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The Democrat-Herald from Springfield, Colorado • 2

Location:
Springfield, Colorado
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE HERALD SPRINGFIELD, COLORADO COLORADO IS STORM SWEPT FOLLOWING CLOUDBURBT FLOODB DEVASTATE SAN JUAN DISTRICT. LOSS OF LIFEUNKNOWN RAILROADB, HIGHWAYB, TOWNS, BRIDGES AND CROPB RUINED IS $5,000,000. Western Newspaper Union News Service. Durango, Colo. San Luis valley and the San Juan country have been damaged millions of dollars with a loss of life that is yet unknown because of the meagreness of detail in the first dispatches received from the flood-devastated districts.

Railroads, state and county highways, towns, bridges and crops In the last few days have suffered as the result of cloudbursts and torrential rains heretofore unprecedented in Colorado. The burden of special dispatches from Durango, Ouray, Alamosa, Antonito, Rico, Cortez and half a dozen smaller towns is ruin and desolation that will take months to repair. Buildings of every description were torn bodily from their foundations; haystacks, heavy logs and railroad and bridge timbers were swept away and tossed like straws on the crests of surging waters; miles upon miles of Denver Rio Grande track were ripped from the roadbed in various places and twisted into hopeless tangles of steel and wood, and a little village east of Durango, containing fifty souls, is reported to have been wiped off the map. Hairbreadth escapes were numerous and hundreds have been made homeless throughout the flooded districts which extend from the center of the San Luis valley westward across the San Juan ranges and down the Animus valley clear across the borders of New Mexico. From Durango, which has been cut off from the outside world, come reports of a loss of $500,000 to the railroad; $200,000 to the farmers of the region, and in the destruction of bridges.

Only one bridge is left standing in La Plata county. Fifteen miles of track between Durango and Silverton are reported gone. Losses of life are feared at Dolores and Cortez. Efforts to get into comlinication with these towns were futile. From Telluride comes the report that the little town of Hesperus was saved only by miners dynamiting a dam and changing the course of the floods.

The breaking of the D. U. G. levee threatened the entire business of Alamosa. Only the Herculean efforts of the inhabitants prevented disaster.

So great was the force of the waters that cement sidewalks were undermined and carried from ten to twenty feet away. Scores of families living along the south side of the Rio Grande river had to be rushed to places of safety in wagons. Among the hairbreadth escapes reported is that of a train of mule teams in the Uncompahgre cafion, near Durango. At Mineral park the mule teams that had left Durango to get supplies for the town had Just crossed a section of road supported by 300 feet of cribbing when the cribbing suddenly gave way and plunged sheer for a depth of COO feet into the bed of the cafion. A stretch of fifteen miles of track between Durango and Silverton Ls reported completely gone.

The effects of the flood at Durango will be more far-reaching than was thought at first. It has been reported that the damage done locally to the Rio Grande railway can be repaired in from one to three months but until the officers of the road can make the estimate it cannot be said with any degree of certainty just how much time will be required to repair the damage. The storm continued with unabated severity for twenty-four hours throughout the Animas valley and over the entire San Juan ranges. The rainfall in Durango was a little over three inches, but in the mountains surrounding it was from seven to eight inches. Only one bridge is left standing in Plata county.

At the section house of the railway company was washed away and the tracks also washed away for a short distance. From Durango to Farmington, N. the roadbed of the Denver Rio Grande Southern is out completely. At Mancos the damage reported is slight comparatively. Officials have estimated that at Durango and surrounding country the loss to the railroad will total $500,000 and that the farmers of the territory have sustained a loss to their property close on to $200,000.

