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FRIDAY, JULY 28. 1818 For Sale 1,200 hMd young cows, (how to be In calf. 400 coming yoarilng heifers and steers. 12 pure bred Hereford bulls two years old. Wo slso have some two-year-old heifers anc some mixed bunches. All this stock have winteied wile and are about evenly divided —Hereforda and Shr thorns. Purchasers will have the privilege of selection. Montana Livestock and Loan Company PHONE 1064, BILLINGS, MONT. I Salter Bros. & Co. WOOL GROWERS 216 Summer SL, Boston, Mass. .n* wool shipments. Full ■i..et prices obtained. Sell direct to the mlils Nothing sold without shipper’s consent. Liberal advances provided. We refer to many leading wool growers. Our Wyoming representative Mr. Wm. C. Irvine Douglas .... Wyoming mmm j •I ■ ■ 11 ■" I* Phone 47 W Phone 47 W Do You Need Any Bran or Shorts, Corn, whole or ground, Wheat, Oats, Corn and Oats, ground, Flour, Corn meal, Breakfast foods, Seeds for your next year’s early garden. Or any Animal or Poultry Remedies? TRY US Cody Flour and Feed Store C. E. HAYDEN, Prop. •j=^===============j;! We will Stand i “TEDDY” Percheron Stallion | on the Sweeney Ranch for the Season. Terms: $5,00 Cash in Advance , —————■^——————i ; FIRE INSURANCE We represent 24 of the largest and best companies in the world Real Estate Rentals Loans Abstracts of Title Inquire about our monthly payment loan plan. For prompt and efficient tervice, *ee The Security Loan & Abstract Company First National Bank Building Cody Wyoming Os a Loving Disposition. This happened in Alexis, 111., as one fun-fan verily avers: A. clerk in one of the village stores who had worked faithfully to please everybody around the place gave up in despair and served notice on his I'Oss that he was going to quit. “Why do you want to leave, John?” the boss asked, “We’ve had no trouble.” “You are all right,” John assured him, “but I don’t love your wife—and I don't think I can ever learn to love her.” And the boss up and paid him and let him go. National Pay-Up Week an Organ- ' ized Movement to Bring Prosperity The word prosperity is a magic word to most people just as other magic words are such, because the great majority of people do not un derstand its meaning. The word prosperty has been a political watchword and catch word for generations. Great contests have been waged around it because of its magic influence over the popu lar mind. But the people of this country are realizing more and more that pros perity is not a thing to be had by resolutions or by decree nor altogeth |er by legislation, but it comes thru ] action of the people in keeping mov ing the medium of prosperity, which | is our money. We are a credit people. This na , tion is possibly the greatest credit ' nation on the face of the earth. The great bulk of our business is done on credit. We credit one another; the manufacturer credits the mer chant; the merchant credits his cus tomer; the professional man credits his customers and clients; and so on through every avenue of our whole business institutions, we find credit the one outstanding characteristic. Credit is a good thing, too, but like other good things it is sometimes a bused, and where it is abused or mis used it becomes a detriment rather than a factor in upbuilding the bu siness of a city, town or community. The man who uses credit judicious ly in his business is an asset to his community, but the man who mis uses his credit is a detriment to the general business welfare of his com munity, and yet there are a great many people who misuse their credit unintentionally but with bad effect nevertheless. We as a people and a nation are so big, rich and prosperous that we have failed in our development to consider some very essential things, and the matter of credit is one of them. But as our business grows in volume and the matter of credit is coming more and more to be recognized as a tan gible asset, it is being found necess ary to give the matter of credit and INFANTILE PARALYSIS NOT EPIDEMIC Infantile paralysis is spreading west with an alarming rapidity and safe guards are being thrown out to prevent the spread of the disease that is claiming hundreds of children un der school age. WASHINGTON, July 25.