The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, December 28, 1904, Image 8
BiMaiaHBM-LL.-MM!B..flKJlLiUr.. r f - i '' a i "l - al ii:. "iv l h ! - J- T - . V V 'U". . J V- p. !- i r. :. i If - J -, i - - T .; .: r i S" i. i;- 5? t3 . i." in .CUT PRICE. AT POESGH'S Candy Factory. Buy your candies at wholesale prices and save the middle man's profit yourself. Please remember that I will guarantee my goods to be as Pure and Wholesome as any goods ever shipped to town. I use no poisonous color as you may get in candy shipped in and what may have stood around for months. We make our goods fresh every day as sold. Best Peanut . 12 l-2c per lb Honey Pop Corn 12 l-2e per lb Candy Beads . . leper yd REMEMBER THE PLACE ..POESCH'S CANDY FACTORY.. PRICES ON AT.T. CANDIES IN PLAIN SIGHT. COME AND SEE n.iiir Csumhz 1 Cent Each. ADDITIONAL LOCAL. A crowd of young people enjyyed a dancing party last evening in the Orpheus hail, which was one of the most enjoyable affairs of the kind held this season. Prof. Sike's orchestra famished music daring the evening. Frank Stovick has been engaged to instruct the Oldenbusch band. He will make the trip twice every week from now on, going about sixteen miles to give the lessons. The Olden bosch band has been organized for a number of years and waB formerly called the Meridian band. Mr. Stovi cek has been one of the best and most faithful musicians in the Columbus band for a long time, and tho country boys have secured a leader who is capable. 11. S. Palmer, tho tailor, will Boon move from his rooms over the Com mercial National bank to the rooms now occupied by James Jones for his news stand and shining parlor, where he will open up a full line of tailored goods, to meet tho demands of his customers. , The most sincere gratitude is ex tended oar neighbors end friends and to all who so kindly assisted us and expressed their sympathy in one way or another in our late bereavement, oscasioned by the death of our beloved daughter and sister, Minnie. John Graf and family. No better New Year's resolution can be made by the good housewife than to improve tho quality of her baking for her husband and children. The surest wnj- to do this iB to use WAY UP FLOUR, made by the Columbus Roller Mills. "Eben Holden" will not be seen in Colambus. It was billed for the North Opera House. Jan. ''. Tne date was cancelled recently by the management on aocount of the change of route de termined for the company. Manager Saley, however, has been fortunate in being able to fill the date with Daniel Frohman's "The Open Gate," which has just closed 150 successful nights in Now York. The name "Frohman" to theatre goers will be sufficient to attract the same people who were awaiting tho privileee of seeing "Eban Holden." SURPRISE. R.O. Boyd was pleas antly surprised Monday by a visit from an elder brother, H. M. Boyd of Belleville, Kansas. The brothers have not visited with each other since 1877. Eleven years ago Mr. Boyd was Here one-half hour, and with that excep tion, thov have not seen each other since 1K77. Mr. Boyd had made the trip from Kansas to visit his daughter in Fremont and came to Colnmbns Monday, remaining until yesterday with relatives. DISTRICT COURT The district cosrt calendar for 190Ti as determined by Judges Rceder and Hollenbeck, is as follows: Colfax county, Jauuary 0, April J 4. and September 11; Dodge county, February 20. May 15, and No vember i:J; Merrick county, January 30, April 1 5 and September 11 ; Nance county. March 13, Juno ." and Decem ber 4 ; Platte county, February 20. May l." and November 13. MERIDIAN CHANGES RATES The Meridian Hotel will be a two dollar house after January 1. The proprietor, J. W. Wisenstine, who has always given excellent service, has decided to offer still better ser vice ana he Will raise his rates accord ingly. Columbus has the largest hotel trade of any city its 6ize in Nebraska and its hotels have an enviable repu tation for the manner in which they Ve that trade. Albion. (From The News.) ' Pat CunninghanTwent over to Lind say yesterday. Mrs. P. Laudemann. of St, Edward aad daughter. Mrs. Henry Zinneker of Beaver Crossing, visited friends in the city the first of the week. Spencer Ladd,who travels for a shoe ins, came home Wednesday to spead the holidays. His headqaarters are at St. Joe, Mo., sad he travels prin cipally ia Kansas. - , Miss Kate Jastas of Platte coaaty" aad Earl J.Benaettof the sasse otmaty visited the County Jadge last Wednes day aad were joined ia aatfrissoay, his haaor, Jadge Riley perfsmiag the censaaay. MatMAfttMiifeMfe $3 will go as ..go in any THEM IN OXJR WINDOWS. Wednesday, while Charlie Trosper was handling