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ANOTHER LIFE SAVED. Mrs. G W. Fooks. of Salisbury. Md, Wife of G. W. Fooks, Sheriff of Wlco- mioo County, says: "I suf fered with kid ney complaint 1 f o r eight years. It came on me gradu ally. I felt tired and weak. was short of breath and was trou bled with bloating after eating, and my limbs were badly swollen. One doctor told me it would finally turn to Bright’s disease. I was laid up at one time for three weeks. I had cot taken Doan's Kidney Pills more than three days when the dis trehsing a..iir g across my hack disap peared, and 1 was »oon entirely cured." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster Miltonrn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. But It Was Fast. 'What is the best time you ever mud* with your automobile*?" they aai' d him. • I don't know exactly." said the chauffeur. "The Evanston detectives in their testimony before the police Justice differed nearly three seconds in •;r c-'ima-e. .”—Chicago Tribune. RAILROADS AND PROGRESS. In hl« testimony before the senate comrr.itte*- on interstate commerce at Washington on May 4, Prof Hugo K. M» >er of the ÜbJ< »eo university, an expert on railroad management, made tbi- statement. "I.et ns look at what might have 1 t. of the farmers of New York and Ohio and Pennsylvania (in the 7"'s, when grain from the west began pour ing to the Atlantic seaboard) and acted upon the doctrine which the in enunciated time and again, that no man may be depr *«J of the ad vantage accruing to him by virtue of his geographical position. We could IJ'*< have w. -r of the Mi*--:*- Ippl a population of millions of people who are prosperous and are great con sumers We never should have seen j the year- when we built 10.000 and 12.n*»u miles of railway, for there would have b« . n no farmers w«*-t of the M<" - ippi river who could have used the land that would have been opened up by the building of those railway* And if we had not -een the years when we could build 10.000 and 12.000 miles of railway a year, we ■h'cild not htvo today en*t -f the Mississippi a at eel and iron produc ing center, which is at once the mar vel and the despair of Europe, because we *■ .**l*l not hav* built up ;* t*-* I and iron Industry if there had been no market for its product. We could n«>t Pav in New England i a great boot and shoe industry; wo could no? have in New England a great, cotton milling Industry; we could no? have spread throughout New York and Pennsylvania and Ohio man ufacturing Industrie* of the most di versified kinds, became those Indus ! trie* would have no market among the farmers west of the Mississippi river. And While the progress of thi* ■ ■ f tb - agricultural »* t of this country, did mean the Impairment of the ag ricultural value east of the Mississippi river that ran up into hundreds of millions of dollars. It meant Incident ally the building up of great manu fact .* it; ■ • •! a? added to the value of this land by thou-ands of millions of dollar* And. gentlemen, those thing- were not foniMn in the *7o'* The statesmen and the public ' mm of thi* country did not see what part the agricultural development of the west wa* going to play in the In dustrial development of the east. And you may read the decisions of the Interstate commerce commission from • the fir*? to the la-’ and what is one of the greatest characteristics of those dec i The continued inability to sc*’ the question In this large way. The Interstate commerce coromis slon never can see anything more ■ than that the farm land of some farm er I" decreasing in value, or that some man w o has a flour mill with a pro duction of fifty barrels a day is be- Im: crowded . ut. It never can see that the i on or impairment of farm value* in this place means the building up of farm values In that place, and that that shifting of value* Is a necessary incident to the Indus- , trial and manufart ur.tig development <»f this country And if we shall give to the Interstate commerce commis sion power to r> dilate rates, we shall no longer have our rates regulated on the sta'<‘«manlike basis on which they have been regulated