foundery building, met x ' l a protest, "John, take care r J"’ 1 !do with reference to that y< - man. j for he is as surely called to :l -- | you are.” Admonished by t. .> conn gel from one whose cauti* :i nh ! clir.rchly matters he knew to l i equal to his own, Wesley r< .i.l> j consented to hear Maxtiold preach. , After listening, lie exclaimed "it * s th * Lord’s doing. Let him do - seem : eth to him good." Convince*. spit*’ of deep rooted disinclination, sanc tioned the first Methodist lay ,• u*r Within a year there were tv F. Winchester in Century. Professional Trust. To any who regard the \vl leg;.* profession with suspicion 1 only answer: “You are probably -;■* *n saying that if .1 lawyer hud dyed the vulture be would not tell -■ t. yet in truth these evil birds of ; y are not the majority in the law. !:' they were more than a small min* y our profession could not sustain tl • luiost boundless confidence it enjoys u tin whole business world. Bonn -or. a lawyer is judged day by day. .id by his deeds lie is justified or con lined. If a significant number of i - were traitors to our clients or if > our hypocrisy we undermined the ly of professional ethics, the keen l un deceived men of this generation would not be placing ip lawyers’ baud' every day their most momentous interests and trusting implicitly in the ncsty of their advice. Suppose we d<* have our little professional attitude and posi-s and pomposities; those •• but superficial mannerisms which may make us awkward and todioii' when \ wo, too. would w rite a popular .rticle, j but which have nothing under heaven to do with our faithfulness to cur ell- i enis. On that faithfulness w- meet our Judgment day six times a w*. Everybody's Magazine. Ufco li «• r*i» Ap pi lent ion. One Saturday afternoon two Brook lyn men were on their way over Fulton ferry to the City of Churches .Mr. Beecher happened to, lie on board As the ferryboat felt its way into the slip Mr. Beecher seemed to be locking on abstractedly. As tin* boat struck the piling at the side, which eivakiugly yielded, Mr. Beecher’s face lighted up. One of the men, who knew Mr. Ropch er’s method of sermonizing, remarked i to the other: “There will be something about that in tomorrow’s sermon. Let 11s go and see.” The men wen* in Plym outh church the following morning as suggested. Sure enough, in the course of the sermon Mr. Beecher made some i such reference as this: "There are in ever*' community men who perform for society the service that yonder pil ing docs in the ferry slip—when they arc struck they gracefully yield, yet are not quite swept from their position. They stand for principle, but they tact fully yield in nonessentials. Those buffer souls are valuable members of society.” IIIn Second StoniiK-li. Smugglers’ brains are proverbially fertile, and a clever expedient was once adopted to import brandy into Paris without ‘paying the octroi duties, says the Golden Penny. For several weeks a splendid elephant and his k*-.-per be longing to a circus had constantly gone in and out of one of the Baris gates, when one day a custom house officer suddenly thrust his probe into the creature’s side. The spectators wore horrified, but the elephant did not ap pear to feel any pain, while from the wound fell four tiny barrels of brandy. Tho keeper, considering that a little extra size in the unwieldy shape of his change would not be noticed, had in cased its stomach in the old skin of a larger elephant and had filled out the space with brandy- a very profitable enterprise. i A Di-HjM-riit «* Mnn, It was in a restaurant, and the young wife looked anxiously at her husband as lie devoured a double portion of lob ster salad. "I wish you wouldn’t eat that, dear,” sin* urged. “You know it never agrees with you, especially at night.” “It doesn’t, but 1 don’t care,” he said as ho* tackled a huge mouthful. “It’s my turn to take cure of the baby to night. anyhow.” -New York Press. A Fair ‘Warn I hr. Mrs. Browne---Don’t you think the new neighbor Is cute? She has such a coaxing little way about her. Mrs. Greene Well, she’ll get herself into trouble if she tries her maxing little way on cither of my hired girls.— Cleveland Plain Dealer. Wli**r«* Friendship CenncH. “That girl with Johnson there—a friend of his. I presume?” “Nope: used to be, though.” 4 ’So? Had a falling out?” “Not exactly. He married her.”—Bal timore American. Much better results can be obtained by paying a woman a compliment than •>. v tryiiif.- to nrfcue with her.--Boston Globe. "GREELEY AND THEREABOUTS” Being a Portfolio of Characteris tic Pictures Artistically Arranged. The Tribune has at considerable ex pense published a souvenir of Greeley and vicinity that ih very attractive, at d i* sold at a*price within the reach of all. It consists of a series of twenty-one % tews in tireeley ami the country adja cent. nicely mounted, singly and in groups, with a page of descriptive mat ter facing each picture. The col.eetion is bouml in an attractive cover, ami tied with ribbon. Each copy is enclosed in a special envelope, ready for mailing The price is 50 cents per copy, at the Tribune office, or mailed to any address. The album contains the following: 1. Main street, tireeley, looking east from the band stand. 