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THE NEW ERA Published by THE NEW ERA PRINT ING and PUBLISHING CO. RAY RIDDLE, Editor. ALFRED H. LAW, Manager. A Republican newspaper devoted to the 'nterests of Walden and the North Park. SUBSCRIPTION KATKS: One Year $2.00 Six Months 1.00 Three Months 50 Advertising rates given on application. PUBLISHED EACH THURSDAY. Entered as second-class matter March 0, 1006, at the post oillce at Walden, Col orado, under Act of Congress of March 3, 1870. Hero shall the Press the cause oj Truth maintain, unawed by Influence and unbribed by (Jain. Everyone should attend the big show given by George Davis in the Odd Fel lows Hall on Nov. 56. Every where that the show has appeared it has been greet ed with great enthusiasm and all say it is the best thing yet. The meeting of Stockmen and Forest Reserve officers in Walden Nov. 10 is an event worthy of sertous consideration on tin* part of every man in North Park It is an effort of the Forestry Bureau to meet the Stockmen halfway . and is in tended to be their opportunity to suggest changes in the policy of the reserves Everyone should think seriously on the problems presented in conduct of the re serves and bo at the meeting prepared to present his ideas fairly to the Ad mini stration in a form impossibl to misunder stand and in a manner at which no offi cei can take offense. Above all every body ought to be there. Id the present financial situation there is food for rflection. One of two things appears to be happening. Either there is a genuine financial panic coming or else a very unusually big row going on in New York moneyed circles. The excitment seems to have started in the form of a fight in New York be tween the conservative banks and some of the newer trust compajes, commenced by the banks againt the trust companies owned by certain speculative geniuses. The opportunity came to strike the new comers a blow and the oldtimers used it intending to crush their new competitors and let it go at that. But when they had made their snowball and gotten it to rolling, after it had buried the intend ed victims, it rolled right on down tin* hill. If the clearing houses and banks can stop it before it hits any industries of importance a hard blow it is only a row in the game in New-York, but if it catches a few big manufacturing con cerns in a pinch, it becomes a panic. Died, this morning Grandmother Brands at the age of 90 years after a five days illness of pleurisy. The sympathy of all goes out to the bereaved family. JOE BLACK’S THIRST PARLORS ARE ST ILL IN W ALDEN, i 1 And Furnish the Best of All Kinds ol Imported and Domestic Liquors and Cigars for Cash. JOE BLACK, Propr. Gent’s Furnishings Famous Walk-Over Cigars and and Red Cross Shoes. Confectionary Best of Goods at Honest Prices at E. J. NORRIS. B For your Harness and Shoe Repairing work go to Tbos. R Cochrane, where all work is fully guaranteed. Leather and new harness repairs of any kind are to he found here. Second hand tools also to ho had both in carpenter and black smith Hues. Anvil and bellows also. Anyone wanting new harness come and get prices. Rubber boots,mended. When in town come in and see us,at the Daugh erty Building. Thos. R. Cochrane. Pasture for Beef Cattle. •100 acres of fine river bottom pasture newly fenced at Granby on Moffat road. Gate 200 yards from stockyards across river. Stock not disturbed or frighten ed by railroad trains. Plenty of good water. Rates reasonable. An Ideal place to hold your stock while awaiting shipment. Address J. N. Ostrander Kesidenence phone, Granby, Colo. Black 7015. Call from Granby Liv ery Stables. Wanted. Party for conn-act to grub and burn sagebrush on, and plow 160 acres ground, or portion. Work this fall. Call or tel ephone Philip P. Hoover, Walden Telephone Oflico. For Side—One Spaulding two seated top buggy. Almost new. J. M. Cochrane. ALFRED H. LAW Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law Notary Public. Full line of Legal Blanks,lnclud ing all Land Office, Conveyauc ing, and Business Transactions. I do Surveying and Prepare Maps. Plats and Filings of all Kinds. Telechone Numbers: ) Office, Walden 18 I Residence,Cedar 18 WALTER L. SHAIR, M. D. PHYSICIAN and SURGEON, j* Walden. Colorado W. 0. MOSMAN, U. S. COMMISSIONER. TFFR E DAYS: Monday and Saturday of each week. •• * • /JANS - REAL ESTATE Walden, Colorado. P. W. FISCHER, M. D. PHYSICIAN and SURGEON, j* Waldnc Colorado. Mr. William A. Radford will answer questions and give advice FREE OF COST on all subjects pertaining to the subject of btiildinu for the readers of this paper. f»n account of his wide expe rience ns Editor. Author and Manufac turer. he Is. without doubt, the highest authority on all these subjects. Address ull Inquiries to William A. Radford, No. 194 Fifth Ave.. Chicago, 111., and only Biiclose two-cent stamp for reply. A large family may be comfortably accommodated In a house like this. For economy of construction and heat ing, two very important features, it would be difficult to find anything better when the amount of room is considered. There are young children usually in all large families, and this house Is intended to boa paradise for children. The alcove off the front First Floor Plan. bedroom is the proper place for the little chaps and their small sisters. Nothing could be better or more cozy than this arrangement. It is big enough for a cot or a small bed and there is a small narrow clothes closet, Just the proper thing for their little belongings. Children who have such accommoda tions are fortunate and they appre ciate the situation in their way, espe cially after visiting their playmates, because they are sure to find children who are not so fortunate and they cannot help noticing the difference. As they grow older they will cause a little anxiety by climbing their way out through the window to the fiat tin roof, but the railing will keep them from falling over and they may be taught not to climb in dangerous places. Children are the life of the house and they should be remembered at building time. A perfect house is a difficult prop osition but this plan leaves very little to be desired. There is a front stair and a back stair, a good cellar, a good attic and plenty of croset room, in cluding a linen closet in the upper