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BOYS’ SHOES always the hardest proposition in the shoe business to please the parents and their pocket book, and the boys and their joys and to come out smiling after the fracas is the ambition of every shoeman. Our I airfield boys sh >es are ' i >J. stout, everyday shoes that stand the efforts of the most strenuous boy. And look at the prices, 9 to II 51.25, ll's to 2 $1.50, 2 l / 2 to 5 $1.75. And next comes the Hollanders, the best I toy s shoe made to day. The makers do nothing else but make bo_\ 's shoes; make them k<>< d: study the needs of the boys: give them snap, stj le and WEAR. Priced at $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00 according to size, and its for you to go to the place to buy boy’s shoes in Idaho Springs. SWANSON, The Shoeman Before Going to Denver TO BUY VOI R QUEENSWARE Call in and see our new imported styles. We sell at the same prices as the DENVER DEALERS. You save the time, hotel bill, rail wav fare and freight. The Roberts Bros. Mercantile Company. Dig Double Store on .Miner Street. “PiMiwcsiiies" ,\ Spring rutin A:: <1 i :::<r in bis quiet ! Wi- busily hustling every day ’ .! ust ] ■ . ::;r - ut with ('< sd they said but in.ee, j.«<ipU to him ; sped" March was \cut Bashful. If it '■ . brnary, it c ■ ■in April. You may . • 1 1 ■ ige over to I ti;t- time i till up. Wc can ! supply >oti at short notice. llunsc < leaniiij; Ti im* <Hi lo\! It b .tts h<-\v biivy .i man is | away fi'-.m homo in house-! A i:;;:it im- . Now is the 11 nit t'» e. t the Coal bin | « it- ne«l up and ready for the "fjsfn's C.,al. We will tell you in this paper and by card Ice tlelivi-reil b tilv. G. H. Curnow phones Black 77 2 ami Porks -7. 11. O. Allen, the dentist. Opportunities in the Texas Panhandle. Very low hotneseek era’ rates are offered. 1-y the Colorado & Southern to points *u Texas for the laud seeker. Let us tell you alx-ut the country and at es. T !•'. Fisiikr, G. P. A. Try us for ranch eggs, vegtables p*.ultrv and meats. THERO & Co. *° rind place VwfcjßS conceded by men of affairs who t the First National Rank. Let lls yon al>out the opportun- I ities here for acquiring indepen l ai,KC - &f>e First National Bank Idaho Springs, Colorado. High School Notes. The Arbor Day program was of the ! highest order. Programs occurred in every school room in the city. • The physics class took a trip to the hall gr'.ju.L Wednesday, where they » •>nduc ted a number of experiments on sound Miss Herr left for New York city yes ter 1 ty afternoon, where she will be gone a week or ten days. Mrs. Ibke will have | charge of her classes while she ts gone. The Manual Training department ex hibited their work Saturday. Lunch was served and numbers of visitors were re > eived during the day. ! Althothis weather has interfered some what with the boy’s practice they have been w irking steadily in athletics and expect to send a good team to the Boul der track meet. EUREKA Yes I have Found it at Last. Found what' Why that Chamber lain’s salve cures eczema ami all manner jof .telling of the skiu. I have been i afflicted (or many ‘years with skin 1 disease. I had to get op three or four times a night and wash with cold i water i<> allay the itching but since using i tins salve in Decnuler, 1905, the itch j mg has stopped and has not troubled 1 me. Li her J' iin G. 0m.i.1 Rootville, Pa. ; For Sale by J. J. Sherwin. Gentle and Effective. A well-known Manitoba editor writes "As an inside worker I find Cham’ erlaiths Stomach and Liver Tablets invaluable for the touch es of biliousness natural to seden ' tary life, their action being gentle and I effective clearing the digestive tract and the head. Samples free. J. J. Sherwin. KEELEY ■ % INSTITUTE Cor. Eighteenth and Curtis Sts DENVER, COLO. Alcohol and Drug Addictions :tv ,1 ientiftc course of medication. ; i ace in Colorado where the K Remedies are administered Mr- F. H Ang ve departed /•,; J days visit in the valley. G A. Dumont was in Kollinsv T I' sd.vv on mining business. Con Calahan departed the fir »? w* ek for his ranch near Fort M The Etster:. Star members g*\ sical a their meeting last Tuts > ning. Liveryman I. D Kills and drov- the vabev last M >n lay to look af’ stock. Jas. A. N.xme, of Georgetow: w , down Thursday greeting many ■ friends. Mrs Ralph Knowels and dsngl <ire spending the week iu Golden \ . _ with relatives The Soci 1' IT.hies club held it lar meeting Thursday afternoon • .a Mrs. Dr. Allen. Rev. L K Jones, of Jackson, will preach *.t the Presbyterian tomorrow morning and evening. \Y A. Maxwell