TiJT: jTS JCA .F F- iiC wm fSj -" t i istttaGS?: RT-flSi -i, e?, v .nu" ry-r j ;j; -r.- L(f . l.c ""Jp T- - 1 ' " . . 3 . .fc r. f : .v 4 . -i :i - :- - .- ftB Tisr!!" - Aft J4 An W . ""'' - - wsHr I - H-x- i JWf w- f JJf 'Zsfe' iAAMMAMMMMWMWWWWWVWWWMW SYNOPSIS. Giles Dudley arrived In San Frar.cisco to join his friend and distant relative Henry Wilton, whom lie was to assist . in an Important and mysterious task, and who accompanied Dudley on the ferrv boat trip into the city. The re marltable resemblance of the two men . is noted and commented on by passen ijors on the ferry. They see a man with snake eye"?, which sends a thrill through Dudjey. Wilton postpones an explanation ni the strange errand Dudley is to per form, but occurrences cause him to " know it is one of no ordinary meaning. "Wilton leaves Giles in their room, with instruction to await his return and shoot . any one who tries to enter. Outside there is heard shouts and curses and the noise a quarrel. Henry rushes in and at his requis: the roommates quicklv ex change clothes, and lie hurries out again. .- Jl.nrdly has he gone than Giles is startled by a cry of "Help." and he runs . out to find yme one being assaulted by a half dozen men. He summons a pollee- Than but they are unable to find any . . trace of a crime. Giles returns to hN room and hunts for some evidence that njiht -explain his strans mission. CHAPTER II!. Continued. Then followed some numerals " mied ia a drunken dance with half ' the letters of the alphabet the ex planation of the map, I suppose, in . .."either, and as it might prove a clue . "to-this dreadful business, I folded the "'sheet' carefully in an envelope and -iilaced it in an inmost pocket. ." "Jhe search having failed of definite , . results, I sat with chair tilted against ,'the wall to consider the situation. Turn it as I would I could make 'nothing good of it. There were des-'-p.erate enterprises afoot of which I . V-couId see neither beginning nor end, T;-purpose nor result I repented of ' "" mv consent to mix in these danger- "bu -doings and resolved that when the morning came I would find other " quarters, take up the search for Henry, and Jook for such work as "'"might be found. .-" It was after midnight when I had . come to this conclusion, and. barring .doors and windows as well as I could, .1. flung myself on the bed to rest, and J.'sank into an uneasy slumber. When I awoke it was with a start find an oppressive sense that some '' body else was in the room. The gas- ; light that I had left burning had been -put "out. Darkness was intense. I . sat upright and felt for matches that ll had seen upon the stand. . Jn another instant I was flung back .upon the bed. Wiry fingers gripped : .my "throat, and a voice hissed in my . ear: ;. .-..'" Where is he? Where is the boy? '. .Give me your papers, or I'll wring the 'life out of you!" I was strong and vigorous, and. . though taken at a disadvantage, .'struggled desperately enough to break . the- grip on 'my throat and get a hold upon my assailant. f "Where is the boy?" gasped the ".; voice once more; and their, as I made .no reply, but twined my arms about ;hinimy assailant saved all his breath for the struggle. We rolled to the floor with a thud that shook the house, and in this '. change of base I had the luck to come . but uppermost. Then my courage rose as I found that 1 could hold my man. .1 feared a knife, but if he had one he had not drawn it. and I was able" to keep his hands too busy to al ;.low him to get possession of it now. '.. -Tending that he was able to accom plish nothing, he gave a short cry and . called: "Conn!" '.: '. I heard a confusion of steps outside, and a sound as of a muffled oath. Then the door opened, there was a '" rush ot feet behind me, and the flash of a bull's-eye lantern. I released my enemy, and sprang back to the corner where I could defend myself ni some advantage. I could distinguish four dark figures of men; but, instead of rushing upon " -me as I stood on the defensive, they seized upon my assailant. I locked pn panting, and hardly able to regain my breath. It