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BACK GAVE OUT. A Typical Case of Kidney Trouble and a Typical Cure. Mrs. Chloe Page of 610 8. Pitt Street, Alexandria, Va., says: “My back hurt me ter ribly, I had sharp, shooting pains, changing to a dull, dragging ache. I could not stand for any length of time and my back hurt mo when I sat down. My feet and ankles were badly swollen every evening, and my stomach was out of order. Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me of these troubles in 1902, and for five years I have had no return.” All dealers. 60 cents a box. Fos ter-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Had Tried It. “You ought to wear glasses. They’ll save your eyes,” said his friend. "Nuttin’ In It," contemptuously an swered Bill de Bruiser. ”1 t’ought dey ould meself wunst, an’ I put on a pair when I heerd a big chap wuz lay in’ fur me. It’s agin de law, ye know, to hit a man wid glasses on ’im. Well, sir, de big chap happened along. He reached over, lifted dem glasses off me face, an’ den he bunged me eyes up, good an’ proper.” SICK HEADACHE E, _<•_ Positively cured by DC these Little Pill,. • Thrjr alno relieve Die- F tress from Dyspepsia, In digestion and Too Hearty 'Be Eating. A perfect rent edy for Dizziness, Nau sea, ‘Drowsiness, Had Taste in the Mouth, Coat ed Tongue, Pain in the hld »- TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SHALL PRICE. m. tyren'c 1 Genuine Must Bear uAKItno Fac-Simile Signature VITTIE - ° Tfulls! REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. Heiskell’s Ointment Cures Skin Diseases For half a century Heiskell’s Ointment ha* been need In all easee of ekln disease with most gratifying results. Many have become entirely cured who had suffered untold pain and annoyance for years. One man in New Baltimore,Pa., writes that it cured him when h# was raw all over. A lady In Philadelphia cured a cose of tetter of six years' standing • in fourteen days, while a man In Allentown, cured his case of eczema that had trou bled him for eleven years with Ices than two boxes of the ointment. These and hundreds •f others have found that llelskelTs Oint ment Is worth more than Its weight in gold. Being a purely vegetable preparation, liels kell's Ointment soothes and heals where ethers falL It allays the Itching and burn ing common to all skin disease, and all yield quickly to its magic influence. There are many varieties of skin diseases with oonfunlng titles, but they are all suscep tible to one and the same cure—llelskcH's Ointment. No one noed suffer long If afflicted with any sltln disease not of a constitutional character If they wil 1 apply this remedy. This lncludessuch skin diseases ns erysipelas, pru rigo, eczumu, milk crust, Itching piles, sculd head, teller,ringworm,blackheads, phor’.aiis, pimples, freckles. In some cases it Is neces sary to give some constitutional treutment, as in erysipelas, eczema, etc.;the iWer should be toned to healthy action and ih«* blood und all the secretions purified. In all cases of ■kin disease cures are hastened by the use of Ileiskell’s Medicinal Boap before a pnly In g the ointment, and in cleaning up the blood and liver with Ueiskell’s Blood and Liver Pills. Helskell’s Medicinal and Toilet Soap con tains lu a modlfiod form the medicinal prop erties of HelNkeli's Ointment, and Is partlcn larly effective In slight disorders of the skin, as rash, eruptions and abrasions. It cleans and lu the bath Is a greut luxury. Helskell's Blood and Liver Pills contain the active medicinal principles of various root, and herbs approved in medical practice. Remember that there Is no case so obstinate that Ilelskell’s Ointment will not cure it. The ointment la sold at 600 a box. Hoap at 25c m cake. Pills at 25c u bottle. You can get them of any druggist, or we will send by mall on receipt of price. Address Johnston, Holloway A Company, 681 Com merce BL, Philadelphia. Pa. I Headache I I Every Month I feS Yon may think, because you H have long had It, that yon mast §H have a headache every month, HI H being a women. jgi B Bnt If yon think to, yon are H H wrong, since a headache U a H H sign o! disease of your womanly H H organs, that thousands of other H SB women have been able to relieve H ■ er core, b the nse of that wonder- B fnl, woman's medicine, H v CARDUI WOMAN’S RELIEF H *T recommend Cardul to