in the past by the railwny men, who really have been great statesmen, who really have been great builders of empires, who have had an imagination that rivals the imagination of the greatest poet and of the greatest Inventor, and who have operated with a courage and dar ing that rivals the courage and dar ing of the greatest military general. But we shall have our rates regulated by a body of civil servants, bureau crats, whose besetting sin the world over is that they never can grasp a situation in a large way and with the grasp of the statesman; that they never can see the fact that they are confronted with a small evil; that that evil is relatively small, and thaf It cannot be corrected except by the creation of evils and abuses which are Infinitely greater than the one that la to be corrected.” Angels mar have wings, but that does not Indicate that they will wel eeese a man milliner. THE WRONG WAY TO WALK Inelegant and Slovenly Galt Noticed All Too Frequently. Walking—one of the most popular j and beneficial exercises—is well dis- j ; cussed in Good Housekeeping: Very stout or slouchy people allow the abdomen to “lead." Brain work- i j era, worriers, all nervous and physl- I , cally uncultivated people, let their i heads lead; the head is further ad- j vanced than any other part of the per son. Dyspeptics whose thoughts are ; centered on their stomachs, often un- J | consciously lead with the waist line Just over the offending organ Oc casionally a weak-willed person per- : rnits the knees to lead. When a thin, j bad walker moves rapidly, there often seems to be a race between nose and • knees, and you watch to see which will arrive at the goal first. When a young woman’s skirt and a ' young man's trousers show a bulging shape over the knees, their owners ' are leading sedentary lives or have never learned to walk correctly. This part of the lower limbs should be kept straight, and the ball of the foot, not the heel, should touch the ground , first When the head Is beet for long Iftnira over sewing machine or ledger <>r onion bed, it is not an easy matter to pull it back to its proper position i and make it stay there, and It seems j so much more easy and comfortable I to let the chest sink than to hold ft j ! up to Its right place; but the demands ! *f health and beauty are identical in 'he matter of a head held easily, not i egotistically, bark, and a chest 1 in the htgke.-t and most advanced position. It is a striking tact that this atti tude of head and cnest is expressive. ! not only of health and grace, but of ■ the finer mental qualities. The em- i bar raised boy drops his head; If he ( ' would hold his head up. his nervous ness would disappear. The shy girl thinks that every <»ne in the room is looking at her. and her chest sinks; | but if she would hold it up assume j the attitude of courage, though *he I have it IV -w; .;' car- w ff: ti er they looked or not. The self-eon- ; , scions person who knows be Is stiff and awkward, and who knows that his stiffness and awkwardness are the direct results of his «elf-coo*r ious- | ness, should Imagine that a strong string is attached to the upper part of his ch<st and held by an invisible hand above him. AH he has to do is to let his body depend from that Ktritg and keep his head well bark of It. and his mind and body will alike become easy and free. The most grant ful wa’kcr I ever knew told me ; 1 that she habitually walked by the aid , of this invisible cord. Tooth Brushes. Dr. 8 H Arnold civ*-- some fetrrwt- ' fog facts and good advice In regard to that daily friend, the tooth brush: Nearly all brushes are made from bristles taken from the wild hogs of Russia or China. The handles are common beef bone*. They are made j mostly In Japan. Franc.' England and Germany, and by one firm in the i United States Probably English : brushes ar«* the best made and worst : shaped. The French are next In qua!