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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1908)
Skin Soap Warm baths with Cuticura Soap followed, when neces sary, by gentle anointings with Cuticura, the great Skin Cure, preserve, purify and beautify the skin, scalp, hair and hands of infants and children, relieve ecze mas, rashes, itchings, irrita tions and chafings, permit rest and sleep and point to a speedy removal of torturing, disfiguring humours when all else fails. !MruM£ Sold throughout the world. Depots: London. 27, Charterhouse 8q.; Parle. 6, Rue de la Pal*: Austra lia, R. Towns & Co., Sydney: India. B. K. Paul, Calcutta; China, Hong Kong Drug Co.: Japan, llaruya. Ltd.. Toklo: Russia, Ferreta, Moscow; ■o. Africa. Lennon, Ltd., Cape Town, etc.; V.8.A., Potter Drug A Chem. Corp., Sole Props.. Boston. •O-Post Free, Cuticura Booklet on the Skin. The Ohio-Mississippi coal trade, which persists today, is one of the greatest single movements of cargo in the world. From Pittsburg to New Or leans is 2,000 miles, all downhill. Coal In 1,000-ton barges is rafted into fleets and towed down this distance by pow erful steamboats, at a cost of less than 76 cents a ton, against a railroad rate of about $4.60—from Pittsburg to Mem phis for 43 cents, against a rail rate of 12.70. Millions of tons of coal have gone thi3 way and always will go this way, because the boats have only to drift, and those that come back, mostly emp ty, are not hard to shove upstream. ' % , No Place for Him. From the Nashville American. "What was that Image, shade or per sonage that just rushed down the street?" "With a wild, startled look on his face?" "Yes, that was It.” "Oh, that was parliamentary law.” "Why the precipitate haste?” "In strolling about looking for adven ture It had come on a woman's club attempting to transact business.” WfDO WS’under N EW LAW obtained nriwoinvo by JOHN W MORRIS. PENSIONS Washington, D. a There are about 320,000 people In the District of Columbia; over 60.000 of them live outside of the old city of Washington (which now has no legal existence, behag merged In the District of Columbia, in a large number of small towns and villages scattered over the hills and valleys of the territory. About one-third of the population Is colored—the largest number of colored people gathered In any place in the world; about one-fourth of the popu lation Is very poor—poorer than most poor people elsewhere In the United States. Tit a Pinch, Use Allen'* Foot-Ease. A powder to shake Into your shoes. It rests the feet. Cures Corns, Runions, Swollen. Sore, Hot, Callous, Aching. Sweating feet and Ingrowing Nalls. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. Sold by all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 2oc. Sample mailed FltKE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, he Roy, N. V. The Belgians border their roadside with apple and pear trees of the cider and perry varieties, and they draw a profitable revenue from their elongated plantations. Thus the 800,000 roadside trees of Belgium bring in an annual income of £13,000—that Is, a little over 4d a tree, big and little; while they cost, Including contributions to a re planting sinking fund a trifle over %d a tree. I* Yon Have Common Sore Eye*, if lines blur or run together, you need PETTITS EYE SALVE. 25c. All drug gists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. How Frick Got His Start. From the Pittsburg Post. One day the Mellon bank in Pitts burg was amazed to receive from nn unknown, man signing himself “H. C. Frick” a letter requesting the loan of $20,000. He had very little to offer in the way of security, the writer said, but he pledged his word that if the loan was made it should be returned with interest. The audacity of the request interest ed the bank's head, and he sent a trust ed agent to find out about the man Frick. When the agent made his re port the bapk decided to make the loan. That $20,000 was the foundation of the colossal fortune of Henry Clay Frick. Not only did he return the prin cipal with Interest, but the business which he subsequently gave the Mellon bank was worth a hundred times the amount of the original loan. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the /'l* "pT Signature of How to Exercise the Bowels Your Intestines sure lined inside with millions of little suckers, that draw the Nutrition out of food as it passes them. But, if the food passes too slowly, It decays before it gets through. Then the little suckers draw Poison from it instead of Nutrition. This Pplson makes a Gas that injures your system more than the food should have nourished It. You see, the food Is Nourishment or Poison, just according to how long it stays ■ tcalled constipation) is to take a big dose of Castor Oil. This merely makes slippery the passage for unloading the current cargo. It does not help the Cause of delay a trifle. It does slacken the Bowel-Musclesmore than ever, and thua weakens them for their next task. j Another remedy Is to take a strong Cathartic, like Salts, Calomel, Jalap, Phospate of Sodium, Aperient Water, or any of these mixed. What does the Cathartic do? It mere flushes-out the Bowels with a waste of Digestive Juice, set flowing into the Intestines through the tiny suckers. * * * But, the Digestive Juice we waste in doing this today is needed for tomorrow's natural Digestion. We cannot afford to lose tt. That’s why Cascarets are the only safe ■Mdicina far ths bowels. They do not waste any precious fluid ot the Bowels, as Cathartics do. They do not relax the Intestines by greasing them Inside like Castor Oil or Glycerine. They simply stimulate the Bowel Muscles to do their work naturally, com fortably, and nutritiously And, the Exercise these Bowel Muscles are thus forced to take, makes them stronger for the future. Just as Exercise makes your arm stronger. They are purposely put up like candy, so you must eat them slowly and let them go down gradually with the saliva, which Is In itself, a fine, natural Digestive. They are put up purposely in thin, flat, round-cornered Enamel boxes, so they can be carried In a man’s vest pocket, or In a woman’3 purse, all the time, without bulk or trouble. Price 10c a box at all druggists. Be very careful to get the genuine, made only by the Sterling Remedy Com pany and never sold In bulk. Every tablet stamped “CCC." 712a * • * tar FREE TO OUR. FRIENDS) We want to send to our friends a beautiful French-designed GOLD-PLATED BONBON BOX hard-enameled in colors. It is a beanty lor the dressing table. Ten centsin stamps is asked as a measure of good faith and to cover cost of C as car ets with which this dainty trinket is loaded. Send to-day, mentioning thla paper. Address Starling Res iedy Company, Chicago or He w Toik, mmm ^BBR^^prices for every ■^MEMBER of the family/^— MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. W. L. Oounlaa makae and nolle more ** mmn'atX.BO, $3.00 and BS.BOahooa than my other manufacturer In the . . “^ssft Ansa.. sx./tXAjiSs"** »w ssiiesfKaSK.!Sg: V. L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At ™, > ■■» «7-«3AirnoiV. W. T„ Douglas name and price is stamped on bottom. Take STo Snbstltute. Bold by the l*est shoe dealer* everywhere. Shoes mailed from factory to any part of the world, lllus* tested Catalog free to any address. W. L. DOtfOLAS. Brocktou. Mass. -jy.yji;11 "■■■■ i .i. —. 1 1 ■" —— Syrup tffigs ^LUxirsfSenna Cleanses the System Effect ually; Dispels Lolas ana ueatt aclies due to Constipation; Acts naturally, acts truly as a Laxative. . Best- forMenVhmen ana (. hila ren -youngand Old, To get its Denejicial Effects Always huy the Genuine which has me full name of the Com '"CALIFORNIA po Syrup Co. by whom it is manufactured, printed on the J front of every packftjte* SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS one size only, regular price 5(K ootlle. Tangled Metaphor, Prom the Minneapolis Journal. It was in a police court In India. The client of the babu lawyer was a woman accused of assault and battery, and the attorney, attacking the oppos ing lawyer, delivered himself as fol lows: "My learned friend with mere wind from a teapot thinks to browbeat me from my legs. I only seek to place my bone of contention clearly in your honor's eye. My learned friend vainly runs amuck upon the sheet anchors of my case. My poor client has been de prived of some of her valuable leather (skin), the leather of her nose. Until the witness explains what became of my client's nose leather he cannot be believed; he cannot be allowed to raise