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The Julesburg Grit-Advecate R. J. Dobell, Publisher. JULESBURG - - OOLORABO POPE PIUS X HAS RALLIED SHOWS A WONDERFUL IMPROVE MENT FROM RECENT SERI- ‘ OUS ATTACK. EMAGIATED AND WEAK TALKS WITH NEPHEW ; ENJOYS AFTERNOON SLECP WHICH REFRESHES HIM. Western Newspaper Unlon News Service | Rome, April 15.—The l’bpc has rai lied in a wonderful manner from tha serious attack from which he suffered Sunday. He appeared to be on the point of death Sunday night, but the ! physicians’ report last night indicate | that the danger poiut, for the present, | at least, has been pasased. ' Dr. Anici paid a visit to the sick | room shortly before midnight. Al-' though the Pope's temperature had ia- | creased slightly he found the general ' condition satisfactory. He adminis- ! tered a heart stimulant and shorllyl the Pope went to sleep. Throughout the day the tempom-! ture was normal, the pulse remained | at about & and the respiration ‘.’6.‘ Tihs indicated a considerable amelior ation in t}ne bronchial symptoms, ! which was further shown by eusicrl breathing and freedom for long peri ods from cough, ' In addition the Pope was able to take some nourishment and he showed ' much interest in what was happening | about him. l When Professor Marchiafava a&l --lowed the pontiff's nephew to eflter‘ the room, there was an affecting scene. The frail and aged pontiff and the young and robust priest embracel tenderly, the latter being unable to re strain his emotion at finding the Pope 80 changed physically. i Professor Marchiafava repeated his | assurances that if prudence were ex ercised the Pope would recover. After his afternoon sleep it was ob served that the pontiff looked very biight and happy. Although he was advised not to talk, he insisted on ex- l plaining how he had just z\wakenexl‘ from a most wonderful dream: He seemed, he said, to have re turned to his beloved Venice. Appar ently he was in his petriarchal gon- | dola on the grand canal. E\'erythlng’ was blazing with sunlight, when sud denly above St. Mark's the sky opened and he saw a vision of his dead sis ter, Rosa, who descended towards hin, took his hand, saying: “The moment has not yet come for you to join us. Your work is not yet finished.” Committee’s Schedule Stands. Washington.—Persistent efforts. to put cattle and sheep on the free list, to cut the duty on swine and to oth erwise alter the ways and means con mittee tariff revision bill were defeat- | ed in the Democratic caucus of thel House. The Democratic leadership contest for the bill as reported wusi piloted by Representative ancls| Burton Harrison of New York in the absence of Representative Under-] wood, the majority leader, who is iil. Favors Direct Senatorial Vote. ‘ Phoenix, Ariz.—ln his call for the third special session of the Legisla ture, which opened Monday, Governor Hunt included a recommendation to provide the machinery for the direct election of senators, to conform with the recent amendment to the federal constitution. SBIXTH OF HOUSE OF MORGAN. Laid to Rest in Hartford Plot—Coffin Covered With Roses. i Hartford, Conn.—The body of J. P. Morgan is at rest. It was buried on the crest of Cedar Hill cemetery, the sixth of the house of Morgan to find resting places there. His grave is to the west of the great monument of red granite that marks the family plot. To the east lies his father, Junius Spencer Mor gan; his mother and a brother whc died in boyhood. In lieu of a headstone there tower: a monument of flowers, masses of roses, lilies, orchids, ferns and cedar boughs heaped in a huge pyramid over the grave. They are the last tributes of friends and relatives whe came here with the body in a special train from New York after the funer al services in St. George's church. Chicago’s Former Chief Police Dead. Chicago.—George M. Shippy, for mer chief of police of Chicago, {s dead at his home here. He was fifty-eicht yoars old. Westminster Service for Morgan. London.