all sick H SH women,” writes Mrs. A. C. Beaver HI 1H of Unicoi, Tenn. ”1 suffered with HI H headache, bearing-down pains, H H feet swelled, pains In shoulders H H and many others. At last I took H| H Cardul, have gained 20 pounds H and have found It the best med- B® |H klne I ever used for female ■ ■ troubles ” ■ H At All Druggists | I WRITE FOR FREE ADVICE, I ■ stating ago and describing symp- ■H I toms, to Ladies Advisory Dept., ■i H The Chattanooga, Medicine Co., ■! Cnattonooga, Tenn. E 37 COLORADO NEWS ITEMS C. Uzelac.who it is charged threat ended to kill Mr. and Mrs. Simon Calich, was bound over to the District Court. Before his case comes to trial an inquiry will be made as to bis sanity. Miss Jean Whipple, president of the j Junior class of Colorado college, and j one of the most popular students in the institution, died at her home in Canon I City of typhoid fever contracted sev- J eral weeks ago. Vert Gregory, local station agent at Florence for the Rio Grande for the last j three years, who resigned a week ago ! to join the oihee force of the new Canon City Electric Street Railway I Company, was succeeded by J. P. : Stroube. Losing his balance while working on the roof of the Rio Grando Western pumping plant at Cisco, near Grand Junction, E. E. Strand, a carpenter, fell ! twenty-five feet to the ground. Four j ribs were broken, he suffered minor j bruises and is iu a serious condition. Lawrence Gipson, a former Greeley | hoy, a grandson of Henry T. West, j after graduating from Oxford college, , England, where he was sent on secur- j ing the Rhodes scholarship, has been appointed to the chair of history and languages in the College of Idaho. Fred Olbert, a young rancher of ; Dix, neai Durango, was killed by a fall from his horse. His neck was' broken. He was forty-four years of age and unmarried. Two brothers, John and George, are prominent Du rango business men. Articles of incorporation of the i South Park Land and Live Stock; Company were filed at Cripple Creek with the county clerk. The company ; is capitalized at SSOO. The company I is formed to purchase and lease real i estate and grazing land. James B. Husted is at the head of the company. Dr. F. N. Carrier of the State Board of Health has urged the City Council of Canon City to appoint a milk and pure food Inspector to donate his en tire time to the work. The doctor has exercised the right of inspection as a member of the state board, and has improved dairies here and closed one slaughter house. A Chinaman at Durango by the name of Skeet took two shots at another Chinaman by the name of Joe. The first shot took off the thumb. The other shot went into the right, side. The in jured man was taken to the hospital j and is not expected to live. The China man who did the shooting is under ar-, rest. The cause of the trouble is not 1 known. Fearing that the Victor Record of fice would be raided at night, George E. Kyner, owner and editor, had his i establishment guarded b varmed men. | It was rumored that because of se- j vere criticisms bearing upon Mayori John 11. Williams and Alderman J. E. j Elliott relative to bills for work done j by those officials for the city, that their friends had threatened to take revenge | on Kyner and his printing office. The Pierce Irrigation Company held \ an important meeting recently when} plans were talked over for extending j the Pierce lateral twenty mile* 4 , eight : miles farther to Owl creek. This calls ! for an expenditure of $30,000 and \ brings 20,000 acres in the vicinity of j Pierce and Ault under cultivation. The Pierce lateral belongs to the Water ; Forty farmers whose land is to be hen- i eflted by the ditch are meeting all 1 costs. The lateral will be finished by January Ist. Greeley potatoes have long been fa mous in the West, ami to a certain ex-, tent, in the East, but an order given the | Wolf Londoner Grocery Company by J. J. Fillius, in the name of B. B. Law rence of New York, shows the opinion ; of many small consumers in the Em-1 pire State, regarding Greeley’s product, j Through Mr. Fillius Mr. Lawrence has, ordered a barrel of the Greeley pot a- { toes shipped straight to him, and he j says that he is willing to pay the heavy ! freight charges for the Colorado vege-! table rather than take any other kind of potato. It is stated that all the section men j working on the Union Pacific