The valley was flooded to a depth of fifteen to twenty feet throughout, the storm seemingly being a series of cloudbursts. At Animas City, the oldest town of the county, great damage was done to property and it is feared there has been a loss of life. A break occurred In the levee of the Rio Grande railway to the north of Alamosa along the hanks of the Rio Grande Del Norte, and the deluge that followed threatened the destruc tion of the business district. Several hundred men were Immediately on the scene and through heroic efforts, the break was patched before any serioui damage was done to the town below. LATEST NEWS EPITOMIZED; 3 4 FROM TELEGRAPHIC REPORTB THAT COVER THE EVENTB.

OF MOST INTEREST i i KEEPING THE READER POSTED ON MOBT IMPORTANT 1 CURRENT TOPICS. Wntern Newspaper Union News Service. WESTERN. J. S.

Dorman, a wealthy citizen of Fullerton, remarried his first wife on the fifty-third anniversary of their first wedding, after having been married to two other women. The elgfct hour law for women, I passed by the recent session of the Washington Legislature, has been de- dared constitutional by Superior Judge John F. Main, at Seattle. The Rio lines in the San i Luis valley and through the San Juan country have suffered more from the storms of this week than ever be- i fore In their history, from present indications. After hunting bear In Texas, elephants in Africa, and various other things in his own country.

Col. Theodore Roosevelt, it is intimated, may go to Long Beach, to hunt 1 whales. Transcontinental railways have 1 asked the Interstate Commerce to suspend Its orders in coast involving the heaviest railroad traffic in the United States, until the Commerce Court passes upon their merits. The municipal matrimonial bureau is the latest innovation in connection with the Des Moines plan of city government. Edward C.

Lytton, the secretary, has been designated general manager of the bureau, which is announced as the house for lonely Barney F. 1-ally, once private secre- 1 tary to William McKinley, died at his Tulsa, Okla. Beginning on the day President McKinley was shot 1 in Buffalo, I.ally always wore a white carnation in his buttonhole in memory of the dead President. Fresh from his triumph, when he topped the Rocky Mountains in a sensational flight from Helena, Cromwell Dixon, the 19-year-oid aviator, fell from a height of 100 feet in his initial performance at the Spokane Inter- state fair grounds and was fatally mangled. With the date for the drawing for 1 06,502 acres of government farm lands 1 in South Dakota set for October 24th, 1 the registration is now its height.

Every train into Dallas and Gregory brings hundreds of landsoekers and it is estimated that by midnight of October 24th over 150,000 will have sworn in their applications. The registration started October 2nd. Several prominent Salt Lake City capitalists, headed by William Spg-y, governor of Utah, have agreed in the formation of a company to build the Utah division of the Denver, Northwestern Pacific railroad (Moffat road), from the Colorado state line to Salt Lake City, Utah, and, In conjunction with foreign interests, to continue the roud westward by arrangemeut with the present holders of Moffat read stock. WASHINGTON. Provisions for the establishment of a parcels post and the transportation of mail by aeroplane has been made by 1 Postmaster General Hitchcock in his annual estimates of postoffice department expenditures, submitted to the Treasury Department in Washington.

It is announced by the Navy Athletic Association that an agreement has been reached with the athletic authorities of the Army and the University of Pennsylvania, by which the annual Army-Navy football game will be played at Franklin Field, Philadelphia, for the next two years. Apparently intoxication is coming to be regarded as a much more serious offense among officers of the army i and navy. It announced at the i War Department that President Taft had confirmed the sentence of dismis- sal in the case of four of the West i Point cadets recently convicted of intoxication. FOREIGN. The Italian flag floats over aultauia fort at Tripoli, which is occupied by landing parties.

Part of the fleet Is anchored in the harbor and the other warships lie a short distance frpm the dismantled fortifications. A news agency dispatch from Vienna says it is reported from Constantinople that an Italian squadron lias bombarded and occupied Mitylene, capital of the island of Lesbos, in the Grecian archipelago, belonging to Turkey. Tripoli has been bombarded, her forts and other defenses in ruins and the Turks have hoisted the white flag. The strike declared on the Irish railroads by the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants, September 21st, has been settled. Tripoli is now under the government of an Italian official appointed by the authorities at Rome.