- \ ity, but far ale-ad in form Germany and Japan are generally Imitators, j Some of the irod expensive English , and French, and all American brushes, , are made in factories under more or . less sanitary conditions, but the cheap i **r grades, including all German and Japanese brushes, are made in the hut* of the j * -vint- wi *tg cattle, dog*, swine, fowls and human* are I herded in common. The bristles and ' bene are given out by the dealer and taken Into the country, where they are assorted by the aged and young chil dren and diseased persons, the strong er members of the family working at more remunerative employment. These cheap brushes are eften in the most unsanitary and wretched sur rounding* imaginable, and it is a sig nificant fact that aft* r being trade they are seldom sterilized before using. The English brushes are generally very much too large to be efficient The French are better shaped, but are | apt to be too long of head, making much waste to the brush, and are too long of brisGe. A wide brush Is not advisable je cattse it limits the movement possibly longitudinally to the tooth, bris tle* are nof the best, because they bend when the brush Is thrust back i between cheek and teeth, and stay bent till the brush is withdrawn, thus missing the interproxlmal spaces so much in need of cleaning. Soft bris tles become softer when wet. and utterly fail to enter the spaces at all. If the surface of the bristles Is con caved longitudinally to fit the labial curve of the teeth, then when the , ; brush is reversed and used on the lin gual surfaces, only the ends of the brush engage the teeth; hence, more teeth are missed than cleaned, and the user is deceived Into thinking he has cleaned his teeth because he has brushed them. Studying the brush over and what I* J required of it. It would seem that the ' brush best adapted to use in the hu- j man mouth should have a short, nar | row head, with short, rather stiff bris- | ties, trimmed straight longitudinally * ( and convex latitudlnally. that each line j . of bristle* may come successively Into J use as the brush Is rotated. i . I IT Breathing for Strength. Instead of the above heading might be written. “Breathing for life." For that Is reslly what we do. And since this fact Is so easily demon strated, It is strsmge that we barto j not more quickly and fully discovered that in this vital process lies the secret remedy for a thousand Ills, if not "the fable fountain of Immor’s youth.” Men have lived weeks with out c-ating; days without drinking, and nights without sleeping; but how long can we live without breathing? Twenty ounces of food and a few pints of water will supply the body one day; but. upon a low estimate it requires thirty thousand pints of air in the same length of time. The delicate machine which this volume of air enters is said to contain over 700,000,000 air cells, or little workshops. Into the walls of these there flows, like the sewerage of a great city, the foul, venous blood of the body. In these remarkable wt"k sfioj s it is quickly transformed 1 a rushing red torrent filled with 1 • giving oxygen from the air. Wha a wonderful invention! What a axira ta lons process! And yet you are trust ed with operating one of these ins?~n ments. Would you note Its magical eff ct under proper conditions? Then str erect. Open the doors and window or. if you are sick in bed. have th m . opened. Lift your chest and chin, at.d breathe the invigorating air of h->a ven. till the muscles of your abdor - n fairly botmd with joy. Now, Isn’t t at a tonic Them take It many time a day. You can repeat the dose of' n. Even a* I write the fresh air tick * try flc.• •• r tip- for when we brea e '■■•••ply. it go s to all parts of Le To "Th* Sutter n' Neat-** Then- w < * a little woman • l ■ i ? ?•■!! 'his woman Disliked t ■ dwell with light. Bh- ■«.-.! her Mind* up tightly. Then < japed »h«* wt? .|ow* o'er. 1 • in.- W 1 -;-,U i i* nn-1 floor. TM« dainty little woman Grew xejy jwle and thin. J ■ '' w. k sprouts In cellars deep and dim. Ah. silly little woman’ Y«*i. h . . : • Ut of Sight. B« auj.