—A cosmopolitan congrega ‘tion attended memorial services for the late J. Pierpont Morgan in West minster abbey. King George was rep resented by Capt. Sir Walter Camp bell, groom-in-waiting, and Queen Mother Alexandra by the Hon. Johu Ward, equerry to the kirz. CONDENSATION OF FRESH NEWS THE LATEST IMPORTANY ODI& PATCHES PUT INTO SHORT, | CRISP PARAGRAPHS. SHOWING THE PRGCGRESS OF EVENTS IN OUR OWN AND FOREIGN LANDS. l TR | Western Newspaper Union News Seryice. z WESTERN. | Drink is the cause of the wrecking ]af most homes whose affairs come un ‘der the Chicago Court of Domestic 'Relations in the last year. " One million dollars will be spent for the building to house the Califor ‘nia exhibits at the Panama-Pacific exposition and to enable the state to act as host to the nations. George Main, thirty-five, of Tellur ide, C'olo., shot and probably fatally wounded his divorced wife, Mrs. Mary Main Boyle, formerly of Telluride, ul; Salt Lake, and then attempted to com mit suicide. | Large buildings at Salt Lake were rocked from three to five inches b.\‘; an earthquake. Telephone ope’ratorsi on the fifth floor of the Mountain States building rushed in alarm to the fourth floor. Former Common Pleas Judge Fred 1.. Taft, a cousin of ex-President Wil liam H. Taft, died at his home in Cleveland, Ohfo, of paralysis. Taft was Republican candidate for Con gress last fall. He was defeated. Dance halls where liquor is sold to girls and where ‘‘friends are provided for those who want them,” were as cribed as the cause of the downfall of many yvoung women by Mrs. Ger trude H. Britton, a social settlement worker, who testified before the lili nois vice commission at Chicago. Despite the fact that a large pro portion of the men employed in its shops in Omaha, as elsewhere, have been on strike for the past eighteen months, these men will be permitted to participate in the relief fund of SIB,OOO which has been raised by the road and its employés for the suffer ers from the tornado of March 23 in Omaha. The anti-saloon members of the Wis consin lLegislature are prt-purt‘xk to introduce a bill which they beljeve will decrease the sale of intoxicants in the state. This bill will provide that persons desiring to buy drinks in saloons must first secure a license to do so from the chief of police or oth er head officer of the town, village, or city in which he resides. Maury I. Diggs, formerly state archi tect, and Drew Caminetti, son of State Scnator A. Caminetti, were indicted by the federal grand jury at San Francisco for white slavery. Both young men are residents of Sacramen to and recently they caused a sensa tion by eloping to Reno, Nev., with Miss Marcia Warrington and Miss Lola Morris, young women well known socially in Sacramento. le‘ fgur were arrested in Reno. ‘ WASHINGTON. Dr. Eusobio A. Morales has been appointed minister from Panama to this country. The average condition of winter wheat on April 1 was 91.6 per cent of “a normal, compared with 80.6 last vear, 83.3 in 1911 and 56.3 the ten vear average. By direction of King Victor Emman uel of Italy the Italian ambassador, Marquis Confaloneri, sent to New York a wreath of American Beauty roses for the funeral of the late J. Pierpont Morgan. Attorney General Mcßeynolds dis approved the new plan for the disso lution of the Unicn Pacific-Southern Pacific merger recently submitted to him by Robert S. Lovett, chairman of the Union Pacific board. John Brooks Henderson, former United States senator from Missouri and author of the thirteenth amend ment to the United States constitu tion, died at a hospital in Washington from a complication of disorders. He was eighty-six years old. Secretary McAdoo of the Treasury Department will deposit $2,000,000 in the national banks of Dayton, Ohio, to relieve the money shortage result ing from the flood. accepting govern ment, state, city, or county bonds as security. This will be the first time since 1908 that the government has accepted as security for deposits bonds other than those of the United States. S A complete revision of the tarift law: modification of the nation's cur rency system; proposals for Philip pine independence, for repeal of the Panama canal free-toll provision and for the immediate construction of government-owned railways in Alaska are the chief problems confronting the first sesaion of the Sixty-third Congress. Professor Willet M. Hayes, who for more than a decade serve as as sistant secretary of agriculture, has broken down from overwork, and now is in a sanitarium in Maryland. CONGRESSIONAL. l New currency reform bills were introduced in the House by Represen | tatives Prouty of lowa, Nelsoa of Wis ,consin