Even most conservative newspapers of Constantinople call on the government to offer a determined resistance to the Italian occupation. From present appearances, the Turkish-Italian war promises to be the shortest and most bloodless war in 1 history. Its distinguishing character- istic has been the absence of fighting, and, with Germany acting as peacemaker. it may end before fighting takes place. SPORT.

WEATKRN I.BAOIIE FIX AI. STANDING. CLUBS. Won. Lost.

Pot. 1 Denver 110 54 .670 2 St. Joseph 93 71 .567 3 Pueblo 92 74 .554 4 Omaha 85 80 .515 5 Slone City 84 80 .512 6 Lincoln 84 81 .509 7 Topeka 60 104 .365 Des Molnea 44 113 .280 Referee Stout awarded Monte Attol of San Francisco a decision over Johnny Daly of New York, at the end of a ten-round bout In New Orleans. Before a favorable 20-mile wind from the south and southeast, eight racing balloons sailed away from Kansas City in contests for the James Gordon Bennett trophy and the Lahm cup. Articles have been signed in New York for a 20-round fight between Sam Langford and Joe Jeannette, the negro heavyweights, to be fought at Tom McCarey's club in Angeles, November 11th.

The Colorado College game with the School of at Golden, lias been postponed from October 14th, until November 18th, which arrangement will give the Mines more time to get into shape for the conference game. The-closing games of the 1911 American League season have been played. By virtue of its victory over Cleveland, Chicago finished the season in fourth place, a fraction ahead of Boston; Cleveland was third, Boston fifth. New York sixth, Washington seventh and St. Louis last.

Battling Nelson, the former lightweight champion, failed in his efforts, when he ran against Young Saylor, Tartar from Indianapolis, who gave him more than ho had bargained for in their twelve-round engagement at the Armory A. A. in Boston. The clubhouse was packed and the crowd was not disappointed. GENERAL.

Betting on the baseball series between New York and Philadelphia is at even money in cities. Earl Ovington, the aviator, started from Governor's Island in an attempt to fly across the continent to Los Angeles. New high records were established in the coffee market in Now York when contracts for near By deliveries were firm at 14 Vi. The was developed that a well organized "baby where infants can be purchased for $5 each like mert.tiandise, exists in Philadelphia. It is charged that in the campaign for nomination for the United States Isaac Stevenson of Milwaukee, spent $30,000 for beer and cigars alone.

Gifford Pinchot will return to Washington about October 15th, prepared to charge that a conspiracy has been carefully organized to mislead public opinion concerning Alaska. Quietness prevails in Chicago in the strike of shop workers on the 1 Illinois Central and other Harriman railroads, according to the announcements of railroad officials. Eight indictments against wallpaper manufacturers and four wallpaper jobbers, charging a conspiraoy in restraint of trade, were returned by the federal grand jury in Cleveland. Governor Hoke Smith of Georgia has announced his intention to retire from office early in November, so as to be ready to assume his duties as United States senator when Congress convenes. A Burlington freight train was wrecked half a mile east of Lingo, Macon county, Missouri.

Six boys of New Cambria and Bevier, are reported to have been killed. They were stealing a ride. It is said that a son of the late United States Senator Stephen B. Elkins is engaged to marry Miss Sarah Brooke, a talented English actress, of London. Miss Brooke is well-known on both the American and English stages.

The Wall street news agencies report that Henry C. Frick, the steel magnate and, next to J. P. Morgan, the most masterful personality in the steel trust, is about to retire from the corporation, having sold most of his stock. It will cost $129,000,000 to maintain the United States navy and provide tor suitable increase In the next fiscal year, according to the estimates completed by Secretary Meyer.