«r you would not l*-t In The „t ijods light. harm and Fireside Consumption Can Be Conquered. TS universal interest In the A' ‘I- Tul* rculosis movement is shown in every convention held to consider t • work The discussions are practl il. not theoretical The audiences are popular, not merely professional. T;.e whole people are Intereted. In i s« - i<>n just cleared at Atlai a. Georgia, many important and inter* st ing phases of the prevention and c re of consumption were considered. ;>r. C. P. Ambler gave a concise review of the duty of the physician in char i to the patient and family. Hl« pa,are I wa« enthusiastically received nd adopted as the sense of the League on this subject. His points were as follow* First. Tubercu. .-Is N not the fata! • aaa commonly believed. Second While com inimical* - it can be made practically harm!* -by the proper course on the part <>i the patient. Third —The chief cause of high ! mortality is late diagnosis. Fourth — diagnosis Is :sed * by indifference of the patient t • arly ; symptoms and carelessness n the part of the physician consulted Fifth—-By thorough, systematic in struction of the patient better result* can be accomplished than by r. • ilea- j tlon Sixth- Instruction of patient, fam- i ily and friends, and close ohac i nee \ on their j»art of the rule* laid own will practically rob the dlscav f its ! method and means of extending. Items that Count. Thore is one iroportau. far? that should be Indelibly fixed in the mtnd ; or every thinking, reasoning being, ’ and that Is that any physical derange- : u.er.t. no matter how slight, leaves Its impres- on the system, and that the individual ran never be e*a< • the *atn*- as before. We know this con trary to the opinion generally held for we frequently hear the remark made concerning one who has recently ~*h ssed through a slight sickness: "The doctor says he is as sound as s bell now!" This is optimism pure and simple, on the part of the phys ician. and it do«*s good by establishing confidence In the mind of the whilom patien ; but. in reality, 't is not so. No disturbance of the normal course of the functions can pass away and leave things exactly as they were. A permanent damage has been inflicted, and although it Is not appreciated at the time. Nature is a rigid bookkeeper, and these apparently trifling debt* to her are duly entered against the indi vidual. and you may rely upon it that sooner or later the bill will be pre sented. It is the sum total of these minor Injuries that become formida ble—the accumulation of these trif ling derangements that break dost constitutions ultimately. The Use of the Potato. According to statistics cited by Wnl i dron in the Revue pour Tons, the po tato Is more largely ised in Europ* i than any other food substance, the 1 average amount annually eaten per | capita being aa follows in the diffet ent countries named: England. 24S pounds; Austria. 662 pounds; France. 697 rounds; Norway and Sweden, 7Jt pounds: Germany, 1.298 pounds; land, 1.364 pounds. The per diem eon sumption for England Is eleven ounces per day, and Ireland, three and three fourths pound. o*> nearly six times IS much. Mars Peopled By Farmers. “Mars Is inhabited.” The fact la proved, according to Prof. Robert W. I*rentiss of Rutgers College, by the straight line* on the surface erf the planet, which, he says, are fertilized areas of land instead of huge canals, as heretofore believed by asironomecs. These views, which are the results of his scientific researches, he set forth recently in a atereopticon lecture held under the auspices of the board of ed ucation at Fifty-ninth street and Park avenue. He said that nearly the entire sur face of th*- planet Mars was desert land, and that through the wastes were many straight lines, which he believed were strips of land, cultivated by intelligent people.—New York World. Deepest Known Fishing. Near the Tonga islands, in the rifle, some time ago a fish net was Mink 23.000 feet below the surface. That Is the deepest haul ever made. It took a whole day to sink the net and raise it. Life was found even at that depth, over four miles, where the temperature w-aa Just above freez ing and the pressure 2,000 pounds to the square inch. Back at Work Again. Buffalo, N. Y.. May 22nd.—(Spe cial) —Crippled by Kidney Disease til! he could not stand on his feet for the hours required at his trade. F. R McLean. 