and Palmer of Penasylvanmia | Congress now has before it a dozen icurrency bills. A government residence, secoad in rank to the White House is provided for Vice President Marshall, in a bill introduced in the House by Represen tative Cullop of Indiana. Mr. Cullop proposed authority for $5,000 immedi !uu-l_\' for designs for such a building | in Washington. ’ “To end the trust or momopoly through which a group of rich men ihu\-p too long appropriated the great ' diplomatic posts to themselves,” was :xh«- reason Representative Henry ‘gave for introducing a bill to pro vide furnished homes for Amerfea: diplomats in thirty-five capitals of th world. SPORT. | | —_— | Percz Arzemo, an aviator, wa killed at Buenos Ayres when the aero plane which he was driving fell from an altitude of 1,260 feet. The Tenaka Golf Club of Dawson, | N. M, and the Santa Cruz Golf and Country Club of Santa Cruz, Cal., bave been admitted to membership in the western association. | Girl athletes of Northwestern wuni versity have aroused the wrath of ‘ma:lv students by bestowing the lettl-r; “N" on girls participating in track ‘mw*t.\' to which the men are not ad mitted. i - Miss Vivian Prescott, who an | ‘nounced in Philadelphia that she hai | been granted permission to drive a | car in the 500-mile race at the speed ‘ way at Indianapolis next month, will not be permitted to enter the contest according to an announcement of the speedway managers. John Johnson's Siberian wolves were still leading in the 412 mile all- Alaska sweepstake dog team race over the snow trail from Nome to Candle and return when Telephone, 250 miles from the starting point, was reached in a blizzard, reported the worst of the season. Johnson's elapsed time for the distance was for ty-nine hours and ten minutes. Fay Dalezene, who pressed Johnson, ar rived forty minutes behind the leader. FOREIGN. Mme. Poincare, mother of President of the French republic, died sud denly. 3 Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, the suf fragette leader, was released from Holloway jail after having been on a “hunger strike” since she was sen tenced, only nine days ago, to three years of penal servitude. ‘ A body of Turks coming from the' coast of Asia Minor has massacred all the Christians among the inhabitants of the island of Kasteloryzo, south east of Rhodes, according to a dis patch received at Athens. Singular variations of sentiment have been developed both in the Bel gian capital and in the provinces in connection with the political strike for manhood suffrage which is expect ed to involve 500,000 out of the 800,000 Belgian workingmen. For the eighth time in his reign, ‘King Alfonso narrowly escaped being the victim of an anarchistic attempt against his life. Three shots were fired at the king in the streets of the eapital by a native of Barcelona, Ra fael Sanchez Allegro, a negro, who was immediateiy overpowered. GENERAL, A quintet of infants was born re cently to Mrs. Charles Smith of Dan by, a few miles south of Ithaca, N. Y. The session of the New York stock exchange was closed for two hours Monday out of respect for J. P, Mor gan. “Uncle John” Butler, known to al most every resident of Ocean Grove, N. J., is dead in his one hundred and fourth year. | Mrs. Ann Simons of Hickory, near Sharon, Pa., is mourning the loss of a diamond ring worth $100 which her big Central American parrot swal lowed. The big bird, however, denies the theft when questioned. Charles F. Baker, former assistant cashier of the Crocker National bank at San Francisco, has pleaded guilty to embezzlement on forty counts, in amounts not specified in the indict ments. Ixperts are still working on the Dbooks and the shortage is esti mated at approximately $200,000. Hostesses can naw tell the suf frage affiliations of any guest by merely glancing over their stock of cards. The latest fad among “Votes for Women"” enthusiasts is to have their engraved cards decorated with their suffrage colors. And a collee tion of suffragists’ cards present rath er a rainbow effect. Marion Johnson, a friend of Abra ham Lincoln, and who was marshal of the Lincoln funeral proc ssion at Springfield, died at his home in Chd cago. He was eighty years old. \ The Ohio river registered 54.4 feet at Cairo, Ill, Friday, a fall of one tenth of an inch. The levee patrol has been increased. Only one or two points between Cairo and Mount Ver non, Ind., ar> above water. In manv places the river is thirty-five miles wide. Over 4,000 refugees now are camped at Wickliffe, Ky., and on near by hills. | coLorRADO NEWS CATHERED FROM All Parts of the State | { Western Newspaper Union News Service. b Dates for Coming Events. May.