was not half a minute before my enemy was securely "bound and gagged and carried out One of the men lingered. ' "Don't take such risks." he said. -'I wouldn't have your job, Mr. Wilton, for all the old man's money. If we - hada' happened up here, you'd have been done for this time." "In God's name, man, what does all " this mean?" I gasped. The man looked at me in evident 'surprise. "They've got a fresh start, I-guess," he said. "You'd better get some of '" the men up here. "Mr. Richmond sent us up here to bring this letter." He was gone silently, and I left in the darkness. I struck a match, lighted the gas once more, and, secur ing the revolver, looked to the letter. The envelope bore no"address. I tore it open. The lines were written in a woman's hand, and a faint but pe culiar perfume rose from the pap'er. It bore but these words; "Don't make the change until I see vou.4 The money will be ready in the - morning. Be at the banlt at 10:30." The note, puzzling as it was, was hardly an addition to my perplexities. It was evident that I had been plunged into the center of intrigue, plot and counterplot. I was supposed to have iwssession of somebody's boy. A powerful and active enemy threat ened mo with death. An equally ac tive friend was working to preserve Seen Through German Eyes. "Every tonrist from our country who comes here," says a writer. In the Frendenblatt, "tells what the Americans wear, what they read, what they eat, and how they do business, but they give little information as to what the Americans drink. In the four weeks of my sojoarn here I have discovered that the American, he who can lay claim to the title by virtue of a three or four-generation residence in tie country, is temperate and C drinks muchwater and comparatively pSSS2S72J3lL i ; I (MMMWWWWMWyWMWMWMWMWWMWOMi my safety. People of wealth were concerned. I had dimly seen a frag ment of the 'struggling forces, and it was plain that only a very rich per son could afford the luxury of hiring the bravos and guards who threat ened and protected me. The fate of. Henry showed the power of those who were pursu ing me. Armed as we was with the knowIedge"of his danger, knowing, as I did not, what he had to guard' and from what he had to guard it, he had yet fallen a victim. I could not doubt that he was the man assaulted and stabbed in the alley below, but the fact that no trace of him or of the tragedy was to be found gave me hope that he was still alive. Yet. at best, he was wounded and in the hands of enemies, a pris oner to the men who had sought his life. As I was hoping, speculating, plan ning thus, I was startled to hear a step on the stair. The sound was not one that need be thought out of place in such a house anu neighborhood, even though the hour was past four in the morning. But it struck a chill through me, and I listened with growing apprehension as it mounted step by step. The dread silence of the house that had cast its shadow of fear upon me now seemed to become vocal with protest against this intrusion, and to send warninc through the halls. At last the step halted before my door and a loud knock startled the echoes. With a great bound my heart threw THE- WJ2QMJJZ4M' off its tremors and I grasped the re volver firmly: "Who's there?" "Open the door, sor; I've news for ye." "Who are ycu?" "Come now, no nonsense; I'm an officer." I unlocked the door and stepped to one side. My bump of caution had de eloped amazingly in the few hours 1 had spent in San Francisco, and, in spite of his assurance, I thought best to avoid any chance of a rush from my unknown friends, and to put my self in a good position to use my re volver if necessary. The man stepped in and showed his" star. He was the policeman I had met when I had run shouting into the street. "I suspicion we've found S'O'ir friend." he said gravely. "You're wanted at the morgue." "Dead!" I gasped. "Dead as Saint Patrick rest his sowl!" CHAPTER IV. A Change of Name. "Here's your way, sor," said the po liceman, turning to old City Hall, as it was even then known, and leading me to one of the inner rooms of the