Thi3 includes a provision for two super-dreadnoughts, probably of about the size of the projected Nevada and Oklahoma, which will displace about 28,000 tons, and for a suitable number of auxiliaries. There will be criminal prosecution of officials of the Steel trust, according to a statement made at the' Department of Justice at Washington. Who these officials are the department would not make known. Meanwhile on the desk of Attorney General Wickersham, awaiting his return from New York, are the papers In a suit in equity ready for filing against the United States Steel corporation. The task of attempting to put an end to all initiative and referendum legislation in this country began In the Supreme Court of the United States in Washington when counsel for the Pacific States Telephone and Telegraph Company filed a brief attacking a taxing law of Oregon because it was enacted under the initiative clause of the state constitution, which is alleged to be in violation of the federal constitution.

William Eleroy Curtis, of Washington, the traveler, journalist and writei of political topics, is dead. At Black River Falls, the prosperous little city of 2,000 persons which was swept by a flood when the Black river, swollen by recent rains, washed through the embankment of the La Crosse Water Power Company's dams at Hatsfield, the situation ls worse than was feared when the deluge burst upon the city. Half of the business section has been destroyed, together with a part of the residence district, and it is said by the townspeople who have taken refuge on high land that the city will be wiped off the map. MUNYON PREACHES HOPE PHILOSOPHY New Association Gaining Many. Members.

CURATIVE POWER NOTED HEALTH EXPERT GIVES REASON FOR BIG SUCCESS IN MEDICINE Tremendous nucccsa has attended organisation of the new Munyon "Hope Professor Munyon claims that has secured more converts than he even anticipated, and says that hla Is growing In leaps and bounds. It la said that the total membership of the association throughout the United States la now well over the half million mark. In a statement for publication Prof. Munyon said: "I want to talk to every alck, oiling and despondent person in this city. I want to preach my new creed to them.

I want to tell them about my new philosophy of health, which is the fruit of a lifetime of study and experience In dealing with sick folk. 1 I want to expound the Great Truth that have learned that there ls more curative power In on ounce of Hope than In pounds of Dope. That sick people should not take medicine except a a medium through which the great curative power of Hope may bo made effective. Medicines are necessary in the present Btate of the progress because they give a patient physTcul support nnd strength and renewed vigor with which to brace up the will power. One knows, from the action of the proper medicines, that he or she Is feeling better by tills inspired hopo and faith, which complete the cure.

think that probably a million persons at least in the United States hnve declared themselves cured by my medicines, and I know thnt these people have had the best remedies medical science had to offer. I have always contended that if there Is any virtue In medicine my followers should have the best, but I verily believe that more than one-half of those who have been lifted to health from tho bondage of chronic illness, through taking my medicines, have been really cuied by the knowledge tiuit they had the utmost in medical lore at their command, and the Hope this Inspired. am not In any sense a practicing fihyslclnn. I employ at my laboratories Philadelphia a large staff of expert physicians and chemists, nnd I have many other physicians In various cities of the United States derailed to give free advice to the sick anTT afflicted. My hendqunrters are nt Laboratories.

53d and Jefferson nnd I hnve there a staff of duly registered physicians and consulting experts, and to all who desire it I offer the best of medical advice absolutely free of charge." Write today, addressing Prof. J. M. Munyon personally and your letter will have a special care. Some Mosquitoes.

"Yes," said the traveler who had Just returned from South Africa. "I was one day so annoyed by mosquitoes that I was compelled to take refuge in an old Iron safe which lay discarded on the veldt first emotions of Joy at my happy deliverance were hardly over i when the mosquitoes, scenting me, began to drive their stingers through the safe. Fortunately, 1 had a ham- I mer In my pocket, and as fast as their stingers through the iron I clinched them, until at length such a host of them was fastened down In this way that, when they started to fly away, they carried me and that safe miles. one by one, they died with She c-xertlon, and I was able to come out with safety. Yes, wonderful things happen In foreign Ideas.