—Instruc tions for state and city health author ities concerning means for prevent ing the spread of infantile paralysis are being compiled here today by the public health service, to be mailed throughout the United States. These instructions will recommend the iso lation of patients for six or eight' weeks and all persons coming in con tact with them, and a general strengthening of all sanitary precau tions. Reports indicate that thus far the disease is not epidemic except in New York City. Elsewhere the number of cases is barely above normal. SYMPTOMS—lnfantile paralysis starts with a cold, which usually takes the form of a running nose and frequently sore throat. Often a slight fever and stomach disorders accompany the cold. Ninety per cent of the cases in the New York city epidemic are children under school age. but adi Its are not immune. The patient will complain of weak- I ness. A siuw paralysis will follow i affecting at first the ai ms and legs { and pcssibl” one side, j After two weeks the paralyzed | parts will begin to waste away while the stiffness gradually diminishes. TREATMENT—The ’'"'•‘ant a child is suspected of having the disease a doctor should be called. The patient should be completely isolated. The limbs and parts of tils body af fected should be given absolute rest. Paralyzed arms and legs must lie bolstered up with pillows and the weght of clothing kept from them i-v means of hoops or some such dc v ice. After the paralysis leaves the limbs the most important curative measure is mass-p-e and training of muscles affected. I The contagious period lasts 28 days | during which the strictest caution j must be observed against spreading the disease. Only one person in addition to the physician should take care of the child, and the nurse and doctor should wear garments for sick room attend ance. The influence of out of doors is magnetic. Its vision true. Its de ductions are honest. NORTHERN WYOMING HERALD the payment of accounts more care ful consideration; and a week has been set aside to be known as Nation al Pay-Up Week, during which time people throughout the country are asked to pay their individual debts so far as possible and in this way increase the prosperity of the entire country. This extraordinary and laudable movement is being conducted by an association of business me nthat is unique in character. The National Association of Merchants Trade Jour nal Readers is, as the name might suggest, a national association of ousiness men. These men are indi vidually interested in the general prosperity of their respective towns and communities, and as these men are in business in practically every town and city of any consequence in this entire country, this movement to promote the payment of debts dur ing the one week of October 2d to 7th inclusive, will at once be national and local, and being such every man and woman in the entire country should be interested in it. National Pay-Up Week is not a movement to promote greater buying but it is a movement to promote more systematic payment of debts. The person who pays his debts dur ing National Pay-Up Week is not necessarily buying more goods but he is simply paying for goods that have been purchased; and not only business men but everyone else—the j minister, the teacher, the lawyer, the i doctor, the farmer, the laborer, arc i all interested either directly or in-; directly in this great nation-wide movement. Every professional man has an in terest in the material prosperity of those about him because he is serv ing them. Every minister in every church i 3 interested in the material prosperity of his people, and indeed those in other churches and those of the community who belong to no church, because it requires money to conduct the activities of a church, and the teacher is interested too be cause it requires money to finance TOURISTS INCREASE POSTOFFICE RECEIPTS “First class mail has increased fifty per cent since the auto tourists have commenced coming over the Yellowstone Highway,” said Post master R. J. McGinnis this morning. “If there is anyone who doubts that the opening of this road is not a good thing for Cody let them come in here and see the mail we are hand ling for them. We are just about working every minute as fast as we can go and if it keeps up we will have to add to our force. “The reason our mail is so large from the tourist business is that everyone who comes has his mail di rected and forwarded to Cody. It is the last point prior to entering the j Yellowstone and means that Cody is in the minds of many people as the j entrance to Nature’s wonderland. From that standpoint alone it as sociates the name of our city with the automobile entrance and will result in an increased business from year to year. “I was talking to J. D. Kelley of Rochester, Minnesota, yesterday who came in over the Black and Yellow trail from the Black hills and he is of the opinion that that road if put in shape will get us more business than the Yellowstone highway and that this office will go to a first class. “He said the scenery on the Big horns is truly wonderful