-—~Knights of Columbus Meeting at Pueblo. May 13-14 —State Council J. 0. U. A. , M., at Colorado Springs. June 10-12.—State 2. E. O. Society at Manitou. : June 17-19.—National Press Association ‘ Mecting at Colvrado Springs. June 22-29.—German Turnfest at Den- Jll‘n‘;’ Northern Colo. Sunday School Convention at Greeley. L S 5 July.—State Postmasters’ Association al Manitou. July 28.-—Pacific Jurisdiction, W. O. W., at Colorado Springs. 5 Aug. 12-15.—Thirty -second Triennial Conclave of Knights Templar, Den .\\::.r'lsfl.'os—-Amerlcan Association of I"ark Superintendents, at Denver. ! Aug 18-20—Army of the Philippines National Society, at Denver. | Aug.—Grand Council of Order of Red Men, at Denver. 1 ' Aug. 25 —Conference of Governors at t Colorado Springs. Aug. Z26.—Knights of Pythias Grand J Lnd',:t:. l\lm-urg at Trinidad. 4 Sept.—National Association of First- Class Postmasters, at Denver. Oct. 21.—Coloraao State Buptist Asso- | ciation at Il'ueblo. ‘ The annual convention of the Na- i tional Anti-White Slave Association | opened in Denver April 14, with two | special meetings. | | The body of Ward Moomaw, the | twelve-year-old boy who disappeared | | from Lyons, was found in No. 2 res- | |ervoir of the Highland Reservoir and l Ditch Company. { The Denver board of supervisors | voted to appropriate $25,000 for the | entertainment of the Knights Tem ! plar, who will hold their biennial con ‘«-luvv in Denver next August. A reception was given by Mrs. E. M. Ammons, wife of Governor Am mons, to the wives of members of the Legislature and of state officers only at her residence, il2l, Clarkson street, Denver. As a result of the 1. W. W trouble at Grand Junction, Shepherd B. Hutchinson, chief of police for the last eighteen months, has handed his resignation to the city commissioners. It was accepted. Conscience-striken a year after she had secured a divorce, Mrs. Abbia Lodge of Pueblo has petiuoned the District Court to again make her the wife of Frank Lodge, from whom she had been separated. Both sides are found to have been in part in the wrong in the report made to the Legislature by the com mittee appointed to investigate the strike which has been on in the north ern coal fields since April 4, 1910, The county assessors of Colorado re fused to go on record as being ia favor of assessing all property at its full cash value and adjourned their '| meeting at the staterouse without agreeing on any definite stand. The body of Alonzo Thompson, the Denver millionaire spiritualist who died at his residence, 1140 Lincoln street, was laid to rest in the Walnut Hill cemetery near Belleville, 111, by the graves of two of his former wives. Preliminary work has already beeu| commenced by the Jefferson county commissioners on the automobile road up the cafion of the Platte riv er. This road will open to the public some of the grandest scenery in Colorado. The finance committee of the Den ver board of aldermen and board of supervisors will recommend an ap propriation of $25,000 by the city for the entertainment of the Knights Tem lar who come to Denver this summer for their conclave. The Nineteenth General Assembly will not appropriate $1,000,000 as the state’s contribution to the success of the Pageant of 1915. This and eighty other bills calling for appropriations were reported upon adversely because I of lack of funds and were killed. State Treasurer M. A. Leddy has honored the first warrant drawn upou the special $50,000 water defense fund appropriated by the Legislature for protection of Colorado water rights | ! in suits brought against the state and state companies @y other states, ‘ Mrs. Ida B. Pope, proprietor of a small laundry at 119 Elati street, and of four sub-stations in various parts of Denver has filed suit in the Dis trict Court against the members of | the Denver Laundrymen’s Association for SIO,OOO damages, which she says has been caused to her through a con spiracy of the members of the associ ation. Colorado’s wheat