SAGUACHE CRESCENT.
VOL. XXI. NO. 6. SAGUACHE, COLORADO, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1901. WHOLE NUMBER 1046.
i i il
Peruna, for La 6rippe, $t,00,
One Minute Cough Cure, 25 and 50 cts,
: K0d01 Dyspepsia Cure, 50 cts, and $I,00,
: Jaynes Expectorant, 50 cts: and $1,00,
|
i: Dr, Sh0ups Preventics, 25 cts, to prevent Grip,
E
Sa uache Pharmacy Co.,
Frank Pllten~er, M~r.
MEN AND WOMEN
Should Buy
Boots and Shoes, (Hamilton Brown Shoe Co.)
Hats and Caps, (Boogh~, Force & Goodbar Hat Co.)
Gloves and MR]Ins, Overshoes, Underwear and Drygoods.
~ock~7, Queeaswar¢ and Hardware.
H~umca% Stoves and Rang~ (Wilson I-Icatets.)
Duck Coats, (all Styles.)
I
of SAMUEL RA$L Moifah £0L0,,
and SAVE MONEY.
LAWRENCE & WILLIAMS
DUNN BLOCKr
S.A.G:LT.A.CI-XE, COLO~.&.DO,
Have just opened as complete a stock of
Does
this illus-
trate your
experi-
ence?
And are
you wor-
HAIR ried for
fear you
are soon to be bald ?
Then cease worry-
ing, for help is at
hand. You need
something t h a t w i 11
put new life tnt(r the
hair bulbs. •
You
need
a hair
,on&
s
aS----
r
It brings health to
the hair, and the fall-
ing ceases.
It always restores
color to gray hair.
You need not look at
thirty as if you were
fifty, for your gray
hair may. have again
all the dark, rich color
of youth.
gt.~ s bottle. All dral~lstl.
"I am a barber by trade and have
had a~reat deal to do with your
Hair y,gor. A nave found that it
will do every~mng that you claim
zor it. It naegiven me the most
complete cartel-action in my busi-
ness." HENRY J. OEORGE,
March ~, 1890. Kans~ City, Me.
W~I the Oa~m,,
If you do not obtain all the Imueflt~
~u expected from the use of the
Sot, write the Doctor about It.
Address, Dg, J. C, AYER,
Lowoa, Mass.
ii ii i !
The Dylbg Cadet,
A youth, a would-be 6oldier, lay wounded at
West Point,
His chin was badly shattered, hie nose wan out
of Joint,
His breath came hard and jerky, at times bunch-
ed into sighs,
GENERAL HARDWARI:: eyes.
As can be found in the San Luis Valley,
This stock is new throughout, was selected by an experienced tlardware
man and was bought at prices which will permit its being
sold right. Anything kept in a well-appointed
Hardware Stock can be bought of us.
We solicit your trade.
Buggies and Wagons
I have at~ my place in tl:e town of Moffat .1 Large Stock of Farm
Implements--Binders, Mowers, Rakes, Bindi,g Twine, Oil, Etc.
[ have a bargain to offer in Buggies and Wagl)n~ which I buy in
car load lots and can make you better paices than you can get any
where else rathe valley. Call and ex...mine n,v stock and get
my prices before buying elsewhere.
JOIIN IIOLCOMB, MOFFAT, COLO.
NEWSPAPRR
TttP, PEOPLE'8 NATIONAL
FAMILY
Published Mon,tav
Wednesday aml Fr'i- I
day. m In reahty a fine, [ 1LT T'I ~17"
fresh, every other-day [ ~11~
Daily, giving tho lat-t l Ill 11 =
est news on days of is- [
sue, and covering news [
of the otiter three• It I
contains all important
foreign cable news
which ap3~ears in THE t ~[T/~'~ |7
DALLY TRIBUNE ,,f [ ¥llgK
same date, also D,,- I J[~Jll.J~
mestic and lrereign ]
Cr, rrespendenoe, Short {
Stories. Elegant Half- I
tone Illustrations I
Humorous Items, In-
WEEKLY
TRIBUNE
Published on Thurs-
tla~', and known for
nearly sixty year~ in
every part of the Unit-
e,J Stales as a National
Family Newm~apsr of
the nighest class, for
farmers and villagers.