and will be the mecca of tourists from across the continent as soon as it is known.” Business in all lines is good in Cody. The groceries and the market report the best trade in years and that it is coming with increasing volume. The hotels and rooming houses are crowded every night and tourists are camping at the school houses in many instances because the rooms in town are full. A number of plans are on foot for 1 the building of rooming houses in Cody to take care of the business and that the town is on the upbuild pre ' vails n the minds of even the most conservative. NOT ENOUGH CHILDREN ! ever receive the proper balance of food to sufficiently nourish both body and | brain during the growing period when nature’s demands are greater than in i mature life. This is shown in so many j pale faces, lean bodies, frequent colds, ■ and lack of ambition. For all such children we say with unmistakable earnestness: They need Scott's Emulsion, and need it now. It possesses in concentrated form the very food elements to enrich their blood. It ! changes weakness to strength; it makes | them sturdy and strong. No alcohol. * Scott & Bowuc. Bloomfield, N.J. the educational institutions of this country. And anything that will cause the people of a town to pay their debts will help every business, every institution and every individual in that community. Incidentally, this movement is not new, as this same association con ducted a National Pay-Up Week dur ing the week of February 21st to 26th inclusive. During this time hundreds of towns throughout the country participated in the movement with the result that thousands upon thousands of dollars were put into circulation. In Huntington, Indiana, thousands of dollars were paid during the week, and all agree that they feel better as a result. At Ridgeway, Pennsylvania, the secretary of the Pay-Up Week As sociation said after the event: “As we sowed, so did we reap.” In Greenville, South Carolina, peo ple became so enthusiastic over pay ing their debts that many who did not have the cash dated checks in advance so that they would be sure that their debts would be paid at the earliest possible moment after they had money in the hank with which to pay. Hundreds of towns were awakened j to the evils of the unrestricted credit ■ business from California to Maine and from Washington to Florida. In many small towns of but a few thousand population, it was found 1 that amounts often running into hundreds of thousands of dollars were due, and in many instances in smaller cities and towns, amounts ranging from SSO to SIOO,OOO were paid during Pay-Up Week. National Pay-Up Week is one of the rare things that is worth much yet costs nothing, and the people of j this town, this community, should be ; interested in a great debt-paying campaign of this kind, because we have our debts here just as people in other towns and other communities in other parts of the country have theirs. DEPOSITS OF OIL ARE INEXHAUSTIBLE ( Calling attention to the fact that , one department of the government , declares that unless the government itself does not continue its drastic withdrawal methods in connection with our oil lands, we might as well , quit building battleships using fuel oil, and’ that the head Department having these matters in charge ad mits, in newspaper interviews and in , private, that there is no danger to , i the oil situation of the country so far ias the navy is concerned. Senator , 1 Clark, during the discussion of the naval bill, called attention to a like j situation with regard to coal lands somewhat previously, i “It is exactly the same cry that 1 has been made year after year when | ever the natural resources of the country have been sought to be touched and made available,” said the Senator. “Less than five years ago it was asserted by the head of a scientific bureau of this government that unless steps were taken to stop the indiscriminate mining of coal and to acquire coal lands, we had not more than enough coal to last the country fifty years, when, as a i matter of fact, everybody who has , investigated the subject knows that \we have enough coal to last this j country fifty thousand years at the i present rate of consumption, and ,: that the rate of consumption is an , nuaily decreasing by the use of addi j tional fuels.” $15,000 FOR CODY IS NOW ASSURED • ' An appropriation of $15,000 for the ': first work on the federal building at | Cody is one of the items in the Sun • dry Civil bill that has now passed both houses and became a law July j j 18. This money becomes available 1 j this year and unless the matter is i side tracked by democratic red tape | there is