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READERS WANT FACTS It Pay* Best to Taka tha News paper That Prints the Lar gest Amount of Fresh and Reliable News It costs an immense amount of money to publish a modern metropoli tan daily. Such a journal reaches a vast number of people and its use fulness, if it is a purveyor of genuine and important news, is beyond esti mate. Each issue is a volume of the up-to-date history of the world. Peo ple will often bear with scapdal, false -1 ood and all that “yellow journalism" implies if, along with the things they I oetest, they get the news they want. J £ome publishers are wont to boast that they get two "scarehead” items where there should be none—by print ing a lie one day aud "taking it back" the next. But this is an insult to the intelligence of their readers. There are newspapers that are con scientious in getting at the real facts and telling the plain truth. Such a I newspaper is a fountain of satisfac- j tion. If it prints rumors which are important if true, but which cannot be verified at the moment, it prints them as rumors and does not go into hyster ics over them. Josh Billings said that "it is better not to know quite so | many things than to know a lot of things that are not so” —or words to that effect. In all parts of the country the Den ver Republican is noted for its effi ciency as a news gatherer and its im partiality in stating the facts. And ! even those who do not agree with it j politically are for this reason fre- j quently warmest in its praise. On its editorial and news staff are men of j experience and judgment, who can usually spot a false statement as soon as it reaches them. They are not "tenderfeet,” but men for many years m touch with the great interests of the Rocky Mountain region. In all this region there is no other paper that publishes during the year so great a number of important items of news. Its correspondents, who thor oughly cover all sections of Colorado, | Wyoming, New Mexico and adjacent regions, are the most enterprising and reliable that it is possible to secure. In the place of inane "Funnies,” the Republican publishes the best of lit erary matter and the most entertain ing of fiction. The illustrations in its Sunday magazine are by the best art ists. photographers and engravers, its cartoons are humorous and pointed without being grotesque. The various departments of the Re- I üblican include fresh new s and care fully selected matter for the farmer, the miner, the workman, the house wife, the children, the student and the business man, in whatever line —for all who want to keep posted. The Republican’s market reports are extensive and reliable. Whoever has anything to buy or sell should consult them daily. In one sale or one purchase the subscriber may j often save or make many times the j rice of a year’s subscription. The Republican is in sympathy with every honest movement to build up the Great West. It has no use for charlatans and their • get rich quick” schemes. It is a newsy pewspaper, a reliable i ewspaper, and a clean newspaper. | "Once a subscriber, always a subscrib er," may be said of its patrons. The subscription price of the Re publican is 00 cents a month for the daily, including the Sunday edition and Magazine, and one dollar a year for the weekly. Address The Republican Publishing Company, Denver. i DENVER DIRECTORY nnu I I nniF Dealer In all kinds of MEK dull 1. LUUK (IIANIHSI Mammoth . »ta lo»r mall«*«l frp* Cop. l*»th A Rlak**. Denver. WONDERI-TI, REVELATIONS—Send : blrthdate. 3 questions, stamp, dime for book. “Your Future Revealed.” read- . Ing free. 1 will surprise you. YOGI j KIIAL.DIA. Box 818. Denver. Colo. ACC AVC RELIABLE : PROMPT OOrs I 0 lV r.' 1 ‘l l *od, *V 1 ‘s 1u «r him »'f|»per. $1.60. Gold and Sliver refined and tMjuiiht. Writ® for free mailing »a< k®. Ogden Assay Co., la3l Court PI.. Denver THE M.i. 0 FALLON SUPPLY CO WHOLES A LK PIATMIIIM* AMI STEAM GOODS. pollers and radiator® for heating re*ld.-ne®« and pul'll' InilldlnK®. General eteam and wa ter work® vui.piiew, pipe and fittings. pump® and windmills bran* pipe, newer pipe. . inent, Harden hose, lire n etc. Agent* for the Kewatiee System of Water Supply. in quire for our hi pipe cutting tool®. Writ e for R-nera 1 Information OFFHES. WAREHOUSES AN'H DISPLAY ItOOMH. CORNER 16TII IV WYS'KOUP STS. Denver. Low Colonist Rates via The Denver & Rio Grande Railroad “The Scenic Line of flic World.