A Metaphor Resented. I understand you to say, sir," said Colonel Stillwell, "that you regarded that remarks as moonshine?" what I said," replied the critical person. sir, I do not wish to seem captious, but w'hen it comes to comparing that line of talk with a mountain product for whose vigorous qualities I have a large degree of respect. I muse say your efforts to be complimentary, sir, go entirely too far." He Balked at That. "I positively and absolutely refuse!" cried the candidate with great emphasis.

"Refuse asked the campaign manager. kissed all the babies In my district," he replied, "but be gumswoggled If kiss Mrs. poodle, even If it costs the whole suffragette A man who needs the money has no time to meddle In other people's affairs. A idea of a responsibility depends on how he is dressed. 'N Saves Worry Time and Trouble Post Toasties Can be served instantly with cream or milK.

It maKes a breaKfast or lunch so superior to the ordinary, that it has become a welcome pantry necessity in thousands of homes, and adds to the comfort and pleasure of life. "The Memory Sold by Grocers Postum Cereal Battle Creek, Mich. MARKET QUOTATIONS Woatarn Newspaper Union Service. DENVER MARKETB. Cattle.

Beef steers, cornfed, good to choice 6.0007.00 Beef steers, cornfed, fair to good 4.5005.50 Beef steers, grass fed, good to choice 4.7505.50 Beef steers, grass fed, fair to good 4.2504.75 Heifers, prime, grass fed. .4.760 5.10 Cows and heifers', grass fed, good to choice 4.2604.75 Cows and heifers, fair to good 3.50@4.15 Stock cows and heifers Canners and cutters 1.Q003.00 Veal calves 4.5006.75 Bulls 2.5003.25 Stags 3.2504.50 Feeders and Stockers, good to choice 4.5005.10 Feeders and Stockers, fair to good 3.5004.50 Feeders and stockers, common to fair 3.0003.50 Hogs. Good hogs 6.4006.50 Sheep. good to choice 5.0005.50 fair to good 4.5005.00 Feeder lambs, F. P.

4.2505.00 Yearlings, fair to choice ....3.5004.00 Yearlings, feeders, F. P. .3.2503.75 Wethers, fair to choice 3.0003.75 Wethers, feeders, F. P. 3.50 Ewes, fair to choice 2.7503.50 Ewes, feeders and culls, F.

P. 2.0002.75 Hay. Colorado upland, per 17.00018.00 Nebraska upland, per ton. .15.00016.00 Second bottom, Colorado and Nebraska, per ton. .12.50013.50 Timothy, per ton 15.50016.50 Alfalfa, per ton 10.50011.50 South Park, choice, per ton 18.00@19.00 San Luis Valley, per ton.

.15.00016.00 Gunnison Valley, per ton. .16.00 0 17.00 Straw, per ton 4.000 5.00 Grain. Wheat, choice milling per 100 lbs 1.42 Rye, bulk. 100 lbs 1.20 Idaho oats, sacked 1.78 Corn, in sack 1.43 Corn chop, sacked 1.44 Bran, per 100 lbs 1.20 Dressed Poultry. Turkeys, fancy, D.

17 019 Turkeys, choice 15 01G Turkeys, medium 12 013 Hens, large 11 012 Hens, small 9 010 Broilers, lb 15 016 Springs 14 015 Ducks Geqse 7 0 8 Roosters 7 Live Poultry. Hens, 4 lbs. and over, Hens, under 4 lbs 7 Broilers, 2 lbs. and under, lb 14 015 Springs, lb 12 Roosters 6 Ducks 12 Turkeys, lb 17 018 Geese Butter. Elgin Creameries, ex.

east, 30 Creameries, ex. 30 Creameries, 2d grade, lb. 24 Process 24 Packing stock Yl A Eggs. Eggs, case count, less com $6.50 MISCELLANEOUS MARKETS. Live Stock in Kansas City.