It contains all the most
imp,~rKqntg e n e r a ]
news of THE DALLY
TRIBUNE up to hoar
of g,ing to press, a~
Agrleullara[ Depart.
meat of the highest or-
der. has entertaining
roading for every
member of the family,
phi and young, Market I
Reporte which a e no- j
cepted as aelhority by !
farmers and country
merchantst and is
clean, up to date, in-
teresting and instruct-
tee.
R,mflarsuhscrivti,,n
price, $1.00 per Year.
W~ furnish it with
TItE CRESCENT for
$2.00 per year•
EW-
YORK
TRI-
WEEKLY
TRIBUNE
dustrial information,
Fashion Notes, Agri-
cultural Matters and
Cotaprehenslve and re-
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Regular subscription
price, $t50 per year.
We furnish ,t with
THE CRESCENT for
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Send all orders to The Crescent, Saguache.,
Best of Job Printing at this office.
A kneeling comrade asked him what me,sage he
should take
Unto his distant kinsfolk, and thus the victim
spake:
"On break it to them gently that when he diod
their Bob
Wa~ thinking ef old Pedunk, old Podunk on
the Wab.
"Tell them in tender manner I died a soldier's
death,
The fumes of hot tabasco entangled with my
breath,
My nose clear off it~ b0arings, my eyes as big as
niCOlaS,
My hair shampooed with mustard, my stomach
stuffed with prunes.
They fed me on hot olives served in cold axle
grease,
And when I made wry faces they hissed like hor-
rid geese,
And during the proceadings they laughed to imsr
me sob
And wi~i~ russell in Podunk, m Podunk on the
Wab.
"Fhey fed me plaster paris, I think almost a peck
They made me drink ]tot water till full up to
the neck,
And my digestive organs, though always prompt
anti pat,
Were not prepared to handle a contract such as
that.
And then they said to teach me to bear the ills
Of war,
They furred between my pale lips a ( hristnms-
time cigar,
Then well I knew the sequel--I'd jump my
earthly job
**ml find a grave at Podunk, at Podunk on the
Wab.
"I laughed at their approaches with scorn when
they began I
To make of me an officer and army gentleman,
i pohshed up the rifles, swept out the stumps[
and quids
And blackened the arm~ brogans of Uncle" Sam-
my's kids. [
Bat when I reached the hardships of war I had [
to squeal,
My body was not armored with (-arnegie's fam.
ed steel,
And, comrande, please express me, when my
heart has ceased tu trob,
With military h,,nms to Podunk on the Wab."
--James Barton Adams in Denver Post.
Hueklen's Arnica Salve.
Has worhl wide fame for marvelous
cures. It surpasses an)' other salve, lo-
ti,,n~, ointsments ,,r hahn for ruts, corns,
burns, bolls, sot(s, felons, ulcers, totter,
salt rheum, fever sores, chapped hands,
skin eruptions, infallible for piles. Cure
gin, ran]cod, Only 2,5o at Lord & Wilcox't,
drug store, Crestone, Colo.
Supt. of ~ehools Painter ls teaehin~ in
the cocnty high" school in the place of
Prof. J. B Morgan and Mr. ttayden still
continues in charge of Jesse R Morgan's
t~lasses.
dames Barton Adams.
"I am not a poet, never olaimed to be
one, and rank myself simply as a writer
of newspaper verse. In my Denver Post-
scripts in the Denver Post I run verses
every day, seven days in the week and in
a,ldition, run more than half a column
of paragraphs and puns in verse. This
I have done fl)r the past four years,never
missing a day, except one week each year,
when up in the mountains on my vaca-
tion. I believe that the fact that I am
able to write so much verse excites more
surprise among my readers than the mer-
it of the work does."