departed ye ! y afternoon for Illinois to join 1 who is at the bedside of her sick er Mrs. J. B. Allen and daughter I-. Mauiice O’Donnell, were passer. •ri the Thursday afternson traiu for t tro polls. Simon An<lerson. the Argentine • : . man, went to Denver Thursday r er n->»n. where lie recently purch 1 comfortable home. G. C. Stimuli, assistant geuei 1 cheese of the Gem. tore hims- *r rn town Thursday a. in., for a short • tween trains in the capital city. Governor Buchtel has appointe B. (it-ijsbeek. formerly of this I serve for the lorrg term on the rt created state board of acc uulancv The Clear Creek and Gilpin rust c mpany Thursday received a n and ' larger fire and burglar proof safe take the place of the one formerly in use and which proved to be too nail for the rapidly increasing demand- Alderman F. A. Miller lost -blooded dog "Jim” last Monday, canine meeting with a peculiar ac, ient. In racing along the sidewalk l; animal’s head came in contact with t: curbing breaking its neck, and caus instart death. Word was received by M: Adolph Nelson yesterday of the death :i Wiscon sin of Fred Dox. Mr.Dox left ere about : three weeks ago apparent!. in the , best of health. He was well k: .vn in the i city having lived here for the past few years. Captain Jessie F. Stark and I. -tella M. Phillips, of the Volunteer America h ive been assigned to carry ' :.t a cam -1 paigu of street meetings in th s city, and perhaps may bold indoor meetings if ar rangements can he made. Col. A. M. Wright will join the workers here by the latter part of next week. William Priquett, a stage driver be tween Walcott and Kncauipuicnt, Wyo., and son of John Priquett, formerly a well known timberman of this camp, who is now located near Saratoga, Wyo.. was killed Wednesday of this week by a run away team. He was dragged .1 consider able distance and was run over by a heavy stage, so that his body was badly mutilated. Geo. M. Kimball and O. I. Hall, of Golden, were in the city to-day confer ring with members of the fire depart ment and others in behalf of the ! committee in charge of the cel ebration to be given at Gol len on the Ith and sth of July. The gentlemen vis- I lted in Georgetown and Silver Plume : yesterday, and were encouraged to be* ; lieve that there will be a large attendance from this county as well as a number of fire teams at the Golden tournament. H. L. Robinson and M. C. Lake re ! turned the first of the week from a hunt ing tripin the neighborhood of Bertboud. The gentlemen brought home with them a gunny sack filled with luscious fowls, which included seventeen species of 1 ducks, hoth wild ami tame. The hunts -1 men were entertained by a shooting club • which owns a chain of five lakes four ’ miles north of Berthoud. They went hunting in an automobile, and after shutting their eyes and shooting upwards the auto would be turned towaro the di rection in which they had shot, and the ducks would fall upon them. It was cloudy all the lime from the number of ducks which obstructed the sunihine. Brick estimates that they saw not less than five million ducks, while Lake is confident that there were at least twice that many in sight. A PURE AIR (???). Draft. Not Cold. Is the T* . j . Harmful. Keep your thong-hs on i i < the home. Don’t be afr.i 1 it a little cold. None of P*-ar;. s ty caught cold all the time the> were in regions away below zero Pure un adulterated cold is healthful. It Is not all the time pleasant, but one ran w rap up sufficiently to provide against *he discomfort of It. That Is easy That Is what they do with consump tives — wrap them up warmly and put them out into the fresh, cold air. It is not the cold that hurts; It is the draft, which disturbs the tem perature of the body and consequently ’he equilibrium of the circulation, which in turn stuffs up the capillaries, and there you are —sneezing, wheez ing. coughing, hocking, grunting and making yourself a public calamity. If one cares to enjoy an interesting scientific research of his own. let him get In a nice little draft, with his side or back to it. and then pay particular attention to what is going on. Pretty soon he will feel a -harp dryness in his throat, a tickline twinge in one nostril a sort of dingy feeling along or.e le of the head, and an impudent chili crawling down one leg and gnaw ing at the ankle. Then he gets up with a mean cold, which, by gentle care of himself, will last him three days. Therefore, flood your home with fresh air. cold or hot, better cold, but keep an eye on that draft; It is al ways just on the outside, waiting to catch yo uunawares; it is a mean con spiracy and usually aims at nice, thoughtless p< le A Iraft is a worse enc-mv to a happy, healthy life than all the mince pie, shrimp salad, hogs head cheese, and Welsh rarebit that one can eat at 12 o'clock at night. So, please do not mix your cold with a draft.