his shot gun he rested the barrel on Mb foot when by some means it was discharged, the charge passing throngh the foot. It took of the middle toe and about half of the one next to it and mode a very severe wound. Dr. Bartlett was called and dressed it and says it will probably be some time before the foot will be all right again. ttrecttttcretet3r CORRESPONDENCE 131 Route 4. Thou. W. Shaeffer shelled corn Mon day although the weather was very unfavorable. Tom never stops for the weather when there is work to be done. Last Saturday the patrons on this route showed their appreciation for service rendered by giving somo very useful presents and the carrier is very thankful for the same. Chas. Mayberger was taken ill very suddenly last Thursday night and was not able to take part in the program at the social Friday night. Beckwith and Sons raised about 2."KK) bushels of Iowa Silvermine corn this year and sold 1500 bushels to Coy and son of Valley for 4o cents a bushel They are holding the balance for 50 cents. The pupils of the Oconee school held their annual basket social last Friday night, Dec. 23. It was a financial sac cess, the receipts lieing over $18 which will be used to purchase books for tho library. Taking for granted that tne itrons of Route have had a merry Christmas, we wish them a very happy and pros perous New Year. G. H. Hillmer who is attending a theological college at Springfield, 11., is spending the holidays with his parents. Richland and Vicinity. Allen Abart and lady of Scnuyle attended divine service here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Kluck visited their kin on upper Shell Creek Snn day. Mail carrier Chas. Wertz has pur chased Mr. Davies mail wagon and feels proud to be an employ of Uncle Sam. The literary' 60city will give a box social at the Richland school house in two weeks for the purpose of raising money to purchase on organ. The advancd class of young men in district 23 presented their teacher. Miss Elsie Hnghes with a fine writ ing set. Mrs. Chas. Morgan near Columbus is enjoying a holiday visit from broth er, Mr. Munsy of Iowa. Mrs. Tucker of Lincoln spent Christmas here with her parents, Rev. and Mrs. Warf ield. Quite h number of our citizens were at Columbus Saturday and listened to the concert at Grays' store. The ma jority of them enjoyed a cup of fine coffee given free by the Gravs. Supervisors' Proceedings. The Supervisors will be in session all of this week and part of next, yes terday they granted a saloon license to John Kudruon of Tarnov, referred the drai nage ditch proposition to the judiciary committee and took up sev eral road petitions. THE FLiHO COITEST. The piano contest i still going on with increasing vigor. Owing to the cold weather some of the active con testants were unable to bring in their votes. The vote will not be announc ed therefore until next week. All con testants are requested to report their full vote by next Saturday. Japs Report Loss of Officers and Men. Tokio, Dec 28. The navy depart ment publishes a list of nine officers and sixty-five men who were killed while on special duty. The umc, place and circumstances are not ex plained, and it is presumed that an other cruiser has been mined and sunk or damaged. An explanation is expected shortly. Moody Confers With President. Washington. Dec 28. Attorney General Moody and William A. Day, the assistant to the attorney general, called at the white house and spent several hours In conference with the president, presumably discussing the proceedings instituted by the gov erassent against the paper, trust... ' MHttBMiittlaftiiaiiiMai far as $5 will othpr store. x Cor Olive and 13th St ATTORNEY GENERAL MOODY FILES SUIT AT ST. PAUL. METHODS OF COMBINE ILLEGAL As Selling Agent of tlie Mills Cen eral Paper Company Controls the Market Absolutely and Has Ad vanced Prices Fifty Per Cent. St. Paul, Dec. 2S. -Attorney General Moody began a suit by petition in the United States district court here on behalf of the United States against the General Paper company and other paper and pulp companies compris ing what is known as the pa?er trust, under an act of congress approved July 2, 1890. entitled '"An act to pro tect trade and commerce against un lawful restraints and monopolies." The petition alleges that the defend ants entered into an agreement to combine and control the sale of the product of the different companies through the General Paper company in that the General Paper company regulated prices, sales and shipments and territory for the sale of the same and after deducting operating ex penses of the General Paper company divided the surplus among the mem bers of the corporation. The pe tition recites that the General Paper company was organized under the laws of Wisconsin, May 26. 