hall. The rooms are so compactly arranged that one chimney answers for the furnace, the Kitchen range and a grate in the sitting room. The sitting room, by the way, is an exceptionally fine room. It Is fifteen feet wide by eighteen feet long and has throe very attractive windows, windows that a woman likes to spend a little time over arranging the drap eries and shades just to her liking. If this window faces the south it should have double shades, a light colored shade next to the glass for outside appearance and also to use in dark weather; inside of this anoth er roller shade of a dark shade of green will be found very agreeable when the sun shines hot in summer. A little extra care is necessary in put ting up double shades; the rollers must be level and the shades cut carefully square so they wind up without running to either side. A few cents more to secure an extra quality of fixtures is a good investment. This room will be used more than any other room in the house. It is a showy room when nicely furnished and the windows nicely curtained It requires a little Ingenuity antWime extra work to plan the furnitinland furnishings so the effect will be thor oughly satisfactory. Ceiling and wall tints and the rugs and draperies should all match in color. It means work and attention to details to do The American Home Wm-A-Radford Editor this in a thoroughly satisfactory man ner, but it is pleasant work and work that every woman lines to do. The grate In this room should not be built for ornament only. The room is large enough to hold a bright open fire and there is nothing In house furnishing quite so attractive. A cor ner is the right place for a grate be cause the light and warmth Is shot into every part of the room and in this case it shows through the open door into the parlor. Little details like these go a long ways toward making a house cozy and comfort able. Little things count and they should all be taken into consideration. In this plan the pantry and china closet are separate, which is a very good arrangement. There is china and extra dishes for odd occasions that the family don’t care to use every day. It is a good plan to have a place to keep such things where they are free from dust and at the same time handy to get at when want ed. Placing the sink in the pantry is another change from the ordinary that most women appreciate after they become accustomed to it. A wo man takes a great many steps in put ting dishes away when they are washed in the kitchen. By this ar rangement they are carried from tho dining room to the sink, where they are washed and at once placed on tho shelves and it is not necessary to do a great deal of traveling around. There is an easy stairway from the kitchen to the cellar and over this a good stair leading upstairs and another over this to reach the attic. It is just where you want a back stair and the stairway itself being enclosed does not cost much to build and it occupies the least possible space. Another little convenience in thh; house Is the cloak room in the fron( hall, the space under the stairway being used for the purpose. Ilall cloa* ets are becoming more common every year. It is much better to put coats, hats, umbrellas and rubbers In a closet than to hang them on a hat rack or pegs in the open hallway. 1-lati racks are a nuisance at best and they look very untidy when hung full of old clothes and wraps. Of course, there is no objection to having a hat rack in this hall at the side of tho stair as an auxiliary to the clothes closet if you want it. A hat rack don'll look bad if you just have two or three things hanging on it but it is no longer considered an essential. The trouble is where there are several members in a family the hat rack degenerates into a catch-all. It is a great annoy ance to be obliged to clear it off every day, then there are members of tho family who never can find anything Second Floor Plan. unless they know just where to look for It. Such persons are always ask ing for things and some one else ;ist run and hunt it up to prevent a dis turbance. There- are lots of li. 'T ss Individuals in this world and we should all be tliankrul that wo don’t belong to that cl ss. This plan Is thirty-three feet six inches wide by forty-three feet six inches long, exclusive of porches, and It should be built under ordinary cir cumstances for about $2,800, but an oilier hundred dollars or two should be spent on the grounds. Look Our Way For the Best* The Ribbon Coffee at from 25 to 50 cents i>er Pound. Up-to-Date Flour The best hard wheat Hour and makes the most bread Cooper Wagons Received First Prize at tho Albany County Fair. Prices and Quality Guaranteed. GEM CITY GROCERY CO, Laramie, SOLE AGENTS. | Laramie and Walden I STAGE LINE *»« | Leaves and arrives every day except Sundays : Good accommodations and cheap rates. A direct connection with Denver the same night. We also operate a livery ami feed barn in Lar -3 amie: teams to hay, 75 cents per day. d Trabing Commercial Co., Propr. | GEO. W. TRABING, Mngr. Cordiner’s Drug Store 311-2nd Street, = - - Laramie, Wyoming. Is the Place for Fishing Tackle— We Carry Everything in this Line. Rods from 35 cents to $J5.00. Kodaks—-If il is not an Eastman, it is not a Kodak We are Agents for the Above Line. MAIL US YOUR ORDERS AND SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. When in Laramie STOP at The JOHNSON HOTEL J. F. Johnson = = = = = Proprietor EUROPEAN PLAN j* .* .< # r T T “r < a^7.vvV ; : LARAMIE, WYOMING p-v THE ROUND-UP j ~ is on, your cattle on the range to look J I. after and your ranch work to superintend, /{» . You can look after one while attending 1 to the other if you have a phone at the tsranch. Think it over, and ij i! If you <want a Telephone Call up the Manager. T.u^l::^S r u‘u m m«r: , ' oru ' , ° Philip P. Hoover, Manager. rf. rf. *?• *J. .7* rf. -J- -J- J f Absolute | Satisfaction! •f. •§* $ A privilege which J | you get when you | | trade with us J «t» •§• | We Handle— | J* Fresh and Cured Meats, Flour and ' X L Feed - Groceries - Hardware Garden Seeds - Onion Sets e* .* •£• We are Agents for- |I X John ‘Deere Plows and Scrapers X Wagons and Buggies - Seeders X jJ. Hay Tools - Sharpies Cream Separators, "t* *s* T T J* Good Goods at Honest Prices! ! THE WALDEN MERC. CO. I t *j* *** JL * ™