no reason why some of the 1 | preliminary work on Cody’s new ' : federal building should not be done ' i this year. Public buildings for Bus- | falo. Basin and Newcastle were also ] provided for in the Sundry Civil bill, • | the last named receiving an appro- Ipriation for a site. Appropriations for Newcastle and Green River are carried in the Public Building bill I which has just been introduced in i congress. i —-o r j Getting Back at Him. i | The young couple were dawdling over a late breakfast after a night at [ an ultra smart party, t “Was it you I kissed in the con • servatory last night?” hubby inquir- ad. I She looked at him reminiscently. “About what time was it?” OFF YEAR B. & Y. TRAIL Money Last Year Went to Roau I Over Bighorns, this Year on Hoback Road J G. Stahl, assistant district forest i er in charge of the office of lands in I the Denver district, is at present en gaged in inspecting the Bighorn for est and will spend two or three weeks there. Under the provisions of the Shack elford bill authorizing the expendi ture of a million dollars a year for ten years on the forest roads in six states which contain forest reserves. Wyoming will probably get $125,000 a year for its forest roads. The bill contemplates the apportionment of the money on a basis of population in the forests, the amount of timber and the enhanced value of the for ests as a result of the roads built, according to Mr. Stahl. “While the primary purpose of the national forests was the preservation of the timber resources,” said Mr. Stahl, “the recreational features of the mountains are being considered by the forestry service and people are being encouraged to use them ex tensively. In this connection, of course, roads are an important fac tor.” Uuder the laws by which the for est has been administered in the past only ten per cent of the receipts of the forests have been available for the building of roads within the for est boundaries, according to Mr. Stahl. He said that there were two large projects in Wyoming, the Haz elton-Buffalo project in the Denver district which is the Black and Yel low trail over the Bighorns, and the Hoback canyon project in the Teton national forest in the Ogden district. This is the road connecting the Lan der country with Yellowstone park and will develop the southern en trance. By agreement between the districts all the money available for these two projects is being expended on the Holback project to complete it this year, and next year the money will be spent on the Hazelton-Buffa lo project “It is possible, however, that some money will be available ! this year for work on the Hazelton- Buffalo road as a result of the pas sage of the Shackelford bill,” said Mr. Stahl. | In discussing the Black and Yel low trail, Mr. Stahl said that it was established on an easy grade and was wide enough for two cars to pass easily so that it would be abso lutely safe and he predicted that when it was completed it wouid be one of the most attractive automo bile drives in the country. Has Fine Education. He was from Boston and of course, had the high dome and the large spectacles. Miss Hytime had con sented to a ride down town for the evening and was mentally wondering what was the best show in the city. He dropped into a soda emporium with a deliberate air. She tied her hopes on the outside. Seriously, he resumed his deep con versation. “You see, my good friend,” he explained, like an academic presi dent, “we Americans are shockingly profligate. Now, in the United States less than one-tenth the population are savers, while more than one-half of the Swiss people are savers.” “Yes,” yawned the fair young lady, putting back of her small ear a stray curl, “I have heard of Swiss cheese.” Whatever it deflects, spooning at least teaches a fellow a lot about as tronomy that he never knew before. Ranch Modernize Your Hom» Every building on the farm can be modernized and brought right up to date at small cost by the use of Cornell - Wood • Board. Start with the farm house. Caraell-Wsoa-BoaT3 For Walls, Ceilings and Partitions Nails direct to the studding or right over old walls and stays there per manently; cost of application is very reasonable compared with other materials; takes paint or kalsomine perfectly. Tt is specially adapted for dairy barns, milk houses, hen houses, basements and porch ceilings. GUARANTEE j Cornell-Wood-Boai d is guaranteed not j to warp, buckle, chip, crack or fall. PRICE: { M* CENTS PER SQU ARE FOO" (In full box-board cases.) Manufactured the Ccmd! WProduct* Co. jc.o. Friable. l*r.-siu. in • i. ttri-1 Mold by Urn 4*«U,ra liutcd here. A.uv tor f.ou p.uua. Cody Lumber Co. PAGE SEVEN