railroad, because of a cut in their wages to $1.35 a day, had quit and joined the grading i gang on the electric road of the Gree ley & Northern Railroad & Utility Com pany, because of the higher wages paid 1 by the latter. At present forty men ■ and teams are working on the new elec- 1 trie line which parallels the Union Pa- 1 eifle between Sixteenth street and Nor-1 mal hill. It is understood that the Union Pacific is much distressed over the building of the electric line, and has sent engineers to trace carefully the new line, on which about one-half mile of grading is completed. The first examination of applicants for positions In the railway mail serv ice ever held in Canon City is an nounced for November 19t.h. Hereto fore examinations for this service have been held only in the larger cities, but the Increasing demand for clerks has caused the civil service commission to extend tnese examinations to the smaller cities. The age limit is from eighteen to thirty-five years. The mini mum height has been reduced from five feet six inches to five feet five inches, and the minimum weight from 135 pounds to 130 pounds. The mem bers of the local examining board are F. J. Pennington, secretary; W. J. Mad dock and E. W. Thomas. Leases on property for the purpose of boring for oil, given by A. L. Camp. Croorge Dauth, William and Mary Mc- Call, W. H. Senior and Charles Wiggins to William and M. C. Evans, were filed In the County Court at Greeley and it was given out. that within a month a well will be drilled on the Camp prop erty. If oil Is not found in this well another will be sunk on one of the farms nearby. By the leases the prop erty owners are to receive ten per cent, of the output of the wells. M. C. Evans, who discovered oil in Kansas and Texas, noticed oil bubbling up in the back waters of the Poudre near the farms. Since then parties have visited the Poudre valley and say the Indica tions of oil and gas have increased since the pool was discovered. Evans and Greeley men will furnish all funds for drilling. ADVICE TO VICTIMS TELLS READERS HOW TO CURE RHEUMATISM AT HOME. Directions to Mix a Simple Prepara tion and the Dose to Take—Over comes Kidney and Bladder Trouble Promptly. There is so much Rheumatism every where that the following advice by an eminent authority, who writes for read ers of a large Eastern daily paper, wifi be highly appreciated by those who suffer: Get from any good pharmacy one half ounce Fluid Extract Dandelion, one ounce Compound Kargon, three ounces of Compound Syrup Sarsapa rilla. Shake these well in a bottle and take in teaspoonful doses after gacu meal and at bedtime; also drink plfc>i'.Y of good water. It is claimed that there are few vic tims of this dread and torturous dis ease who will fail to find ready relief in this simple home-made mixture, and in most cases a permanent cure is the result. This simple recipe is said to strength en and cleanse the eliminative tissues of the Kidneys so that they can filter and strain from the blood and system the poisons, acids and waste matter, which cause not only Rheumatism, but numerous other diseases. Every man or woman here who feels that their kidneys are not healthy and active, or who suffers from any urinary trouble whatever, should not hesitate to make up this mixture, as it is certain to do much good, and may save you from much misery and suffering after while. THE NUMBER OF ANIMALS. Recent Attempts to Tabulate the Beasts That Perish. Every now and then some natural ist endeavors to make an approximate numerical count of known animal species. This kind of attempt is sure ly not without Interest, but it must be acknowledged that its results are very uncertain. We are far from knowing all species, and there is yet a delight ful prospect ahead for those who love systematic zoology and for zoologists who bestow mutual honors by giving each other's names to some animal hitherto unknown. As Nurmann remarked to a recent meeting of naturalists at the museum, to which he presented his “Catalogues Mammalium," the species of rodents known in 1880 were only 970 in num ber; now they are 1,900. The num ber has thus, at least, doubled in 27 years. The number of living species of this creature now known is about 1.500, divided among 160 genera. This family is the most numerous of the class of mammalia.