** Tickets on Sale March 10th April 10th, ’ 1911, Inc. —s2s— TO Denver San FranHsso Colorado Springs Loa Angeles Pueblo Kan Diego Florence Han Jose Caflon City Marysville Halida Kaeramento Buena Vista Stockton Leadvllle Portland Ulenwood Springs Tacoma Delta Seattle Grand Junction Spokune Montrose Vancouver, R. C. Gunnison Victoria, B. C. Dally Lines of Pullman Tourist Sleep ing Cars will leave Denver dally via THE DENVER & RIO GRANDE for San Francisco and Los Angeles without change. BI.EtTIIIC LIGHTED TOURIST CARS TO SAN FRANCISCO via Salt Lake City and the New West ern Pacific Hallway. For full particulars, train service, res ervations. etc., call on any Rio Grande Agent, or address FRANK A. WADI.HIGH, General Passenger Agent, Denver, Cola. Jabot Designs i ERE are three jabots that are new In lines, easy of construction and and chic In effect, three qualities H that you cannot afford to ignore. The jabot, especially In this season of low revers, Is almost a necessity, and In the delightful form pictured here It is a luxury. A new plisse Is shown at the left. Sheer linen forms Bcallops on each side of a narrow strip of lace. Valen ciennes edges the rounded sections. The same little shop on the Rue de la Pair Is showing exquisite colored models of the same type. These are worn with colored suits. A pale lav ender looks extremely well with any of the purple suits; white touched with hand embroidery in black look? stunning with the mixed suitings now so popular. Ecru lace is combined with these batiste forms, and fre quently coinspots of linen thread arr aplied to give the models a touch oft distinction. In the central jabot a deep cream tulle is finely pleated to form the straight strip down the front. Tiny black velvet buttons ornament this, and at each side a frill of the tulle (which, as you know, is a fine net) falls in soft fullness. As a square finish the last jabot suggests a use for square motifs or straight lace. The ends give a step- TRANSPARENT YOKE IS HERE Takes the Place of Low Neck Dress and Is Welcomed Almost Unanimously. Except for actual evening dress, the low neck is not seen now. Fash ion decrees T nstead —and good sense for once joins her —that the transpar ent yoke and high collar be worn in stead. This yoke may be pleated or tucked, but more frequently It is perfectly plain, without a suggestion of niching or ornamentation of any kind. Os course the collar must be boned, but the bones are made as few and as in conspicuous as possible, so that the yoke and the collar seem simply fitted closely, though not tightly, to the figure. These yokes are usually of net, though chiffon and even tulle or ma line are occasionally seen, particularly the first; and they are, nine times out of ten, dead white. If you have not the sort of skin that can stand pure white next to it, insert a tiny fold of ecru or flesh-colored chiffon under the top of your collar, but do not let it be apparent. This style is especially seen in dressy gowns in the darker colors — most of all in black. The color con trast is striking, and is usually most attractive and becoming. Although one would not think so, it looks espe dally well on middle-aged women who have not lost their fresh complexions and whose hair is white or gray. Noth lng could be more distinguished in appearance than a draped black silk gown, simply trimmed, with on*- of these white net yokes and collars, on a woman of this type. The collar is as high as can be borne with comfort (and as tight also), and is slightly pointed under the ears. In general, It has not even a line of black at the top, but Is, as j I have said, absolutely plain through I out.—Exchange. How to Color Purple. To color purple, for 15 pounds of cotton take 4 pounds of logwood chips and boil them in two pails of water. Dissolve 1 pound of alum in a pall of hot water and add to the first solution, put in the cotton and boil in the dye for one hour. Drain and haug to dry. To color yellow and green, for 5 pounds of cotton dissolve 8 ounces of sugar of lead In 4 quarts of warm water and dissolve 5 ounces of bi chromate of potash in three quarts of warm water. Put the cotton cloth in the lead solution first, wring it out and put into the bichromate of potash so lution. Repeat until the right shade is reached. To color green dip the yellow cloth after dyeing into a so lution of bluing, making it as deep as tiksd. Ribbons In Demand. All the world is talking about the tremendous vogue for ribbons. It forms the piece de resistance on near ly all the fashionable toilet accesso ries. There are many novelties in moire, satin and velvet ribbons, the •hot and reversible being perhaps the most In demand. like effect. Insertion Is used to trim the ends. Black velvet ribbon slipped through lace slides is the unexpected touch that the French so thoroughly appreciate and introduce on the acces sories. Why not make one of these for your blouse or shirtwaist? They fill in the gap at the front of a coat. They are certainly representative of little cost and great effect. RENOVATING THE TULLE VEIL Few Moments’ Care and Trouble Will Restore