90 East Ferry St., this city, had to quit work entirely. Now he’s back at work again and he does not hesitate to give the credit to Dodd * K:dney Pills. Yes.” Mr say* "I was too bad. I had to quit I could not stand on my feet for the necessary hours. It was Kidney Disease I had. and a friend advised me to try Dodd’s Kid cey Pills I did so and after using six boxes am completely cured aa<! era working as steadily as before I was sick I recommend Dodd’s Pill* to any one afflicted with Kidney trou I • * Th**re is no form of Kidney Disease Dodd's Kidney Pills will not cure They always cure Bright’s Disease th** most most advanced and dsadh stage of Kidney Disease Automotor Cars. The International Railway Congress at its recent meeting in Washington • .nsidered the use of autornotors and in its resolutions declares that exper iments with this class of vehicles should be continued. It may be expected,” the conclu sions say, "that from now on autptno !•:!•• cars and automotora hauling trail ers will constitute a valuable means of transportation which on some llnc-s will have a great future. Owing to the saving in the number of employes re qulred, the probable reduction in cost of maintenance, the material reduction in the cost of traction and better util ization of roiling stock and the smaller extent of station installations required, it will be possible materially to reduce the cost of working line** with little traffic, and will, in the cases of other Hues, result In a material Improve ment in the working of some classes of service. Their use will certainly ef fect a change in the system of opera tion in the case of a great number of lines and appears to hare a real fu ture before 1L" Superior quality and extra quantity must win. This I* why Defiance Starch la taking the place of all others. When a young man t»egins to call on a girl twice a week his mother fears the worst. i i TEA Your grocer has also our coffee baking-powder ex tracts spices and soda. Ail alike as to trueness and goodness. # Srt»tli!n*r • fie.t la * cuod foot rul* t» «nnn your fror*r »UA. Ye*. Csrdelta. It Is posaible for a pretty woman to be a plain cook. Stats or Oim. City or Toledo, i L« .» * »YY t■* Tsaxb J < him) m*tM <-*rb that b« la mW earner of the firm of t J. ' urn A Co. 4-lnC tn the * tty »f T .eU *. * mu:/ »ud »;ai* at-reM' t %A.l tt,»t *al<* firm «!i: pay tfte *am »f OXK HI Nl’tiEif DOLLARS f t e».-h ar.d **ery ea-«- of « that r»i*Dvt be c urea by i&a in of Balls tiuttu Ccu. FRANK .» CHENET Iwt.-m to before me and Mb* r-bed In my pra» •sea. *!.!• *ifi day of December. A. D I*°** . —* - , A. W. GLEASON. XffTlIT PIILW. Hal * Catarrh Cure ?• taken IrtcrnaUy and acta Street 'y on the hi«**d and tnuc*-u* aurfacea cf tU« ay*tcuj. send fur leatla.- nlala free t J. < HENE Y a CO.. Tot«4a,o gold by all Drairtrl-t*. 7%e. Taka HaU'a Family Plila for cooaupnUum Fat Crowe say* he can't stand living sway from-Omaha. The question now l* whether Omaha can stand Fat. **Oyapepata Tormented Me for Team. Dr. Paitd Kennedy ■ Faf rriU- Kemedy rtire.l n» ” Mr* C. a. Doutfberty. MlUrtU*. Jt.J. l wdom»;Mn. SA Virtue becomes a vice as soon aa you are vain of It. Mer, Ftaxlbl, and Laitlng* won't shake out or blow out; by using Defiance Starch you obtain better re sults than possible with any other brand and one-third toon for as mo money. ‘b.mr fnrroer* are troubled with In flammatory rheumatism, and some i.w.trs wttn inflammatory Reubenlem. TEA~ The modestest thing in the world is tea. It is only tea! It 1* a woman's fondness for change that prevents many a husband from leaving any In his pocket. Those Who Have Triad It wltl use no other. Defiance Cold Wi» tor Starch has no equal In Quantity or Quality—l 6 os. for 10 canto. Ottoar brands contain only 12 os. Mrs. Jordan—Did you ever hear my daughter aing. Mr. Johnson? Mr. Johnson—Ob. yen; I only live Are blocks from your boms you know. The Young Physician. WHAT HLS EXPERIENCE PROVED. In the early sixties it wa* usually the duty of a practicing physician to ride many miles every dav ou hss regular round of \isits upon his patients. In those day* a young man who had receive! a splendid medical training in one of the