1900. with a capital stock of $100,000. divided into 1,000 shares, which '"ere dis tributed among and are now held by certain of the defendants named and that later the others were taken into tho combine, naming'Them in the or der in which they entered the trust, and goes to state that the General Paper company became the exclusive selling agent for the defendants with absolute power to control tbe output of the various mills, fix the price of all paper sold and to whom and upon what terms and conditions the paper should be sold, and into what states and places it shall be shipped, what publishers and other customers each mill shall supply. The petition al leges that in consequence cf the com bination all competition in the manu facture, sale and distribution of pa per had been restricted and price of ail paper products greatly increased, particularly ' of news print paper, which has been increased about 50 per cent. It further states that no dealers or newspapers or other cus sumcrs in the territory west of the Mississippi, with the exception of cer tain newspaper publishers in St. Louis and Chicago, can purchase any paper except directly through the General Paper company, and then only upon terms dictated by the latter. The court Is asked to declare the alleged combination unlawful and that tho defendants be perpetually en joined from doing any act in pursu ance oi the same, that the General Paper company be enjoined from act ing as sales agent for the other de fendants and that the latter be en joined from continuing their arrange ment with the General Paper com pany. The court Is also asked to di rect the defendants to come into court and answer all questions relating to allegations of the petition as may be necessary. CREW IN MEAT PERIL Tramp Steamer Orumelzier Pounding to Pieces on Fire Island Bar. New York. Dec. 2S Efforts to learn whether Captain Nicholson and the crew cf the British tramp steamer Drumelzier are still aboard tbe ves sel, which is aground on the bar at Fire island, have been unsuccessful and the lifesavers are still watching from the beach in the hope of com municating with the ship. Hidden in a black fog and pounded by fierce seas rolling from the southeast the steamer is in imminent danger of go ing to pieces. If her captain and crew of thirty-two men are still on the ship they face an almost certain death in the heavy surf breaking over the sandy beach. The captain would not let the lifesavers take off his crew early in the day when the seas were not running so high and it is now too late to save them. No boat in the world could be launched in the teeth of the southwest gale that is blowing up great waves and crashing giem down on the shore. Eight Miners Again Deported. Telluride. Colo., Dec. 3. Eight union miners, who had returned to this city f lace the strike was called off, -were placed aboard the outgdlhg trala by Acting City Marshal Geyer aad depatSesrwao bad arrested then and -ordered to stay fxoiehla district 1 ( o J wifcSftPtyffi 10 BUI in Ml ifiiMEiliiHiMiliiMHttiHMi Itfaest aaJMi c paa. An animal trainer says that "no aua living, knows all about animals or more than a very little about them. Some who are dead thought they knew. That is the reason they are dead. Only those who realize tbeir Ignorance and supplement it with un tiring watchfulness last long at this queer business that I'm in. "Sooner or later most animals of the cat kind become utterly intractable and remain so. 'Going bad' is the; professional term for this. Rarely do they return to their old amenable ways. Henceforth they are of no use as performers and arc relegated to the exhibition cages, for any man entering tbe cage of a lion or tiger that has. gone bad is instantly attacked. This is one of the terrors of the trade. Symptoms of the change of heart are apparent enough sometimes, particu larly in animals which are growing old. Occasionally, however, some young beast, formerly as obedient as you could wish, will turn murderous with out cause or warning. If her trainer gets out alive he is lucky. If he ever enters her cage again he's a fool." McClure's. The Xclsy Birds ( the Klght. All tbe night birds are noisy. They cannot consort with one another in happy companies, as do tbe warblers and thrushes and finches, and sing and whisper, but must call loudly and long to one another in the darkness. On coasts where petrels and certain other night hunting sea birds abound, all day sitting on their eggs or hiding in burrows, you will bear no sound from morning till night, but after