crop on April 1, acvcording to the crop reporting board of the United States Depart ment of Agriculture, was in two per | cent better condition than on the cor | responding date of last year—and | 1912 was the biggest crop year in the | history of the state. The rye crop, | according to the same report, prom | tsed a four per cent better yield than last year. , Charles E. Stubbs of Denver, who '| has gained an international reputation | as an authority on the best and most | perfect type of draft horse, has re ceived a very nigh honor from the king of Belgium, which is rarely, if | ever, bestowed upon a foreigner. Mr. | Stubbs has been decorated with the | Knighthood of the Order of the | Crown. The honor comes direct from | the king. x The potato leaf roll has been iden | titied as the cause of the blight which | has practicaly obliterated potato growing in Weld county. FUNDS FOR ROAD WORK APPORTIONMENT COMPLETED IN ALL FIVE DISTRICTS. The $328,000 Distributed by Highway Commission Will Bring Roads ‘ Up to High Standard. \ i Western Newspaper Union News Service - Denver.—The proposition of build ing new good roads and repairing the old has been declared a special order of business on the calendar of Thom as Ehrhart, state high way commis sioner. A partial apportionment of the roads fund has been made by the commissioner after consulting with ‘his advisory board. A total of $328,- 000 was distributed among the five ‘districts, as follows: District No. 1, $66,600; No. 2, $43,200; No. 3, $60,300; No. 4, $99,000; No. 5, $48,900. Coun ties accepting this money must add to it an equal amount. The new commission consists of Thomas Ehrhart, commissioner; John M. Kuykendall of Denver, represent ing the first district; Leonard E. Cur tis, Colorado Springs, second district; Charles R. McLain, Cafion City, third district; Charles E. Herr, Durango, fourth district; J. B. Walbridge, Meek er, fifth district. Kuykendall has been chosen president and J. E. Maloney. secretary-engineer. The partial apportionment for all districts follows: District No. 1-—-Adams, $4,500; Arapahoe, $4,500; Boulder, $8,000; Clear Creek, $10,000; Jefferson, $15,- 000; Gilpin, $12,000; Larimer, $9,200; Logan, $3,000; Morgan, $3,500; Phil lips, $1,200; Washington, $1,500; Weld, $2,000; Yuma, $1,200; Sedg wick, SI,BOO. District No. 2—Lake, $6,000; Chat fee, $5.200; Park, $5,000; Douglas, $4,000; Teller, $5,500; Elbert, $2,500; El Paso, $9,000; Lincoln, $2,000; Kit Carson, $2,000; Cheyenne, $2,000. To tal, $43,20.° District No. 3—Fremont, $12,000; Custer, $3,600; Huerfano, $3,000; Las Animas, $6,000; Crowley, $2,400; Otero, $9,600; Kiowa, $1,800; Bent, $3,000; Prowers, $4,800; Pueblo, sl3, 500; Baca, S6OO. Total, $60,300. District No. 4—Delta, $4.800; Mont rose, $7,200; Gunnison, $6,600; Ouray, $7,200; San Miguel, $4,000; Dolores, $4,200; San Juan, $12,000; Hinsdale, $4,200; Saguache, $4,000; Rio Grande, $6,750; Costilla, $3,000; Conejos, $6,- 750; Alamosa, $3,000; Archuleta, $4,- 800; Montezuma, $4,500; La Plata, $12,000; Mineral, $4,000. Total, $99,- 000, District No. s—Moffat, $1,800; Routt, $4.200; Jackson, $1,200: Grande, $4,800; Rio Blanco, $2,400; | Garfield, $7.500; Eagle, $3,600; Pitkin, | $12,000; Mesa, $9,000; Summit, $2,400. | Total, $48,900, | Another apportionment will be | made next fall. ‘ Engineer Killed, Two Hurt in Wreck. Cheyenne Wells.—Thomas Hale, en~[ gineer of Ellis, Kan., was killed, and Thomas Dosial, his fireman, and E E. Thomas, a mail clerk, were injured seriously, when eastbound passenger train No. 110, on the Union Pacific railway, plunged into a snowdrift three miles west of here and was de railed. Several passengers . were | lightly hurt. | Woman Hurt in Auto Crash. Brighton.—While traveling about twenty miles an hour an automobile, containing Will Egner and wife of Platteville and three others struck a car belonging to J. W. McLaughlin of Denver. Both cars were wrecked. Mrs. Egner was badly bruised and sus tained a broken collarbone, and Claude, Stover received a sprained shoulder. The others were not hurt. Youthful Eloper Wins Over Father. Golden.—There is joy for Arnold Jacobson and his youthful wife in the decision handed down in the District Court by Judge Class here when he ruled that it is not an offense in Colo rado for a yoyng man to swear false-i ly to his age in securing a marriage ‘ license. Stabbed, Austrian Dies. Pueblo.