be-t medical colleges of that day was ac customed to ride ten. twenty or thirty miic* nr more visiting the sick and afflicted. Hi* success was soon phenom enal. iKwtors ami families called him for consultation to towns at considerable dis tances by rail. One of hi* specialties was the cure of thorn distressing d :*,•»*,*< of women. He liad early discovered that i by combining th** vegetable extract of th«* following medicinal plants in Just the right proportion w ithout the use of alco hol— hi* prescription invariably oimi such case*. Later, in order to place this remedy before the public in a sha;**- easily to be procured, lie 4 -tablish**! a labora tory at Buffalo. N. Y where regularly qualified chemists were put in charge to accurately prepare his prescript;on and put it In -hai*- for shipment to all parts of the United States. 'I h:« remedy, which he named Dr. Fierce** Favorite Fr*->crip tlon. i* not a "patent medicine” in th*? common acceptance of the term, hut a tonic for women, and a regular phvsl- Conviction Follows Trial When buying loose coffee or anything your grocer happens to Imre in his bin. how do you know what you are ? Some queer stories about eiffee that is sold in bulk, couhl lie told, if the peojile who lioiullo it (grocers), cared to Eqs-ak out. Could any amount of mere talk have persuaded milliona of houaekeeqiera to use Lion Coffee, the leader of all package coffees for over a quarter of a century, if they had not found it sujierior to all other brands in Purity, Strength, Flavor and (Jnllormlty ? This pyto sec,ss of MON COFFEE ess be dee only to teberest sierlt. There Is so ill 11, - proof of merit than cos- Ueucd aed tec res. iso pspelsrltjr. - U Ike verdict of MILLIONS OF BOUSt HI I puts does not convince g/ yon ofl the merits ol LION COFFEE. Mi It costs yon but n trtlle to buy a lr Wl pncknflc. It is the easiest way to X/WidwSril/Wl convince yonroelL and to make AglcV 'W>''JriSk I yon n PERMANENT PURCHASER. I LION i'OFFEE i* ao.’d "nIT in I IN. Tr" 5I and rparhe* you a* purr sud oeaa aa auen il left our /M hm'\c ??**■»** LißfitoS f<-r taiaabl# prpmiima. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE A friend who knows your secret hold* a mortgage on your peace of mina. TEA Tea is coarse or fine, tea or weed, harsh or smooth, keen or soft, heavy or bright; but words are empty. WrttA for oor Knonlodtf* Book, A. trblUlaf a Company, Ran f ran.-loco. If p«opl« wi re compelled to think twice before they art lots of actora w'ouidn't get u chance to act. Mr*. Window’* Soothing Syrup. Tor rh' d-en tertfclntf. oofteaa thn gun.a. r—loca* fp. BaOili nli«»lii.abA|apaUt,CßTW wladcolß.. Zk n IvUA Many a man will give another man a letter of recommendation, though he wouldn't lend the applicant a dollar. No chromo? o- cheap premiums, but a better quality and one-third more of Defiance Starch for ttoa same prftoa of other starches. It’a an easy matter to get satisfac tion hy going to law—if you art a lawyer. TEA How much money do we return to dissatisfied people ? All that our grocers get asked for. Your grower mumi your money tf you doal Uk* SrfaUUßgb BenL An Irish philosopher say* he knows of no satisfactory reason why woman should not become good business men. SMOKERS FIND LEWIS* SINGLE BINDER .'tCltv better Qotlity tkm nost tot Ci*m Tow Jobber er direct front Factory. Peoria, 111 BEE SUPPLIES —H? of lapp'lH tree. CWLokAU'I HOMEY I’KOBI CKIU' ASSOCIATION. 1440 Market Street, Denver. Italian Queens In aemnn. Sheep: Cattle Dip Wo carry all the best makes of dins. PASTEUR’S VACCINE. LIME AND SULPHUR- Write for prices and cir culars. We are headquarters. ▼MB L A. WATKINS MDSE. CO. BBg Wa— It, Denver, Celersde. W. N. U.—DENVER.