dark the air is filled with shrill cries. The loud, reiterated calling of the southern chuck-will's-widow and of its northern cousin Is familiar. A whippoorwill will sound its cry several hundred' times in succession without a pause. Owls hoot or utter a harsh sort of laughter, rarely pleasant to listen to, and night herons and bitterns squawk and boom. Sweet songs occasionally heard in the darkness are those of wakeful day birds, as the nightingale or our own oven bird. Ernest Ingersoll in Harper's Magazine. Rleht UvlMf? and Good Looks. Today our great cities show propor tionately a higher average of dress and general string after personal attrac tiveness ameng both men and women than the great cities of any other country- Success depends in the largest meas ure upon health and the personal im pression one makes upon his fellow men, and properly to develop and to' maintain tbe "points" that make for personal attractiveness is to develop and maintain health. For example, how many men and women stop drinking and overeat ing because fat is fatal to good looks? The struggle to keep looking young is a struggle to keep In perfect health. And what a blessing that is to the present and all future generations! The price of good looks is right liv ing, and the reward of right living is health. Saturday Evening Post Carlyle'a Cttarteeaa Side. In tbe "Retrospects" of Professor William Knight of the University of St Andrews are some interesting anec dotes. Among these is a bit from a let ter by Dr. Maclagan, who attended Thomas Carlyle during Carlyle's last years: "My personal experience of Car lyle was this: IlSTwas the most courte ous man I ever met. Never once did that old man fail to rise up to receive me nor allow me to leave his room without walking to the door with me while he had strength to do so. After death all the ruggedness and the wrin kles disappeared from his face. But for tbe beard it was like that of a wo man, so delicate and beautifully mold ed it was." Prefect the Back. People are more likely to catch cold in the back than they are generally aware of, and if neglected It may prove a serious matter. The back, especially between the shoulders, should always be kept well covered, and never lean with your back against anything that is cold. Never fit with tbe back In a direct draft, and when warming It by the fire do not continue to keep the back exposed to the heat after it has become comfortably warm. To do so is debilitating. Journal of Health. "Baraed" hy Cold. Intense cold, as is well known, burns if we may use the term like heat. If a "drop" of air at a temperature of ISO degrees below zero were placed up on the hand it would have tbe same ef fect as would the same quantity of molten steel or lead. Every one who has the care of horses ought to know the pain Inflicted by placing a frosted bit in a horse's mouth. It burns like hot iron. Ualatereated. "Over there. ladies and gentlemen," said the guide to the party of "person ally conducteds," "are tbe famous mud baths of "Don't interest me," said the gentle man from the United States indiffer ently. "I've run for office too many times at home." Puck. His Geatleataaly Keaeatateat. The Judge You called him a liar, did you? How did he take it? Tbe Colonel He agreeably su'prised me, suh, by acting like a perfect gentle man. He knocked me down, sub. Chi cago Tribune. A Jilt. "Is Miss Richly an athletic glrir "I should say so! She threw over one of the heavyweights of the football team." Exchange. Not love, but tact, makes the world go round. Beatrice Harraden. belt ttesaect. Self respect Is at the bottom of all our love of life. Lessen our self re spect and man 13 willing to throw his life away in debauchery and the worst kind of dissolute living. Self respect Is the bond that holds all his powers together, that makes him able to act, to bear, to endure. Now, nothing but ceaseless striving for conduct, for mo rality, for principle, can give you self respect. Every man who deliberately does wrong and does not strive to put It beneath his foot as he would an as sassin seeking to take his life loses self respect, and his power will pass away little by little. Eara ( Lahatera. Host curious are the ears of lobsters. Each is a sack or bag containing fluid and "ear stones," these last being par ticles of mineral matter, or, In some cases, particles of sand. They laereaae tbe vibrations aet up by sound waves, which in due season impinge on the delicate cells of the ear, which contala the ends of the nerve of hearing. These last In tarn convey the iaptaaafaaai ta what serves the lobster by way f a bnda, aad a very irancUbk aarnag ia. . i'!' HI in OHIO