—Wissen fur Alle. Everything Bad. A prominent planter recently had occasion to visit some of his holdings in southern Arkansas. The land was situated several miles from a railroad, and it was necessary to finish the journey in a buggy. So he took a friend with him and started out. After traversing several miles of sparsely settled country, they came upon a farmer plowing corn on the side of a hill. The planter, wishing to appear civil to his neighbors, stopped his horse and yelled at the man, who came to the fence, mopping his face with a red bandana. “Good morning.” “Mornin’, mister!" “You live here, I suppose?” "Yep.” “How’s crops?” “Fair to middlin’.” “That’s a bad hill you’re plowing.” "I know it. Bad hoss, pullin’ th’ plow, bad plow, bad everything.” "Why, you talk like you were the poorest man in Arkansas,” laughed the planter. “I ain’t, though,” was the response, as the young fellow smiled good naturedly. "Another feller owns half o’ this crop.” TAKE THEM OUT Or Feed Them Food They Can Study On. When a student begins to break down from lack of the right kind of food, there are only two things to do; either take him out of school or feed . him properly on food that will rebuild the brain and nerve cells. That food is Grape-Nuts. A boy writes from Jamestown. N. Y., saying: “A short time ago I got into a bad condition from overstudy, but Mother having heard about Grape- Nuts food began to feed me on it. It satisfied my hunger better than any other food, and the results were mar velous. I got fleshy like a good fel low. My usual morning headaches disappeared, and I found I could study for a long period without feeling the effects of it. “My face was pale and thin, but is now round and has considerable color. After I had been using Grape-Nuts for about two months I felt like a new boy altogether. I have gained greatly in strength as well as flesh, and it Is a pleasure to study now that I am not bothered with my head. I passed all of my examinations with a reason ably good percentage, extra good In some of them, and it is Grape-Nuts that has saved me from a year's delay In entering college. “Father and mother have both been improved by the use of G-apc-Nuts. Mother was troubled with sleepless nights and got very thin, and looked care worn. She has gained her nor mal strength and looks, and sleeps well nights.” "There’s a Rer.son.” Read “The Road to Wellvillo” iu pkgs. BIROS TRAVEL ALONG ROUTES. All Have Not Same Range— Swallows' Great Distance. The routes by which b f .rds pass to and from one country to another in spring and autumn are regularly fol lowed. One great thoroughfare, of course, Is in the spring from south to north, and conversely in the autumn from north to south; another is south east to northwest; a third southwest to northeast, with the return into the same starting points, says the Scot man. The groat southern wintering region is south of the north of Africa and extends to far beyond the equator, and from it, under the breeding in stinct in spring, birds hurry away to disperse themselves over the wide spreading palaearctlc or northern lands, which extend as far, in the case of some species, as a long way within the arctic circle. South of the equator during the northern winter the migrants fly toward the south pole to breed. The seasonal range limit of some of the northern breeding birds is enormous—several extending from Patagonia to Greenland. All migratory birds have not the same range; some fly longer, some shorter, distances. The best known of all the birds of passage, the swal low has one of the longest ranges— from 7,000 to 10,000 miles. In this extended range are also included such birds as the gray plover, the knot, the pectoral and curlew sandpipers and the Asiatic golden plover. The longer range—from 6,000 to 7,000 miles —includes such well-known birds as the cuckoo, the corncrake, the sedge warbler, the greenshank; the moderate range—from 3.000 to 5,000 miles —embraces the turtle dove, the crane, lapwing, mallard and jack snipe; the third range—from 1,000 to 2,000 miles —such birds as the wood chat shrike, the stone curlew, the woodcock and black tern and in what is called the restricted area—with a mileage of 1,000 miles downward — there are the waxwings, several gulls and the eider duck. BABY IN TERRIBLE STATE. Awful Humor Eating Away Face- Body a Mass of Sores —Cuticura Cures in Two Weeks. “My little