—NO. 1905. WhSS Answsrtna Advert. icm« its Kltb Mstttios This Pacer. clan’s prescription, and contains the lowing non-alcoholic ingredients : |r Lady's Slipper [Cypripe>Uum Puheaemak Black Cooosh <('imirifuon Hacemtmx). Unicorn root ( ChnrturX irHtm lutsumj, Blue Cohosh^ Caulophyllum ThalictroiduQ Golden Seal HydrasU* CaruuU msis>. Scientifically prepared by experleneoA chemists at tne Laboratory of tho World’s Dispensary Medical Associa tion, Buffalo, X. Y. Dr. Pierce does not claim for his "Fa rorite Prescription • that it is a "curo-alL* It is recommended as a most perfect specific for woman's peculiar ailment*. So uniform are the results which follow the use of this remarkable remedy, that it can be truly affirmed of "Favorite Pre scription ” that it alufiyt help « and almost aheay* cures. Ninety-eight per cent, of the women who give this medicine a fair and faithful trial are cured and remaia cured. It l* a powerful invigorating tonic, im parting health and strength in particular to the womb aud its appendages, lisa local, womanly health is *o intimately rotated to the general health that whaa disea&c* of the delicate womanly organa are cured the whole body gains in hsallfc and strength. For weak and sickljr women who are "worn-out,” * run-down” or debilitated, especially for women wfca work in store, office or schoolroom, wbn sit at the typewriter or sewing machine or bear heavy household burdens. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription will prov* si priceless !*-neflt beeau*e of its health rustonug and strength-giving power. The Proof. •I want to tell you of th# great Improve ment to my health since taking your'Fimk ; Ite Prescription.' " say* Mrs. It. 8. Jones, of to I N C. "When I t**ran It* v.so l waa a w nhy*i- &1 wreck and had despaired of «•*•» having good health again. Could not alt up all day. 1 n -o-d a a*rent improvement before the tit-Nt Little waa all used. Wa* suffering with ahtuat every pain ibat a woman th sufae i jes-t t.had ii.narnn.atlon of the OTartas. painful and suppressM periods, and other byuiptxms of female d;*4'a»e. After taking -i* bottles of 'Fsvortt** I’rescrlpUcm.'l OMS like a new peram. Can ride horseba'k and take all kinds of exercise aad not feel tired.” Fef.i. Crastky?—Casa of const! pntlon. A man or woman who ncglccL* constipa tion suffer- from slow poisoning. I ten-tor Pierce’* Pleasant Pellets cure constipa tion. One little “Pellet” is a geatle laxative, and two a mild cathartic w. L Douglas makes and sells more Men’s •■'!..‘»o than any other tnanufaetnrer In the world. SKMHM* I SEW ASP to say sss was car 4t«srs*s Ibis lift TV. L Douglas ST.3O shoes are ths greatest s*-llers In the world because of their excellent style. ea«y fitting and tuierlur wearing equalities. They are d a* gM.xl as those that eost from to OO to 97.00. The only difference to ", the prior. TV. L. Itonglas *:i.M shoes | mr eo*t mure to make, hold their shape tot better, wear longer, and are of greater value than any other MU*.AO shoe on the market today’. W. L. IhFuglas guar antees their value by stamping his name and price on the bottom of each shoe. Look for It. Take no substitute. TV. I- Douglas A-AO shoes are sold through htsown retail stores In the prin cipal cities, and by shoo desirrs every where. >o matter where you live, W. L. Douglas shoes are within your reach. EQUAL #l.OO SHOES. “/ have veom W. L. Donfflat S3JO than foe y/rtirt, and rounder them r'/uai to any SSjUO iV* "*«* os the market. They/ have often esttr« e<tl\tf*cUon. m «'rn. H. Andtreon, Meat AUaU Agent. A*u*as Cug, Mo. Boys wear W. L. Douglas llMtolllM •hoes her—es they tot bettor, held their shape and wear longer th— ether M*fcH if L. Ponglae u« Corona Cottitrn 4m Ms X3JO shoe». Corona Coil it conceded St W the JLnett patent leather produced. Fast Color Eyelets will mot wekr Brossy. W. L. Douglas has the largest shoe mail order butiri-ss to the world. >o trouble to set sSt brraaiL at cents extra prepays delivery. If you desire further Information, write for JU unrated Latalugne of Apr tne Stglee. W. L DOWLAS, —u»s os #rsefc—n. Mass. DENVER BEST U SST new prsmlutn Ust. The Geyaerito Mo— MIS. Co. D—mr. DITCIITO w atseo a. Onaua, Patent Ab rJft I rii I A tornsy.Waahingtoo.D.C Adv'co ■ nibniV (rM . Terms low. High— ref. Howard E. Burton, hp«cui)rn prx es. gold, stiver. lead/ •l • fold, sliver. 76c; gold. 60c; sine or copper, fl. Cyanide tests Mailing envelopes and full price list sent on application. Control Kd umpire work solicited. Lead elite. Colo. Terence Carbonate National Bank. A b bA ■ ZHSIctsESK- ■ WA tsOmo. —gvrdr—gtoia