Adornment to Orig inal Beauty. Tulle veils that have become limp may be renovated by pressing them with a warm iron, having first placed a handkerchief between the Iron and the tulle. Lace veils and scarfs should be soaked in a strong lather of white soap and soft water and allowed to simmer gently in a saucepan over a fire for about twenty minutes. The veils should be lifted out and squeezed tightly, but not rubbed, then rinsed out in cold water. The second lot of water should be faintly tinged with blue and have in it a small quan tlty of hot starch. Clear the veils of any particles of the search by clap ping well between the hands; then pin on a clean white cloth and allow to dry. In this manner they will look as fresh and clean as when new, and they may be washed any number of times. Veils should always be ironed with a handkerchief or piece of fine linen between, as they are much bet ter aud wear longer If they do not come in direct contact with the iron IN BLACK AND WHITE Truly this lg a velvet season, and j one sees It worked up Into every sort of costume, but none are so perfectly beautiful as the evening gowns. A stunning example Is portrayed In the accompanying sketch, which shows a skirt of black panne volvet, wonder fully draped on side* and veiled with a white lace tunic. The bodice of white net and lace Is trimmed with broad bands over shoulders and deep girdle of black velvet Joined to them In Jumper fashion. It la predicted that stripes will be worn a good deal tbie spring. Fancy Hercules and Titan braids are the elect this season. SLEUTHSDFDOGDQM Nebraskan’s Bloodhounds Have Caught 150 Criminals. Proof to Show That They Practice the Science of Deduction With the Profundity of a Sher lock Holmes. Beatrice. Neb.— A peaceful, white bearded physician of this town has been directly Instrumental In the cap ture, during the last 25 years, of more than 150 murderers, train robbers and other desperate lawbreakers. Dr. J. B. Fulton has passed his 78th , birthday. Meeting him at the front door of his cottage, where he lives with his deaf sister, It would not bo easy for you to believe that bis name Is the terror of criminals In half a ; dozen states. But speak to the old gentleman about his favorite hobby ! and see his eyes light up with pleas ure; persuade him to take you through the bloodhound farm, which I takes up almost an acre back of the cottage and contains upwards of 20 | skilled man hunters; watch him as he fondles his fierce pets and you will begin to understand. Polk, a 5-year-old Cuban blood hound, and Cheyenne, a 4-year-old English bloodhound, were brought out of their kennels by the trainer. The visitor, who had in his youth watched with awe the great red-tongued brutes that make “Uncle Tom’s Cabin" shows attractive, was first struck with the smallness and apparent docility of the two hounds. “We usually run a Cuban dog In a team with an English hound,” Doctor Fulton remarked. "The two breeds i are of about equal ability as far as i following a scent ts concerned, but the Cuban dog Is more active and ener getic on a trail, while the English member of the team, ts he ts well The Dog* and Their Triiner. trained, usually seems able to make finer deductions—he’s more logical." J “You spoke of the dogs being logical —when is it that they have to make deductions?” Doctor Fulton was ask ed. “Well, in a case like one that hap pened out In a Nebraska town a few years ago—l forget the place. A house had been burglarized in a small town, the robber getting away with several hundred dollars, and leaving nothing from which we could give the scent to the hounds. The owner of thw, house knew all the people who had been in the room from which the money was taken for the last three I days, except the robber. We got all those people there, and gave the order • to the dog; 'Find him!* “The Cuban hound Immediately picked up a scent that took him to the wife of the owner of the house. | who was In the next room. But the English dog went sniffing around, got acquainted with the scents of the peo ple there, then found a trail different from any of them. It led to a negro’s house out In the country, and the negro afterward confessed to the crime. “There Is an old Idea that a man can shake off the dogs by walking In running water. About ten years ago two men broke out of the Beatrice Jail. They followed the bed of the creek four miles and then confidently took the road. We simply trailed them to the creek, and, one dog on each side, followed It down until the place where the men came out. Then —this will show you how keen Is the scent of the hounds—we put them In o buggy and drove along the road. As long as the men we were hunting bad stayed on the road, which was about ten miles, the dogs sat still, Intent and