Kansas slow; beeves. southern steers, southern cows and heifers, native cows and heifers, stockers and feeders, bulls, calves. western steers, 7.10; western cows, $2.7504.75. steady; bulk of sales, heavy, packers and butchers, lights, pigs, $4.0005.00. strong; muttons, lambs, range wethers and yearlings, range ewes, $2,500 4.00.

Flax. on track in store, to arrive and October, November, asked; December, bid. Wool. St. Louis inactive; medium grades, combing and clothing, 170 20c; light fine, 17019 heavy fine, 14015 tub washed, 21026 c.

Eastern Produce. Chicago cream erics, dairies, 25 cases included, 17c; firsts, 20c; prime firsts, 21 daisies, twins, Young Americas, 14 long horns, Potatoes choice to fancy. 70075 fair to good, 70073 c. turkeys, 15c; chickens, lie; springs, 11c. 50 to 60 lb.

8 0 9c; 60 to 85 lb. 850 110 lb. 11c. Metals. New York.

copper dull; spot, October, November, December and January, $11.80011.90. Lake copper, electrolytic, $12.250 12.37%; casting. $12.00012.25. spot, October and November, December and January, $39.75040.25. sl.

4.40 New York; $4.200 4.30 East St. Louis. $5.9506.05 New York; $5.8505.95 East St. Louis. Cookson's, $8,250 8.37%.

FLOOD DISTRICT SHORT ON FOOD PEOPLE ARE ON HALF RATIONB. ALL MEANS OF TRANSPORTATION HAB BEEN CUT OFF. NO RELIEF IN SIGHT 83,000,000 LOBS IN SAN JUAN, 500.000 IN NEW MEXICO; INDIAN SCHOOL RUINED. Western Newspaper Union Newi Service. Durango, forces of men are at work repairing the damage wrought by the devastating waters, but they are engaged in once more placing the stricken city in running order they are faced with a menace of greater suffering than that caused by the flood shortage In the food supply.

While it has not reached the famine point as yet, the supply of flour and potatoes is growiug slim and sugar has become almost an unknown quantity. There is a large flour mill here, but the total absence of wheat renders it of no assistance now. The grain must be brought from the San Luis valley and until the railroads resume traffic this will be practically an impossibility. Dealers have not raised the prices on their wares, but have issued warnings to the people to economize. Pack trains can bring In a limited amount of supplies, but the difficulties encountered would make the prices prohibitive for many of the people.

The Denver Rio Grande Is now building a spur of track from its line down through one of the principal streets of the city to the river in order to recover two box cars that were on the bridge when it was swept away. The Rio Grando Southern succeeded in getting a train from here to Mancos, thirty-one miles. The company expects to get to Dolores, twelve miles farther, within two or three days. A combination train carrying passengers, mail, baggage and freight, will be run from here east as far as the washout at La Baca. It is reported in Durango that one of the rescuers was drowned in Tellurlde.

His body has not been recovered. On the Farmington branch of the Rio Grande, during the progress of the flood, bridge after bridge went out after the last train had passed. As reporta'continue to come in from the flooded district it Is that the destruction will be greater than anticipated. The most conservative estlmateh now place the loss at 000,000 in the San Juan valley. During the height of the flood on the river, a section man on the Farmington branch of the Rio Grande at Bindad reported seeing a cabin containing a man and a dog floating down the stream.

Both were lost. The idendlty of the man has not been ascertained. A stage line has been established between Durango and Rockwood, a distance of eighteen miles. From Rockwood the travelers take saddle horses to Silverton and from there to Ouray to the railroad. The famous Red Mountain toll road from Silverton to Ouray is so badly damaged that It is impassable except on horseback.

Trains now can operate from Denver to Lumberton, N. seventy-five miles east of Durango, and from Durango east a distance of thirty-one miles, leaving a gap of forty-one miles over which trains can not cross. Alamosa, Colo. The Shiprock agency of the Navajo Indians, thirtyfive miles west of Farmington, N. was destroyed totally and the buildings erected by the government at a cost of $200,000 carried away by the flood and probably a score of the Indians drowned, according to reports that reached here.