labyrinth of offices. The policeman opened an office door, saluted, and motioned me to enter. "Detective Coogan,'' he said, "here's ycur man." Detective Coogan. from behind his desk, nodded with the careless dig nity of official position. "Glad to see you, Mr. Wilton," he said affably. If I betrayed surprise at being little alcohol. Much of the water is made bad by the liberal use of ice. In the great -restaurants where the fashionable world assembles it is net unusual to see tables where there is no wine of any kind." Tried and Hanged the Dog. Because he attacked a little girl with apparently murderous intent. Jack, a big Newfoundland dog of Lie persville. Pa was duly and deliberate ly hanged by the neck until he was dead, after a fair trial in which the called by Henry's name. Detective Cpogan did- not notice it. But I has tened" to disclaim' he dangerous dis tincticn. I am notWilton,'"I declared. "My namsTsfDaaiey-Giles Dudley." x At this announcement Detective Ccogan turned to the policeman. " v"Just-step into Morris room, Car ..son, and tell him I'm going up to the 'morgue."' -. j- r "Now," he continued,"as the police man closed the door behind him, "this won't do, Wilton. We've had to over-' look a good deal, of course, but you needn't think you can play us for suckers all the time." "But I tell you I'm net" I began, when he interrupted me. "You can't make that go here," he said contemptuously. "And 'I'll tell you what, Wilton, I shall have to take you into custody if "you don't come down straight to business. ,W'e don't want to chip in on the old man's play, of course, 'especially as we don't know what his game is." Detective Coogan ap'neared to regret this, ad mission that he was not omniscient. and went on hastily: "You know as ! II -J A, A Ji -A. .t..4. .... wen us we uu uiui te uuu i wuui tiuy fight with him. But I'll tell you right now that if you force a fight, we'll make it so warm for him that he'll have to throw you overboard to light en ship." Here was a fine prospect conveyed by Detective Coogan's picturesque confusion of metaphors. If I persisted in claiming my own name and person I was to be clapped into jail, and charged with Heaven-knows-what crimes. If I took my friend's name, I was to invite the career of adventure of which I had just had a taste. And while this was flashing through my mind, I wondered idly who the "old man" could be. The note I had re ceived was certainly -in a lady's hand. But if the lady was Henry's employer, it was evident that he had dealt with the police as the representative of a man of power. My decision was o necessity promptly taken. "Oh, well, if that's the way you look at it. Coogan," I said carelessly, "it's j all right. I thought it was agreed that we weren't to know each other." This was a chance shot, but it hit. "Yes, yes," said the detective, "i remember. But, you see, this is seri ous business. Here's a murder on cur hands, and from all I can learn it's on account of your confounded schemes. We've got to know where we stand, or there will be the Old Nick to pay. The papers will get hold of it, and then well, you re member that shake-up we had three years ago." "But you forget the 'old man,' " I re turned. The 'name of that potent Un known seemed' to be my only weapon in the contest with Detective Coogan, and I thought this a time to try its force. "Not much, I don't!" 6aid Coogan, visibly disturbed. "But if it comes to a choice,, we'll have to risk a battle with him." "Well, maybe we're wasting time over a trifle," said I, voicing my'hop'e. "Perhaps your dead man belongs somewhere else." "Come along to the morgue, then," said he. "Where was he found?" I asKed as we walked out of the ..City Hell. "He was picked up. at about three o'clock, in the back room of the Hur ricane Deck the water-front saloon, you know near the foot of Folsom Street Detective Coogan asked a number of questions as we walked, and in a few minutes we came to the under taker's shop that served as the city morgue. "Here At is," said Coogan, opening a door. The low room was dark and chill and musty, but its details