—Three days after he had been assaulted with a beer bottle and stabbed in a boarding house fight at 1817 East Abriendo avenue, Mike Fe kolich, - thirty, an Austrian steelwork er, died at St. Mary’s hospital as the result of a fractured skull. Four Hurt When Car Wrecks Auto. Colorado Springs.—Four persons were serjously injured when an auto mobile in which they were riding crashed into a street car. Those in jured were Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Bils borough and Mr. and Mrs. William A. Makinney. The automobile was de molished. Edwards Heads Agricultural Board. Fort Collins.—The State Board of Agriculture, at a meeting held at the State Agricultural college, reorgan ized for the biennial term. A. A. Rd wards of Fort Collins was elected president; J. L. Brush of Greeley, vice president; L. M. Taylor of Fort Collins, secretary, and T. S. Jones of Fort Collins, treasurer. The execu tive board is made up of the president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, Gcvernor Ammons and pr(‘.sldnnt‘ Lory of the college. | J , Grew l;u. Relloved ‘ Mr. A M Ikerd, Box 31, West Bup ‘ lington, lowa, L writes: ‘ e0 Y “I had oo 1g ‘o tarth of the e aol stomach and ‘ J‘v(w*fi E] small intes B tines for o ] - sumber of | ey BN Years. I weat " T to a number ! i of doctors and | il Bot no reliet, and finally one of my doctors sent me to Cht - cago, and I &3 met the same P fate. They e said they could do noth : ing for me; Mo AM. Meord. said I had cancer of the stomach and there was no cure. lal most thought the same, for my breath was offensive and I could not eat any thing without great misery, and I grad ually grew worse. “Finally I concluded to try Peruna, and I found relief and a cure for that ‘ dreadful disease, catarrh. I took five ' bottles of Peruna and two of Manalin, ‘and I now feel like a new man. There is nothing better than Peruna, and I ‘keep a bottle of it in my house all the time.” S —— | Not the Same. They were strolling through the woodland. “Yes,” the youthful professor was saying, “it is a very simple matter to tell the various kinds of trees by the barks.” She gazed at him soulfully. “How wonderful!” she exclaimed. “And can you—er—tell the various kinds of dogs that way?™—Lippin cott’s. — S/ Constipation causes and aggravates many S (3 h! prces Qe Ty sl et family laxative. Adv. There’s always some man around to second any kind of a motion—except & motion that looks like work. Ten emiles for a nickel. Always buy Red Cross Bag Blue; have beautiful yeLr“y'hib clothes. Adv. Treat people kindly and you will find them easier to work. Much of the rheu- e=— 1= matic pain that %flv‘\fi\ comes in damp, fl\ AR changing weather is =% 3 the work of uric l*‘-——;-‘l. acid crystals. Xlll \224) Needles :ol:'ldn't ‘ \‘\* "' cut, tear or hurtan A S worse when the Il i il fected muscle joint ’ I is used. R If suchattacksare gs] marked with head- ~-/ _#] ) ache, backache, diz ziness and disturb- \.‘ ances of the urine, ! . it's time to help the g Tolls weakened kidneys. > oy Doan's Kidney " Pills quickly help sick kidnzys. o - n oOn Ase piptn BOMRT AT B I e hardly stoop or stralghten. The lldn&mr’- tions became rmtund obliging me arise painTul My Eidhieys becie b Al s eaoron Loy Phought L whsdone for. Doma's Kl i s L ever, went right to the seat of the trouble and for over three years my cure has been permanent.” Doan's at D 66 A' N“t"é"‘fl PNy PILLS FOSTER-MILBURN CO., Buffalo, New York ° Your Liver Is Clogged Up That’s Why You're Tired—Out of Sorts —Have No Appetite. N CARTER’S LITTLE r LIVER PILLS A will put you right CARTERS in a few days. -/ ITTLE They do IVER their duty. PILLS. Cure Co- \ stipation, —————— Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature BEE SUPPI.IES of best quality, at lowes prices than you cas buy same goods else where. Write for free fllustrated catalogue giving information on bee-keeping. We sell produced at the apiariesof HIHE Hu"EY our members. By freight ot parcel post. Ask for nrices. THE COLORADO HONEY PRODUCERS ASS'N. 1440 Market Street, Doaver, Cole. ORI S e e o e R 8 BARTELDE EE Westorn Seeds for Western Planters E Once Used—Always Used D S AR TH 8 10z 1804, Depe WoEs, Demrer goto. e e, PATENTS Srsmismre el b W. N. U, DENVER, NO. 16-1913.