2. Birdseye view of Greeley from the Court House. 3. Ninth avenue, looking south from ! 13th st. 4. Tart of the Normal campus. 5. Tenth avenue, looking north. 0. A bend in the Poudre. 7. Odd Fellows’ building. S. Ogilvy dam. on the Poudre. 9. Beauty spot in Normal Park. 10. City Park. Greeley. 11. Normal campus. . 12. Weld County Court House. 13. State Normal School. 14. tireeley Beet Sugar Factory. 15. Sunset on Seely Lake. 1*5. Irrigating Alfalfa. 17. Irrigating Sugar Beets IS. Harvesting Potatoes. 10. Harvesting Onions. 20. Sacking Cabbage. 21. Fattening Lambs for market. The size of the book is 5 1 ., x 7 inches i and it weighs five mnu'i s. Address all orders to the Greeley Tribune. Stamps taken same as cash JJOTICE OP FINAL SETTLEMENT. In tho matter of the estate of Arthur B. I lark, decoasud. -Notice in hereby given that nu Monday, the r.th day of Otoln r. A. I). I'.Ot, being o:n> of tin regular days ot the September term o', the County Court >»f Weld county, Colorado. I. Louise M. ( lark. Adminoiratrix «>i Mtid estate will appear before the Judge of said Court, present my final settlement as such Adminis tratrix. pray the approval of the same, and will then apply to he dLcharged as such Ad ministratrix. At which time and pane any person in interest may appear and pre.-e.it ob jections to the same tfans there he. Dated at tireeley. Colorado. August 1, P.MiA LOUISE M. FLAKE. Vdmiidsrratrix of tin* estate of Arthur B. Clark, deceased. Bv Win Hall Thompson, her attorney. First publication it: tireeley Tribune Sept. J 11*0*: last publication Sept. Jl. Uncj. ■yOTll’E OF FINAL SETTLEMENT. In the matter of the estate of William (’ Hough ton deceased. Notice is herohygiven.that on Monday,tlie -Mh day of September, A. D j'.KD. being one of the regular days of the Sept. Term of the Coin.ty ( Hurt of Weld county, iu tin* State of l ’olorado, I, Frances L. Houghton, executrix of said estate will uppoar before the fudge of said Court, pre sent my tiual settlement as such Executrix pray the approval of the same, and will then j apply to be discharged as such Executrix. : At which time and place any person in interest may appear and present objections to the same 1 if any tnote be. Dated at Greeley. Weld County. Colorado. August -’-’d. 190:L FHANCKS L HOl/UHTON, Ex cutrix of the Estate of William L. Hough ton. deceased. First publication in Greeley Tribune August 27th. tWO; last Sept 17th. 11*0.1. The service of the Nickel Plate mail to New ork City ami Boston, is unsur passed. Three fast express trains in each direction daily. These trains tire composed of modern tirst-cla-s day coaches, elegant vestibuled sleeping ! curs between Chicago, New York and Boston and other eastern points; superior dining-car service, meals being served on American Club plan, ranging in price from 35c to $1.00: also service a la carte. Passengers can travel com fortably and economically via the Nickel Plate road. No excess fare charged on any Nickel Plate train. See that your ticket reads th:if way. Depot, La Salle st. and Van Buren st., on the elevated loop. District Passenger Agent’s office, 1 911 Seventeenth st.. Denver. Colo. '—■—■ '** le Island’s New Chica -11/ I I M go Terminal— the LaSalle street 1/1/ W|u station—is the largest, hapdsonu-s'. WW I | I j| 1 most conveniently arranged and ** IAJJAI most centrally located depot in wv _ Chicago. It is only half a ldock 1 1 i\ I I Irom the Board of Trade and only a ■ 1111 block and a half from the l’ostoflic, A V/ A-tl trains of all Chicago’s elevated railroads stop at its doors. A f_l |J ¥ \ J hen you arrive in ChicaSo via ft |\ f\ I 1/ H 'be Rock island you are there II I'i I W I I within a few minutes’ walk of tin principal hotels and business esta _ lishments. /111 Rock Island trains for Chirac 'leave Denver 11:,'50 a. in. and 1 :• ; '' *Tp| I'. m. 1 C* Ihrough Sleepers and Chair t ar- I I lilil I * <r information ns to rni.es ami I I lIH J |l|| 111 routes, address HAL S. RAY, nt Mvva rni r^ADO I • ♦o»o*o»o#6*o»o*o»o»o»o#o»o*o#o*o*o*o*c.,,.F^H 1 p —T] Why Not Try (I • | ; -l Line of “Villa! School Shol « \ for boys and <;irls. « > li ' ,10t takill K any risk vfl • ' . ,f the >' are not rijjhtßH J ’em free of charge. Also, First-Class Repairing Guajawß O V j Matson & Borl • Sl4 Eighth-av. 2 Doors South of Postoffice. ■ *o»o#o*o*o#CP#o*o»o»o#o»o»o o*o»„»o*o*o»o*o*o*o, l B 1,, I jm"^GREELEY m ChicagoHH IUSUSdi “Chicago Special” leaving Denver 1:10 p. m. fflfijj&M arriving Chicago 4 p. m. next day. flakes close if fin Ik q connections with Greeley trains ut La Salle. lljjhjd . A boHiitiful train of Pullman Sleepiug Curs, ’"Pll'lr Buffet Smoking and Library Cars and free B • II ramvit dining f hair Cars. I^l W'i Irn Ask ' o ir Union Pacific agent mm about it or write to A , D- W. ALDRIDGE, Gen. Agt. M 801 17th st. Am\ DENVER, I ■ i i I °’® picTof"* ,v I THE BEST ROUTE EAS' VIA Solid Vestibule Trains, carrying elegant Pullman Sleepit g Cars j latest design, and Reclining Chair Cars (seats free). Observation Parlor Cafe. Dining Cars (meals ala carte Dining Cars and Sleeping Cars equipped with electric lights and fai For further information see your nearest Ticket Agent or wiite Ellis Farnsworth, T.[P, A., 8-B.Kooser,G.W.F.&M DENVER, COLORADO