So writes Mr. James Barton Adams of
the Denver Post, and his modesty at once
differentiates him from those real poets
who know they are real poets, and whose
reality proves such a bar to the publica-
tion of their verses. Nevertheless, here
is a little unpretentious verse taken hap-
hazard from the ~'Oenver Postscripts"
whmh a real poet mizht have taken a
good deal more than one day to turn out
and then have missed its poetry:
Every day I hear the singing
Of some dear old rural ode,
i Melody of youth--days ringing
Through our mountainland abode,
And my lowng glances wander
To that happy wifely face
That I learntd to love back yonder
' In the far east country place.
It is true that Mr. Adams' daily con-
tribution does not pretend to be more
than a story m doggerel or a plain cow-
boy ballad, but that is exactly what hi~
public wants, and does not necessarilly
imply limitations. On December 12, the
"Pest~ript" was "The Baron Wiener-
wurst," whmh is Lord Burleigh of Bur-
leigh, transposed to the plains Coupled
with Mr. Adams, we must congratulate
the Denver Post on the originality and
i
enterprise of getting up a daily story in
versb excellently illustrated with photn.
graphs typical of the scenes--a sleeping
prospector, a mounted cowboy, a donkey
alelgh, etc.
Mr, Adams is nearly 50 years of aga
He m an Ohioan and served during the
civil war and afterward in the Pawnee
~couts, and than put in three yeare
ran'chins in ]qew Mexico. It wa~ not till
tbo World's Fair that he made a start
a journalist, trying Chicago and New
York in turn. His work is of value as
pictures of~rontier life by ona who has
lived )t.--Brooklyn Eagle.
Will Boom Ills Bumlu~ms.
S. Lava], a merchant of Dallas, Texas,
writes: "I thought I would have to give
up business, after two years of suffenng
from general debility brought on by over
work and long hours but four bert, lea of
Electric Bitters gave me now life. "I can
now eat anything, sleep well and feel
like working all the time. It's the best
medicine on earth." It's a wonderful
tonic and health builder for tired, weak,
sickly and run down people. Try it.
Satisfaction ~tuaranteed. Only 500 at
herd & Wilcox's drug store, Creatone,
Colo.
Tom Haslip, an assayer from Victor,
came in Sunday to look at the copper
claims on Garner creek belonging to
Bob Montieth.
Persons who cannot take ordinary
pills find it a pleasure to take DeWi~t's
Little Early Risers. They are the best
little liver pills ever made. Ssguache
Pharmacy.
Note and receipt books and short form
bills of sale at this office.
6,0,TaylorWhlskies ~talned by the weakest ,tomachl
Women as Well as Men
Are Made Miserable by
Kidney Trouble.
Kidney trouble preys upon the mind. dll~.
coursers and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor
and chseHulness soon
,~:~'~" ~ disappear when the kld-
:~¢rr~,vrT'g'@ neys are out of order
.lXit-|l~,/~t~" or dls~.
"~~ Kidney trouble has
~/~:~ be~me so prevalent
" ~ -'~f ~l that It is not uncommon
f'/f,\~t~.\6L..~.~_ for a child tc be born
¢~/1~.~'¢~L~~ afflicted with weak kid-
d._~ ~i'~L=-' neys. If the child ufln-
~q" ates ton often, If the
urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child
reaches an age when it should be able to
control the passage, it is yet afflicted with
bed-wetting, depend upon It. the cause of
the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first
step should be towards the tree]men] of
these important organs. This unpleasant
trouble is due to a diseased condition of the
kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as
most people suppose.
Women as well as men are made mis-
erable with kidney and bladder trouble,
and both need the same great remedy,
The mild and the immediate effect ot
Swnmp=R~t is soon realized. It i~ sold
by druggists, in fifty- I~'E~.~.~
~nt and one dollar~~t
sizes. You may have a~
sample bottle by mall
free, also pamphlet tell- Home ot ~a~.~m.
ing all about it. Including many of the
thousands of testimonial letters recelve