started victim and other witnesses testified. Hugh McLaughling owned Jack, who suddenly last week sprang upon little Thelma Berger, aged five years, knocked her down rynd mangled her arm. He would probably have killed her V aid had not been near. Mc Laughling heard of it and as he is a native of Labrador, he remembered a custom o that land which declared that a. dog with the lust for human blood must be hanged. Therefore he sent for the child and the witnesses and instituted a regular court of trial, forth from the obscurity as-he no the lisrhts. Detective Coogan's words seemed tc come from7 a great 'distance as he ted. said:- "HereTyou see, he was1 stabbed The knife went to the heart Here he was hit with something- heavy and blunt; but it had enough of an edge to cut thescalp and lay the cheek open. ' The skull ?isr broken. - , See v I and nere - I summoned my resolution looked. Disfigured and ghastly as it was, recognized it It was the, face ot Henry Wilton. The next I knew I was sitting on a bench, and the detective was hold ing a bottle to my lips. "There, take another swallow." he said, not unkindly. " I didn't know you weren't used to it" "Oh," I gasped, "I'm all right now." And I was able to look steadily at the gruesome surroundings and dreadful burden on the slab. "Is this the man?" asked the the de- tective. " "Yes." r "His name?" "Dudley James Dudley." I was not quite willing to transfer the whole of my identity to the dead, and changed the Giles to James. "Was he a relative?" I shook my head, though, I could not have said why I denied it Then, in answer to the detective's question, I told the story of the scuffle in the alley, and of the events that followed. "Did you see any of the men? To recognize them, I mean?" I described the leader as well as I was able the man with the fece of the wolf that I had seen in the lantern-flash. Detective Coogan lost his listless air, and looked at me in astonish ment "I don't see your game, Wilton," he said. - "I'm giving you the straight facts," I said sullenly, a little disturbed by his manner and tone. "Well, in that case, I'd expect you to. keep the straight facts to your self, my boy." It was my turn' to be astonished. "Well, that's my lookout," I said with assumed carelessness. .- "I don't see 'through you," said the detective with some irritation. "If you're playing with me to stop this inquiry by dragging in well, we needn't use names you'll find your self in the hottest water you ever struck." "You can do as you please," I said coolly. The detective ripped out an oath. "If I knew you were lying, Wilton, I'd clap you in jail this minute." "Well, if you want to take the risks " I said smiling. He looked at me for a full minute. "Candidly, 1 don't, and you know it," he said. "But this is a stunner on me. What's your game, anyhow?" I wished 1 knew. "So accomplished a detective should not be at a loss to answer so simple a question." "Well, there's only one "course open, as I see," he said with a groan. "We've got to have a story ready for the papers and the coroner's jury." This was a new suggestion tor mo and 1 was alarmed. "You can just forget 3our little tale about the row in the alley," he con tinued. "There's nothing to show that it had anything to do with this man here. Maybe it didn't happen. Anyhow, just think it was a dream. This was a water-front row tough saloon killed and robbed by parties unknown. Maybe we'll have you be fore the coroner for the identifica tion, but maybe it's better not." I nodded assent. My mind was too numbed to suggest another course. The gray dawn was breaking through the chill fog, and people were stirring in the streets as De tective Coogan led the way out of the morgue. As we parted he gave me a curious lock. "I suppose you know your own busi ness, Wilton," he said, but I suspect you'd be a sight 'safer if I'd clap you in jail." And with this consoling comment he was gone, and I was left in the dawn of my first morning in San Francisco, mind and body at the nadir of depression after the excitement and perils of the night (TO BE CONTINUED.) . AUTOS AT A