—Ohio State Journal. EASY ROAD TO MINER’S HEART. Child Beggars in Camp Early Become Worldly Wise. "The mining camp child usually de vel.w'S into the greatest beggar as a class that child life ever sees,” said H. I) Smith, of Milwaukee. “I have never been fn a mining camp yet *'he’«- there were children that one of them did not stop me every now and the and ask for some money or a piece of ore Their plaintive walls are to be heard on all sides. “A story is told of a little girl In Dawson who made it her custom to ask every miner she saw for a nug get. She was a cute little thing, and her request was nearly always ac ceded *o. After a while she had $.3,000 worth of nuggets collected in this fashion. As a rule, the miner is a generous fellow, particularly in a gold camp where the Inhabitants have pros pered and where most of the men have claims of their own. Nearly all of them carry loose gold around in their pockets and think nothing of giving little chunks of it away. "In camps where they are not thus supplied with gold they usually are free with their money and the beg ging child is tossed anything from a nickel to a dollar.”—Duluth Herald. Told by the Teeth. “A man carries a good barometer In his teeth," declares a dentist of large experience. "The teeth are pe culiarly affected by damp weather, especially bad teeth. When strangers begin flocking to my consulting room complaining of toothache and pains in the jaw, I know that we are going to have a spell of bad weather. A good bit of it is neuralgia, but is is a sure sign. "This rush of business keeps up tin til the bad weather Is well set in. and when business falls off I know that we shall soon have better weather. When toothache patients are few- and far between I am assured that we are in for a spell of fine weather." It Marriage a Failure? Maria, the colored maid, had been neglecting her work shamefully. Her mistress remonstrated, but in vain. Finally Maria's carelessness called forth a sharp rebuke. To soften the Bting the mistress added: “Maria, I think you must be in love.” Maria, who was resting rumlnative ly on her broom handle, drew her self up and replied with great dig nity; “ 'Deed, ma’am, I*s a married ’oman!" —Judge. One Exception. Ned —I called upon Miss Outertown last night, determined to win her. She accepted me all right. Dick —Good for you! Carried every thing before you, eh? Ned —Not everything. When I start ed to catch the last train home I car ried her father's bulldog behind ma. - TMy . * • - • • • « ■ = • • • . * ' » j ANDREW ANDERSON, 5 Wines, Liquors, Cigars C- WORTH S OLD STAND Elegantly Refitted and Planned for the Comfort of our Patrons. A Specialty Made of Imported^M ines and Liquors. •fi 1623 Miner St. Idaho Springs, Colo. S- 2 ; } iSH§ I he mail is quick, the telegraph, is quicker, » 2 J ■ but the long distance telephone is install- || taneous and you don't have to'wait for an answer. • | tl Two Direct Lines To Denver 1] It -fl 1 Prompt and Courteous Service 3S IIPICMRIisi" ■ OSB h a unique product. Uxc decoration of this ware is notable SySp** tor originality and beauty. For that undcfinable fometbing W which attaches to products made ™' s T "* M *"* -- —Ndj i>y artiVts wlo work I I uncier conditions of Ya< 'v'*'/ rk <x yT-irira \1 j a #.. freedom and who take | I pleasure in w hat they ~ ON lvl „, *, ece ’ * M J l ' : pl 0000000000000000000 0000000000000000000 l You Way Wish to Spruce Up a Bit! § ® O If so, we have the best Red Spruce Timbers ° 0 and Planking ever offered in this section of g ® our country. Their durability for under- O .j ground work is unquestioned. We also carry g I Everything Used in the Construction of a Building, g g The Idaho Springs Lumber Co g 3 o WILLIAM DENTON A. B. DUNTON C. S- BIRKINS Z ~ o O 9 9000000000000000000 0000000000000000000 FLUFF RUGS= Send us your old carpets. New- — machinery. Plant up to da£. A circular sent on application. A. H. WHAITE & CO., 1616 Glenarm St., Denver. Keep vip with the Times By Reading’ The Siftingfs-News The Official Paper of the City and County OOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOO6OOOOOOOOO i m ! I CLEAR GREEK and GILPIN TRUST f o p i Company i O O O o o o § General and Savings Banking S o o o o o Trust Company Building #o o o 60000000000000000000000000000000000000