SHERIFF REFUSED REQUISI TION FOR DR. CHACWICK. WILL CORRECT THE PAPERS Affidavit Tending to Show That In dicted Man Was in Ohio When Crime Was Committed Forwarded From Cleveland. New York, Dec. 27. Sheriff Barry of Cleveland reached New York from Albany and went to the Hoffman house, where he will remain until the arrival of the Pretoria, which is bringing to this country Dr. Lcroy S. Chadwick of Cleveland and his daugh ter. Miss Mary Chadwick. Mr. Barry was not at all disconcerted over his inability to obtain the requisition pa pers from Governor Odcll. which will permit him to take Dr. Chadwick to Ohio. In conversation with a representa tive of the Associated Press, the sher iff said: "I do not find any fault with Judge Joyce in declining to issue ths requisition papers. I recognize that it is necessary for him to act abso lutely in accordance with his inter pretation of the law. I decided that it would be better to have the matter straightened cut in Cleveland, so I wired Prosecutor Keeler the facts in the case and came on to New York. Mr. Keeler has already forwarded lo me an affidavit giving testimony be fore a grand jury tending to show that Dr. Chadwick was in Cuyahoga county, Ohio, March 15. 1903, on the date the alleged crime was commit ted, and this affidavit will be in my hands today. With that in my pos session I anticipate no difficulty in getting the necessary paper. I am especially solicitous that Miss Chad wick be spared any humiliation. I understand that some of her relatives will meet her on the arrival of the steamer and make arrangements for her future movements." Mr. Barry said that Mrs. Chadwick Is better than when she arrived at the jail in Cleveland and that she it taking her troubles philosophically. Hearing to Be in Lincoln. Omaha, Dec. 27. Tho hearing of the injunction asked by tbe Burling ton and Union Pacific to restrain the county treasurers and tax commis sioners of the various counties through which the roads pass in this state from enforcing the collection of delinquent taxes against them will not be heard until Jan. 16, the first day of the federal court at Lincoln. Attor ney General Prout, on behalf of the state, met with the railroad attor neys and Judge Munger and agreed on stipulations for the hearing to take place at Lincoln on Jan. 16. American Girl Weds Title. Washington, Dec. 27. Miss Mar guerite Hyde ("Daisy") Leiter. the youngest daughter of the late Levi Z. Leiter of Chicago, was married at noon to Henry Molyneaux Paget How ard, the nineteenth carl of Suffolk and Berkshire. The ceremony oc curred in the Leiter residence ra thi3 city. The couple left later for New York and expect to sail for England tomorrow. Corporal Commits Suicide. Des Moines, Dec. 27. Corporal Solomon Cook of the Eleventh Unit ed States cavalry committed suicide in the Wellington hotel by turning on the gas in his room. He was found by the chambermaid. Cook bad served in the regular army many years and had seen service in the Philippines. One Man Freezes to Death. Cheyenne, Wyo., Dec. 2C. An uni dentified man was found dead near the Union Palific depot. He had ap parently frozen to death. The ther mometer had fallen during the night from 18 abovo to 4 below zero. The cold wave was accompanied by a high wind. Hospital for Insane Quarantined. Lincoln, Dec. 27. The state board of health gave orders that tbe Ne braska hospital for the insane be quarantined for an indefinite period on account of the presence of small pox. Superintendent Green says there is but one case, and it is mild. Zero Weather at Pierre. Pierre, S. D-, Dec 27. The first se vere storm of the winter prevails here, with a temperature of zero and snow drifting badly. Edaeatti Education Is not a certain amount of raw knowledge which you have been able to stow away. There are many men full of facts who in a moment's conversation show they are without an education. True, education is the awak ening of the mind to see and enjoy it Is giving it wings by which to inoust higher, see more clearly and enjoy more fully. COLDS THAT HANG ON So frequently settle on the lungs and result in Pneumonia away or take something that only half cures it, leaving FOLEYfc HONEY McCLINTOCK & CARTER, LOVE IN JAPAN. It Ia Very DUKereat Frraa That Which Wmi the Western Heart. The boys and girls, the young men and young women of Japan do love ' each other, I suppose, but one never aces the slightest shadow of evidence to prove it The spirit of love does not dominate the national life as it does In America and the countries of Eu rope. Japan's poets do not siug of love; her story writers tell no tales or love mat can urm an Aiigiu-M-a." heart, and