COYOTE DRIVE. California Hunt Not as Successful as Had Been Hoped For. A large crow,d of San Joaquin coun ty residents assembled at the Bol linger ranch, in the eastern part of the county, and enjoyed a coyote drive, which was not as destructive as the people of that district hoped for, as the animals kept out of sight and only a few were killed. Of late the coyotes have been killing sheep, pigs and chickens. The scarcity of dead animals has caused the coyotes to invade the ranches and give the farmer a lot of trouble. As a general rule, these animals seldom attack stock,, but , when driven to starvation they become bold. Itwas 'with the,hc?e that a large number would be killcJ that a general invitation was extended .to the people to assemble and make a roundup. All kinds of vehicles, fro::i the old fash ioned top buggy to the latest in au tomobiles, were in evidence, and many men appeared on horseback and join ed the chase. One drhe was made in the forenoon and another in the aft ernoon, lunch' being served between the two trips. Later another effort will be made to exterminate the trouble some animals. after which he took his big dog to a tree and solemnly executed it. Then he cut Jack down and buried him. Pride Helps. We mortals, men and women, de vour many a disappointment between breakfast and dinner time, keep back the tears and look a little pale about the lips, and in answer to inquiries say: "Oh, nothing!" Prie helpt us, and pride is not a bad thing whea it only urge's us to hide our own hurt not to hurt others. George Eliot turned! P gMBBMBBMMBBHBBBBBBHBiWMBBMHBBBMMiBMBBBHBiik Don't Poison, Baby. pORTT TBABS AGO almost every mother fhongiri her cMd rmufc hata , - -PAREGORIC? or laudanum to maktMii sleep. Thesclnigs will product deep, and 4 FEWDROPS 100 MA2TY produce the SLEEP PR0M:WHICH THERE IS M WAKING. ' Many are the children whahavefbeen Hied, or whose health has been ruined:fbr life by paregoric, laudanum and morphine, each , of which is a naicotio product of opium. Druggists are prohibited from selling andproduces sleep, hut which in poisonous doses-produces stupor, coma, convul sions and death." ThetastedsmeUofmerMnescontain and sold under the names of "Drops," aCordials,n,4 Soothing Syrups,9 etc Ycu should not permit any medicine to be given to your children without you or your physician know of what it is composed. CASTORIA DOES NOT CON TALK NARCOTICS, if it bears the signature of Ghas. H. Hetcher. rJXff.W.LiI-i3i -E-ni C ! i, -HHZLu- " 2.I.3 i; -ii-fr r-ue-Mu. . -i- . . . --..i.- i;-.ii.H bTiTillOTiraf tlll ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. I AAfegcttejHraficnfeis. tinglteStadBandolsa nessandfesiContainsrciio-0-xum.Marphine rcr Mineral. Not Narcotic. MceeetauksstwaannR MxUtUit- Sai bik AperfrrtBenKdyforOmsflpfr U0n,MUT3aUl.UlU&rrd Worms jLom-oiswnsJtrEnsa nes3riLoss OF SLEEP. lacSsASfetarceof NEW YORK. bMTanteedunderi .Exact Cepy of Wrapper An Indignant Editor. Last Saturday evening after sewing two patches on our Sunday trousers and cleaning and pressing them we hung them out to dry. An hour later we found that they had been stolen. This will explain whywe were not in our accustomed place . in. church on Sunday. ijThe human ..being who will deliberately steal a pair of trousers from the editor of a weekly paper, and knowing that they are his only pair for church-going,, deserves a worse fate than our indignation will allow us to mention. It seems to us. as if civiliza tion had been turned back half a cen tury. Hometown (Pa.) Banner. The Soft Answer. Senator Tillman at a banquet In Washington said in humorous defense of outspoken and frank methods: "ThPse people who always keep calm fill me with mistrust. Those that never lose their temper I suspect. He who wears under abuse an angelic smile is apt to be a hypocrite. "An old South Carolina deacon once said to me with a chuckle: "'Keep yo tempah, son. Don't yo' quarrel with no angry pusson. A soft answah am alius best. Hit's com manded an, furthermo, sonny, hit makes 'em maddah'n anything else yo could say."' Selfish Etiquette. Some rules in an old book