watchful. As soon as we reached the spot where they dived Into a corn field the dogs jumped out of the bug gy. They had scented the trail from the bed of the buggy. “A trail becomes hard to follow after about 50 hours have elapsed, but < we have followed trails much older than that. “We ran a horsethlef who had made away with a fine pair of mares In South Dakota, four years ago, 250 miles before we captured him and the horses. It took nine days to catch him. the two hounds steadily follow ing the scent for that length of time. Then about eight yearß ago two of my dogs, ‘Joe-Joe’ and ’Miss Colum bia,’ were taken out to the wild hills In Wyoming to run down a band of train robbers who had taken SIO,OOO from a Missouri Pacific train. ‘Joe- Joe* got lost out there and was never found. Probably he was stolen. But ‘Miss Columbia’ went on and man* aged to capture two of the robbers.** And It Wee All Imagination. T wonder how much Imagination governs some persons’ senses?’* re marked a visitor at the St. Regis yes terday. “For a Christmas present I sent to a young woman of my ac quaintance one of the most elaborate sachet cases I court! find. It was such a beautiful thing that I didn’t put per fume in it, for some women prefer to use a certain kind all the time, and 1 thought I would leave it to the re cipicht to put her own particular sach et powder in the case. You may im agine I was somewhat amazed to read this in her enthusiastic letter of thanks: “It’s perfume has pervaded the whole room.’ “ —New York Press. Keeping Oil Fire From Spreading. Milk will quench a fire caused by an exploding lamp, water only spread ing the oil. Tightness across the chest means a cold on tne lungs. That’s the danger signal. Cure that cold with Uatnlina Wizard Oil before it runs into Consumption or Pneu monia. He who cannot do kindness without a brass band Is not so scrupulous about his other dealings. TO CURB A COLD IN ONE DAT Take LAXATIVE BKOMO Quints® Tablets Druagta*® refund mnnfr if It fall® to esse AW. GEO* M'S atanutur® 1* on ®acb bus. Ac. Magnify your personal rights and you are sure to create some social wrongs. Taking Garfield Tea will prevent the re currence of sick headache, indigestion and bilious attacks. All druggists. A good home Is the best exposition of heaven. VETTER FUR HEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN TRAN CASTOR (XL* SALTS, OR PILLS, AS IT BttllM AM) CLEANSES THE SYSTEM SOU VfKSMIT AJ» s SAB TQSf PLEASANT TO TAKE \SYMJP*fFJGS"" d EUXIR°fSENNA. IS THE IDEAL FAMILY LAXATIVE. 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DfJULTTATING OR CMPML AND THEREFOR.*! DOCS NOT BfTERFERE M ANY WAY WITH BUSINESS OR PLEASURE. IT M RECOMMENDED BY MttUONS OP WELL. WFORMED FAMILIES, WHO KNOW OP ITS VALUE FROM URL TO GET ITR BENEFICIAL EFFECTS ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE; MANUFACTURED BY THE CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. Eg v. J rig iTCrIftnAjHRMH IwiBSBMIik and used it with such satisfactory results that I sent for two large bottles, and I have up to this time used about half a 50 cent bottle with splendid success.”— James Hvdh, Beebe, White County, Arlc Got Ease in Less Than Ten Minutes. Mr. James E. Alexander, of North Harpswell, Me., writes:— “l am a horseshoer and subject to many strains in my back and hips which baa brought on rheumatism in the sciatic nerve. I had it so bad one night when sitting in my chair, that I had to jump on my feet to get relief. I at once applied your SLOANS LINIMENT to the affected part and in less than ten minutes it was perfectly earn I think it is the best at all Liniments.* 9 man Sloan’s Liniment does not need any fiS rubbing. It’s a powerful penetrant Try it for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Sprains, Chest Pains, and Sore Throat | It gives almost instant relief. ■ Price 28&, 800., and *I.OO at All Daalara. B JjSSST B ■»“<* 'or Sioaa’, m. Book oa Roim AddroM DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS. IjSSI RHEUMATISM Munjon’s Rheumatism Remedy relieves pslus In the legs, artus. back, stiff et swollen Joint*. Contains no morphia* opium, cocaine or drugs to deaden the pain. It neutralises the acid and drives out all rheumatic polsona from the are* tern. Write Prof. Hunjron, 53d and Jeff erson Bt«. Phil®.. i»a., for medical ad vice, absolutely free. The Army of Constipation la Growing SmmtUr In® P«® UN. Sck M—®k fluunu, HULL DOSE. MUULL FUS Cwwl— Sirpnatur® DEFIANCE STARCH SLTK2S “It Cured My BacK” “ For twenty-nine years I have * been at intervals a great sufferer from rheumatism. During that time, no telling how many gal lons of the various kinds of lini ments and oils 1 have used and with but little relief. Recently, I 1 was confined to my bed help less. I tried Sloan’s Liniment