her artists paint ao pictures of love that can reach the Anglo-Saxon understanding. Now, considering all this, how can there be such a thing as "a good old summer time" in "this la::d of sunrise? And yet there is, and it is especially delightful in its way, too. because the Japanese are a nation oi J feasters and picnickers, of uature lv j era and world beautifiers. uad if. i..c can only lose sight of the fact t!..u everywhere one goes the poor little women toddle meekly along behind the men. who stalk pompously ahead :ia if they owned the earth, one may al most enjoy oneself. One never sees a woman caressed ia Japan, not even with n glauuc; one seldom sees a baby fondled in fact, all human tenderness or expression of human tenderness is conspicuous by it ; absence, and I believe that is the or.o Impassable great gulf that is fixed be tween us and this people. And yet the people are happy, with a simple, sweet happiness that Is charming. That is it It Is an' atmosphere that uiiidly charms, but never thrills, the western heart All the nation's love is concen trated upon the emperor, and the high est note of the national life is sounded In yamato damashi, Japan spirit pa riotism, and even this is beyond our comprehension, because it is empty of romance and unsatisfactory to us, who cannot separate the interests of "fair women and brave men" even upon the battlefield. Eleanor Frankliu in Les lie's Weekly. Boosters for Sale. Twenty Thoroughbred, lioso Comb Brown Leghorn Boosters for sale. John Marolf. Leigh, Nebr., Konto 1. DR. GUMS. ft. PLflTZ HOMEOPATHIC PhysiGian and Surgeon. T. O. Mock Colnml-in NOTK'f. T, John A. JnlniMin, i:n-ro-i(!iit .lefcnil.int : Yon art h'rr!) nntif'usl that on lh 12th ifciy t OiTfinlH-r. l!i'l, lnH .Mnry .loliu.n. pliiintilT. tilt-tl n itelitibU jriiii.-t joii in the I-!-trict Court of Platte County. N't lrk:j. the olijVct uli! pr.iy er of which ar. to obtain a ttivoro from ou on thei;ronnti that ou hi.i wilfully aKimlonttl the plaintiff for more than two jearx Iat j--t without n reatonahh) or just cauw: that for more than two jenrx la-t twist, though of Mitiicieiit ability to proviih'.suitnhle maintenance ami mii. IKirt for iilaintitT. joii have itn n-ly. vantoni.v and cruelly ucKlet-tetl to ! ho; ami li:t ji.ii have become an hiiLitual ilrur.knnl. PJaiuMf rli-o aftkn for the restoration of her mail-ri name, I na Mary Anden-on. Yon are require! to answer mill petition on or before Monday, the 2!rd day of January. VXT. I.KXA MAUY JOHNSON. tier James Nieholn, htr attornuy. The Skill of the American Housewife in Bread Making is due to Yeast Foam. It makes good Bread from any flour. Yea6l Foam Is the yenst that took the First J rand Prize :it tin St. Louis Kx positiun.aixl In sold ly all grocers a t .V. si package vnoupli for to loavc. Our book '-Good Dread" free. NORTHWESTEBri YEAST CO. CHICAGO, ILL. Stops the Cough and heals the lungs and prevents Pneumonia and Consumption C. Ungsr, 21 1 Maple St., Champaign, III., writes: "I was troubled with a backing cough for a year and I thought I had consumption. I tried a great many remedies and I was under the care of physicians for several months. I used one bottle of FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR. It cured me, and I bavc not been troubled since." Three S!m-25c, SOe, $1 .00. size aad the $1.00 SMJ Ml RECMHKHO BY tmsmmmmmmmssm THE TWO HEADED SNAKE. CMatrletmr Tfcat Has a Very Deceptive Tall. Every now and then some traveler tells of a two headed snake which ex ists in Egypt, and whenever the nar rator hasn't seen the snake himself, he is more or less disposed to assert that there really is a snake with two heads in Egypt, because he has been told about it by many reliable persons. Indeed, sometimes a traveler who. has actually caught :i g.nupse of tliu snake is likely to doclaru that it truly is tv headed, for the serpent certainly appears to be so when scon only by chance. It is only when the snake is actually taken up and examined closely that the truth is revealed. The two headed snake ia not a poison ous serpeut. It is only a boa con strictor, and it Is fairly common, vltut it is so secretive that it hides away in its sandy burrows almost constantly. It is straucely formed in so fur that its tail, instead of taperit: off to u point as the tails of other snakes do, widens out into a bludgeon shape, thus uiukiug it look so utterly unlike a tail that it is almost impossible to think It is anything but a head when the snake is seen for only a moment. To add to the deception. jujIers catch these boas and paint jaws and eyes on the tail. The work 13 so care fully done that only a trained observer can