on eti quette seem to encourage a practice commonly called "looking out for num ber one." Here are two of them: "When cake 'is passed, do not fin ger each piece, but with a quick glance select the best. "Never refuse to taste of a dish be cause you are unfamiliar with it, or you will lose the taste of many a del icacy while others profit by your ab stinence, to your lasting regret." Youth's Companion. DR. TALKS OF FOOD Pres. of Board of Health. "What shall I eat?" is the daily in qniry the physician is met with. I do not hesitate to say that in my judg ment a large percentage of disease is caused by poorly selected and improp erly prepared food. My personal expe rience with the fully-cooked focd, known as Grape-Nuts, enables me to speak freely of its merits. "Prom overwork, I suffered several years with malnutrition, palpitation of the heart and Iosb of sleep. Last sum mer I was led to experiment person ally with the -new food, which I used in conjunction with good rich cow's milk. In a short time after I com menced its use, the disagreeable symp toms disappeared, my heart's action became steady and normal, the func tions of the stomach were properly carried out and I again slept as sound--ly and as well as in my youth. "I look upon Grape-Nuts as a per fect food, and no one can gainsay but that it has a most prominent place in a rational, .scientific system of feed ing. Any one who uses "this food will soon be convinced of the soundness of the principle upon which it is manu factured and may thereby know the facts as to its true worth." Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason. Ever read the above letter? A new ne appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. Letters from Prominent Physicians ' addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. J. W. Dinsdale, of Chicago, 111., says: "I use roar Castori and adTiM its use la all families where there are children.'' Dr. Alexander E. Mlntle, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: "I bars freqncntlr prescribed your Castori and have found it & rellabla and pleasant rem edy for dilldren.' Dr. J. S. Alexander, of Omaha, Neb, says: "A medicine to -valuable and beneficial for children as. your Castoria iij, deserves the highest praise. I find tt in use everywhere." Dr. J. A. McClellan, of Buffalo, N. Y, says: I have frequently prescribed, your Castoria for children and always got good results. In fact I mm Castoria for my own children. Dr. J. W. Allen, of SL Louis, Ma, says: 1 heartily endorse your Cas .torial I have frequently prescribed it In my medical practice and haver always found it to do all that Is claimed for if Dr. C. H. (Hidden, of St Paul, Minn., says: "Sly experience as a prac titioner with your Castoria has been highly satisfactcry and I consider it" en excellent remedy for the young." Dr. B. D. Benner, of Philadelphia, Pa, says: "I have used your Cas toria as a purgative In the cases of children for years past .with, the moat happy effect, and fully endorse it as a safe remedy." Dr. J. A. Boarman, of Kansas City, Mo, says: "Your Castoria Is a splen did remedy for children, known the world over. I use it in my practice and have-no hesitancy in recommending it for the complaints of infanta and children. Dr. J. J. Mactey, of Brooklyn, N. Y, says: "I consider your Castoria am excellent preparation for children, being composed of reliable medicine, and pleasant to the taste. A good remedy for all disturbances of the digestive organs." GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS j yy fiean the Siffurtareof- Bean The Kind Ton lave Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. thc cehtaun www. tt wimu trnmr. mcwtomk em KasjpraS3('flBk i I fi 1 3Vf rPRICES. FOR EVERY MEMBER OFTHE FAMILY. KEN, SOY. WOMEN. MISSES AND w? Mr. a. uocrous nrsAres snostsum tataa 'OS23SO, $3JMJmmi$S.60ahem 2rVj&re! they mold AVST iftun Stmo mrnrnSi to-dav. cam mancraerarai- W. L. ffcurts S4 and S5 Gilt Etee Shoes Csnaet W ('AWrioar. W. I- D-inclas urn nd orice (rated Caialoz free to any addren. Anything Almost. "Sirs. Rucksher is a woman whe seems to be willing to do almost any thing for the sake of appearance." "Yes but she draws the line at wearing inexpensive hats for the sake of making her husband's task easier when he has to face the assessor." That an article may be good as well as cheap, and give entire satisfaction, is proven by the extraordinary sale of Defiance Starch, each package con taining one-third more Starch than can be had of any other brand for the same money. The fact that ignorance is bliss may account for the happiness of newly married people. Smokers have to call for Lewis' Fingle Binder cigar to grt it. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. When the Lord makes a fool, devil gives him a tongue. Life. the Mm. Wlnalow's Soothlar Syrup. For children teething, wften the Runs, reduce to flunmuioa.ilajrtpalc.cuTeawladcoUr. ssc a. bottle Wise women get their rights without talking about them. ESWMSMHMMlSMMlSYeaMflEISMl SICK HEADACHE Positively cored by these Little Pills. Thty almo relieve Di treMfrom Dyspepsia, I digestion aad Too Hearty Eatlag. A perfect rem edy See Dizziness, Nau sea. Drowataesa, Ba Taste la the Moata. Coat ed Toagne, Pais la the Sido. TORPrD UVEK. mu the Bowel. Purely Vegetable. SHALL PHL SMALL MSE. SHALL PUCE. Genuine Must Fac-Si)ffe SifMtiirt SHSTH1TES. CARTER eaUiEFisE i labelling ti 9 i CHILDREN. tmtnm AofrStl &d Fttt Color Fvr'etM Be Enrolled At Any Pries tJixctuuttlgJ Is rtaraoed on bottom. Takf If Sateatitottv Hint. t W. L. X0 t'GLAS. Brockton, AC: Typical Fans Scaae. Sfcowias Slock WESTERN CANADA Some of the choicest lands for grain crowing, stock raisinffandmrxedfarmingin the ir dis tricts of Saskatchewan and Alberta have re cently been Opened for Settleaent under the Bevise. Htnestca. Ifgilatitis Entry may now be made by proxy (on certain conditions), by the father, mother, son, daugh ter, brother or sister of an Intending home steader. Thousands of homesteads of ICO acre each are thns now easily available in these great grain-grow ice stock-raisin? and mixed farming sections. "" jl " There yon will find healthful climate, good neighbors, churches for family worship, schoola for your children, good laws, splendid' crops, and railroads convenient to market. - -, Entry fee i n each case is $10,00. For pamph let, "Last Beit West," particulars as to rates, routes, best time to go and where to locate, apply to . W.V.iEIWCTT,-' - - - SH Sew Tart Us IsHslst, HOMSEEKERS ;.-,. NEW TERRggRY ' PUBLIC LAND OPENING K aader the Carey; law-, along Irrigation canal bow finished; laadMtrih perpetual water right, 110 to H5 per acre ptrlesg time and small pay ments; also irrigable homesteads. Husband and wife are en.itied to a section of smooth, S reductive irrigable public land near Rock prings, Wyoming) Free timber for fuel aad Improvements; white pise lumber, tlS per thousand ; finest of fishing and I arse and smalt game hunting ; 'millions of acres of good year around free range. Ready for entry June C, I90B. For official bulletins, post cards, etc., send four cents In stamps to I. 8. TRAPP, Official Agent, Boulder Canal Lands, Reek Springs, Wyoming. If yon are coming wire at once. No drawing for numbers. fofckltV HAIR BALSAM -MM. SMMt htrnMifrnm) tM SMI TPtrsMrdMal Si loTSZiriBUt aflDTsTtli. 1- - - SUI a -"-- - fTa mw-er in" iwyit I AaUX" W9 1V ITOUIiUl Vwimre CMt cm2 dlsf st hair mWa mmm ari sTil flnat lMsMamBaam , i - PILESI SS&&V&&3& m at drofit or fcy i IKIX. EC "ANAKKtlt" HtTAMES aad .NOTICES hmoumj DaVMaT-inai NmclMrsahoaldwiUafarcaai rfilwOl Vlw Oder to Tasb a Whitmaj CoWaahtagtoa.D.C. (Over a years' exptirlawaej KFUKE Mi Wtiw Starch ssekMlaiiadryworkaaieiaure. Mos.akg.Mav MaraTBTTenSSmVader M fCUf lUf oh PENSIONS bywaawi.'ft"l 'affTaif ' Eft Wi tar W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 22, 10. "i'l 2sj &5HT mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmfmmmmmmmmmmmnmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm .! -71 r ";! S ,"! ii vVI u n i j 'i X '. , i-tt r i v .is,. -x -'. i -.' i o"v rv.-'J'-u 1 r. jJZJZsJS. :k&gvrT MiiiAhthrMMa, pfftvJyrr Uiefcj &&y&A"-V36$toCttU. ZvZXA-K&' - ... - - Z-.. "