daughter broke out all over her body with a humor, and we used everything recommended, but without results. I called in three doc tors, but she continued to grow worse. Her body was a mass of sores, and her little face was being eaten away. Her ears looked as if they would drop off. Neighbors advised me to get Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and before I had used half of the cake of Soap and box of Ointment the sores had all healed, and my little one’s face and body were as clear as a new-born babe’B. 1 would not be without it again if it cost five dollars, instead of seventy-five cents. Mrs. George J. Steese, 701 Coburn St., Akron, 0., Aug. 30, 1905.” Double Protection. “I wish,” a lady recently said to her husband with what Punch discreetly terms “considerable emphasis,” “I wish you wouldn’t always sit on the pia*no-stool when we have company. Everybody knows you can’t play a note.” “Neither can anybody else when I’m sitting there,” returned the sage.— Youth’s Companion. The extraordinary popularity of fine white goods this summer makes the choice of Starch a matter of great im portance. Defiance Starch, being freo from all injurious chemicals, is the I only one which is safe to use on fine fabrics. Its great strength as a stiffener makes half the usual quantity of Starch necessary, with the result of perfect finish, equal to that wnen the goods were new. Reciprocity. “Every father thinks he has the finest baby in the world.” “Yes,” answered the cynic, “and once in awhile, but not nearly so often a baby grows up to think It nas one of the finest fathers in the world.” Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottlo of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infanta and children, and eeo that it Bear* the Signature of la Use For Over 30 Years. Tko Kind You Have Always Bought Saved by a Neck. “Won’t you have another drink?” said the kangaroo to the giraffe as they stood in front of the zoo bar. “No, thank you,” replied the giraffe. “One drink goes a long way with me, you know.” That an article may be good as well as cheap, and give entire satisfaction, is proven by the extraordinary sale of Defiance Starch, each package con taining one-third more Starch than can be had of any other brand for the same money. A woman’s egotism has reached the limit if when she walks out she imagines that all the men going in the same direction are following her. FITS, St. Vitus Dance and all Nervous Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send for Free $2.00 trial bottle and trentiso. Dr. R. 11. Kline, Ld., 9?\ Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa. Whom fortune favors tho world favors. —German. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more aoods briahter and faster color* than any other dye. One 10c package color* all fiber*. They dye in cold water better than any other dye. You can dys Writs lor Ire* booklet—How to Uye. Blesc hand Mu Color*. MON ROE DRUG CO,, Qu/noy, l/Unmlm Sheer white goods, Zu fact, any fine wash goods when new, owe much of their attractiveness to tho way they are laundered, this being done in a manner to enhance their textile beau ty. Homo laundering would be equal ly satisfactory if proper attention was given to starching, the first essential being good Starch, which has sufficient strength to stiffen, without thickening the goods. Try Defiance Starch and you will be pleasantly surprised at th# improved appearance of your work. Terrible Fate. There is something which will ap peal to every American In the horror of a fate Invoked upon Henry James, Sr., by his son. tho novelist, and recorded in the letters of E. L. God kin. The young man had been worsted in argument, and exclaimed: “Then may your mashed potatoes always have lumps In them!”— Youth’s Companion. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, an they cannot reach the neat of the (Unease. Catarrh Is a blood or consti tutional disease, and In order to cure It you must take Internal remedies. Hnll'a Catarrh Cure Is taken In ternally, and arts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure la not a quack medi cine. 1 1 was prescribed by one of tho best physicians In this country for years and Is a regular prescription. It Is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two Irmredlcuts Is what produces such wonderful re •ulta lu curing catarrh, hend for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggist*. price ?sc. Take Hall'* Family I*lll* for constipation. How It Happened. Gyer—l was in a railway wreck seven years ago, and I never got over it. Myer—You must have been badly hurt. Gyer—l wasn’t hurt at all. I didn’t get over it because I crawled from un der. See? —Chicago Daily News. With a smooth Iron and Defiance Starch, you can launder your sliiii waist just as well at home as the steam laundry can; it will have the proper stiffness and finish, there will be less wear and tear of the goods, and it will be a positive pleasure to use a Starch that does not stick to the iron. What ripens fast does not last.— | Shakespeare. The Power Behind the Dough! fur BAKING \ | gV V POWDER J 23 Ounces for 23 Cents ■ 1C ft I J;I A real power that raises and sustains the dough with absolute certainty. \fJTLng%i No failures. A cake made with |Sim| K C cannot fall. ■ « tin nflnluß We insist upon refunding your , - —..—j ———-^—^— -—. Ravillon Freres, I invite trappers, collectors and shippers to send all their raw furs to Revillon. Because we arc the largest manufacturers in the world we can afford to pay highest prices for n>l ■■■ I -all your raw skins. r**!V Wri,e to us for ° ur I Mj ■NlgSlVWfl forecast for the com. ing season. It will O h ! a -. I-. "eke money for you. rHOBS Ior Oon,t delay> but ■ ■H W W IWI write to . day . Address Da P m a REVILLON FRERES, Inc. liaW rUIS 19 West 31lh Slreel ■ ■ »■ ■ w New York City —B—■—i—Ma— ——mmmm W. L. DOUGLAS A ~ $3.00 & $3.50 SHOES thelmorld JBKOI BfiSPSHOES FOR EVERY MEMBER OF «« a THE FAMILY. AT ALL PRICES. ***« ft fit % ( To any one who can prove W. L. mg W" Wcj LS> > DQuotas doom not make A moll Mg : ff uL Pa.«»aa#l ') more Mon’m $3 M, S3.SO mhoom fICVVar W (//>..#> any oihor manufacturer. V 'oHk TIIE REASON \V. L. Douglas shoes are worn by more people in all walks of life than any other make, is becauso or their wR excellent style, easy-Htting, ami superior wearing qualities. /Hf The selection of the leathers ami other materials for each par® ,T.* JtSW of the shoo, and every detail of the making is looked after by Wm the most completoorganization of superintendents, foremenand y 'J 'Jm skillet! shoemakers, who receive the highest wages paid in Iho T&TIP&M nh<m industry, ami whoso workmanship cannot be excelled. ymOnf.M t If I could tike you into my largo factories at Brock ton. Mass., M and show you how carefully \V.I». Douglas shoes aro made, you O ftff would then understand why they hold their shape, lit better, oIK wearlonger ami are of greater value than any other make. sfo My SS.OO and SS.OO Gilt Edoo Shoes cannot bo oQuallad at any or tom, CAUTION! The genuine have W. 1.. Douglas name and price stamped on bottom. Take >*o Substitute. Ask your dealer for \V. L. Douglas shoes. If he cannot supply you, send direct to factory. Shoos sent everywhere by mail. Catalog free. W.L-Douglaa. Brockton, Mu» Principal of Stenographic Department is a Court Renorter. Principal cl Bookkeeping Department is a Public Accountant and Auditor. Send for cata logues. 1733 Champa Street, Denver, Colorado. Precise Degree of Intimacy. Nan —Young Mr. Ketchley Is away on his vacation, isn’t ho? Are yon and he on corresponding terms? Fan —Not quite—but we’re on pic ture postcard terms. RPAHFPQ of this paper de- ULiIIyLAJ siring to buy any thing advertised in its columns should insist upon having . what they ask lor, refusing all substi tutes or imitations. A RAZOR AND STROP FOR $1 We are funding razor and etrop liy mall |M»*t paid foe •I.uo. Tlio razor In of In-iit ateef guaranteed to hold m iH-rfiH-t edge. If tt don't, rend It liack and get a new one, llollow ground—round nr r<|iiare point. Li-lt Inch bladei rubber handle. A double.barber atrop of beat horaa lihlo amt can vans: nickel awtvel. Hold only by tba K. W. HUUc Basor C o -139 K. Center street. Bradford, I*o, gif PAftktft's — g&H HAIR BALSAM and beautlflae th# bait. a laiuriant growth. -Hllevtr Fail* to Beetore Gray Hair to ira Youthful Color. train diteaara k hair falling, DEFIANCE STIRCH -r^ —other atarchea only 12 ounce*—aame price and '•DEFIANCE" 18 SUPERIOR OUALITY. ft rn vpi|*A*,imr.r>iw>, Patent A'tor pH I !■ M I \ni'y. Washington. !».<■■ Advm* I ft I kll I Ef free. Terms low. Highest rw£ tore 'ey obTu ae f ThOHipSOITS E*B Wattf W. N. U„ DENVER, NO. 44, 1907.