distinguish the real head from the false. Thus the story of the two head ed snake has obtained wide circula tion, and has even crept into the books of otherwise accurate writers. But the second "head" is only a tail after nil. Exchange. ONE FARE Plus $2.00 COLORADO. AND RETURN Oliver, Cilorado Spriigs and Pueblo. Tickets on sale January 7, 8 and D with final return limit January "11, 1905. Bo sure your ticket reads via Union Pacific The Popular Route to Colorado. Shortestlinc. Fastest Time W. H. IlESHAMAgont. Subscribe for iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiitiHiiiiniinnit i The P. D. A-ll ZEZirLOs :&j:atezia,l., Soft Coal. t Yank on loth Street, near I fc M HENRY RIEDEK, Manager. m 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 ii ii ii' II Mi I II 1 1 Illl SOME PAINT 1. Pure Uasnd OU is UM 2. Tbe general prejadtee wm iuo im uuu iuo.il m 3. AM trnint is first sreand tatoa b sain f?l2ii(?a,:''r JJ" MIf,B aaltoa f "eir-you save f lake 4. Warn sim bay aVsdr-Ttlxed 4 Paint Prtre for tnl. caaa4 "olVor tap 111. fMt.fi nai. ..w nil I.. ...-. r-." -. wu . Sl.1. to5 p?ta.wl,M ' STOP, when the paste taeew Utat any 24 year old boy ran tafcc liifc. pjiMe and tUo pure raw mui rllrrUoB,KTOre,iiolMsandBtJn.lv..aal FOfaaew yea bavo'aa abxolntely pure Unseed ell imur! ?Iat kax coat nta at haitZSV, less taaa aay -llislTlSrf c- IKy-eaauS! a2 aeaest Briee for bot!i paint and oil and your ovu ci-ruoauU Junta l de el Its parity and terabMlty. f.ou ...- . Tkfs pttlnt Is Kialoca Jloase Paint; whlcls is nadn In a. full aalnt M'a tna tZln aMl nld tlrr.imm .c- . ...... T aether ready for yen to tJ-tadow. nM.o""!."" WHEREVER WE HAVE NO AGEMT. YOUR OVJtt DEALER WILL GET "KINLOCH" FOR YOU. JF SHOWN TH5S AU.. 3Y WRITING DIRECT TO KINLOCH PAIMT COMPANY. ST. LOUIS. MO. n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 or Consumption. Do not take chances on a cold wearing the seeds of serious throat and lung trouble. Cured Hemorrhages of tho A. M. Aks, Wood, Ind., uTites: "Several years since my lungs were so badly affected that I had manv hemorrhages. I took treatment with several phvs'icians without any benefit. I tiien started to take FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR, and my lungs are now as sound as a bullet. I recommend it ia ad vanced stages of lung trouble." The 50-ceat size contains two an """g1" "Jg lh " bottle ahaest six times as much. HEFUS6 subs.itutes. Columbus, aaaanana?nWnanJaanWJa 3 . SEEING A PICTURE. Try Leek at It Tkrmh Eye at the Artist Wfce Pmlated It. The first necessity for the proper see ing of a picture Is to try to see it throngh the eyes of the artist who painted it This is not a usual meth od. Generally people look only through their oavh eyes and like or dislike a pic ture according as it does or does not suit their particular fancy. These peo ple will tell you. "Oh. I dou't know any tiling about painting, but I kuow what I like," which is their way of say ing, "If I don't like It right off I don't care to be bothered to like it at alL" Such an attitude of mind cata one off from growth and development, far It is as much as to say, "I am very well satisfied with myself and quite indifferent to the experiences and feel- ings of other men." Yet it is just this feeling and experience of another man which a picture gives us. If you con elder :i moment you will understand why. The world itself is a vast pano rama, and from it the painter selects his subject not the copy of It exactly, r.!ncc it would be impossible for him to do this even if he tried. How couhl he represent, for example, each blade of gniis. each leaf upon a tree? So what l:e does is to represent the subject as he f.eos it. as it appeals to bis sym pathy or interest, and if twelve artists painted the same landscape the result would Le twelve different pictures, dif- fcriug according to tho way in Whicb" each man had been Impressed by the ' scene In fact, according to his. sepa rate point of view or separate way of . seeing it, influenced by his individual experience and feeling. Charles II. Cofr fln in St. Nicholas. the Journal SMITH CO. 33-CLlia.irLg1 ZEZaxd a,n.d 3Prioe xigrlit depot. JJoth riiones ii 1 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 ii n 1 1 n u m Illllllllll llllllllllll FACTS ef Rll Vtolat DarahUMr. iNMMT'niifd Fatal la ha advMerate'J wit Interior . THICK: PASTE, and tk ib. y lIon eC tniM paato wmSTi ta went for its parity Pnlat. ym vh. s.,.--wi... troia 2 J2 ta h ti.ii thcaWki-t ..... I a .. .. . . - - m hi juw wou vraiier m unrrfi. 1 1 1 n ii 1 1 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 m 1 1, is - TAR Nebraska. i- i TD UK. : , j .. ;.. fc, M