It has so far been impossible to make a count of the Indians to learn the exact number that perished, but it is declared that the number will not be less than twenty. It Is estimated that the total damage done by the flood in the devastated district, comprising an area 100 miles north and south by seventy-five miles east and west, will reach a total of $4,500,000. It will require between $300,000 and $500,000 to repair the Denver Rio Grande narrow gauge from Durango to Silverton, and the time required in making the repairs will necessitate the closing of the Durango smelter several months. Durango is connected with the outside world by telegraph, the Western Union sending messages by telephone to Ouray, where they were placed on the wire. The principal towns and cities that are entirely cut off from railroad com inunication with the outside world are Durango, Silverton, Farmington, Rico, Tellurlde, Pagosa Springs and Aztec.

Indications are that all lines in Colorado, with the exception of the branch from Durango to Silverton, will be opened this week or early next week. As further information is gained of the damage wrought by the flood, the railroad situation grows more serious, and it is now stated there will be no through train from Denver inside of two weeks. The southern branch, loading to Durango, is open as far west as Chama, N. M. The damage between Chama and Durango is heavy and it cannot be stated definitely when it will be opened.

The Rio Grande Southern is open between Durango and Dolores, but the section between Dolores and Placerville is heavily damaged and it will be several days before trains can be operated. The worst damage to the tracks occurred between Durango and Silverton and Durango and. Farmington, Mr HE be lighted with the resuits of Calumet Baking Powder. No no flat, heavy, soggy biscuits, cake, or pastry. HH Just the lightest, daintiest, most uniformly raised and most dellclous food you ever ate.

Pure Faad libmlUm, isor. if Shoo'Polishes FlnMt in Quality. Largest In Variety, They meet every requirement for cleaning aid polishing shoes of all kinds and colors. GILT EDGE the only ladles ahoe dressing that positively contains OIL Blacks and PoUsbos and children's boots and shoes, shines vlthsat robbing, 23c. aloes," 10c.

DANDY combination for cleaning and polishing all kinds of rnsset or tan shoes, S3c. sUe, 10a. 12 LITE rout. I nation for gentlemen who take pride in hA.lng their shoes Took Al. Brstoroa color and black shoes.

Polish with a brash or cloth. 26cents. also 10 cents. If yonr dealer does not keep the kind yon want, send us his address and the price In stamps fas full size package. WHITTEMORE BROB.

CO 90-28 Albany 8t. Cambridge. Mus, i'he Oldest and largest Manufacturers of Shoe Polishes in the World. Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief Cure LITTLE LIVER PILLS faiL Purely vegeta- ble act siirely TFDX but gently on the liver. JTLE Stop after IBIVER dinner dis- PILLS, Indigestion, improve the complexion, brighten the SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK.

Genuine must bear Signature YflllYOU TRAPTffISSEASON? IT 50 YOU WILL WANT OUR COMPUTE PRICE UBTON RAWFURS ITS ran As'i A pay what ervt you fll charge ill Basquarcll no 111 QUOTE DEAL WCOMMISSMIf DIRECT BUYERS OF FURS LOTZbros U3ii3 elm stSt Louis. LIVE STOCK AND MISCELLANEOUS Electrotypes IN GREAT VARIETY FORj SALE cAT THE LOWEST PRICES BY WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION Kansas City, Missouri Hhair balsam Clend beautifies the hair. Promo tee a luxuriant growth. Merer Falla to Restore Gray Bair to lta Youthful Color. Curse eealp dleraeea a hair felling iiV Eye Water (Slefc relief eje eaaerwtaO.

DITCMTC w.tMlß.(„if„nß,w..i--rAI DEFIANCE STARCH rreiag Kcoughs.

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About The Democrat-Herald Archive

Pages Available:
5,556
Years Available:
1897-1923