a castle in the air by beating upon a bush.” FAMILY’S SKIN TROUBLES. Bcsema, Heat llnuh, and Scalp Affec tions Afflict Different Member*, bnt Cutieura Cure* Them. "My wife had eczema for five or six years. It was on her face and would come and go. We thought we would give the Cutieura Remedies a trial. We did so and she has never had a sign of eczema for four years. I myself used Cutieura Soap and Cutieura Ointment some time ago for falling hair. I now have a very heavy head of hair. Wa used Cutieura Remedies for our baby, who was nearly bald when young. She has very nice hair now. She Is very fleshy, and we bad so much trouble with heat that we would bathe her with Cutieura Soap and then apply Cutieura Ointment, It would dry the heat up so much quicker than anything else. Mr. H. B. Sprlngmire, 323 So. Capitol Street, Iowa City, la., July 10, 1903, and Sept. 16, 1906.” “The Bread Wat Sully.” From the Bookman. Once John Muir, author and ranch man, was dining with a friend. They sat down and Muir began to tell a story. The waiter came around sev eral times, but the story was so good nothing was ordered. Muir talked and talked, and In between he would reach over and break off a piece of bread from a French loaf on the table. This he did a good many times. The story reminded him of another, and so he talked and ate bread, until his com panion broke In w'.th: "Well, what shall I order for you, Mr. Muir"” "Order,” he repeated In his abstrac tion. "Yes, order-—to eat.” He looked over at the last little re maining piece of bread on the plate and said, as if waking from a dream: “Eat? Why, I’ve had all I want— that bread was. bully.” A Remedy for Neuralgia or Pain In Nerves. For neuralgia and sciatica Sloan's Liniment has no equal. It bas a powerfully sedative effect on the nerves —penetrates without rubbing and gives immediate relief from pain—quickens the circulation of the blood and gives a pleasant sensation of comfort and warmth. “For three years I suffered with neuralgia in the head and Jaws,” writes J. P. Hubbard, of Marietta, S. C„ "and had almost decided to have three of my teeth pulled, when a friend recom mended me to buy a twenty-flve-eent bottle of Sloan’s Liniment. I did so and experienced Immediate relief, and I kept on using it until the neuralgia was entirely cured. I will never be without a bottle of Sloan's Liniment in my house again. I use it also for in sect bites and sore throat, and I can cheerfully recommend it to any one who suffers from any of the ills which I have mentioned.” Voluntary immolation on the funeral pyre of her husband was of frequent occurrence in India before Lord Will iam Bentinck's suppression of it. In olden times the tendency of thought and feeling gave an impetus to the do ing of such deeds. This devotion to the departed husband is not confined to the widow only. It is expected of the wife, in circumstances of unnatural conduct on the part of the living husband. He may spurn her; still she should not only bow to her lord without a demur, but be loyal to him. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Cater isscetssjs Matter aaO Inter calm Huai) after tea. Oae I Oc aackaae calan all Otars. Ttejr tea la ceM water teller Ikaa aar elker Ora. Tea caa Ora ma aanaaal witeaal teaatea aaart Write I w tna keakief law la On. Oteack eat Mil Cetera. MO/fHOE DDVC CO.. Qmincjr, IllineU BEAUTIFUL COUNTESS CLEVER HOTEL THIEF French Noblewoman Caught at Nice With the Goods on j Her Person. Paris, Special: A series of mys terious hotel robberies on the Riviera, extending over many years, has been explained In the arrest of the beau tiful, charming, but masquerading. Countess of Montell. For years the Countess of Montell has been enter tained lavishly, both at Paris and the Riviera. Her wealth and Jewels have drawn comment and admiration from far and near. Now she Is declared one of the most Ingenious, successful and audacious hotel thieves that has ever troubled the hotel proprietors of France. Her arrest reveals her not as the captivating, brilliant countess, hut as a thoroughly up to dnte burglar, carrying concealed In her betwitchlng garments an array of burglar’s Imple ments of intricate workmanship which opened to her any hotel room on the Riviera which she knew to contain the coveted wealth of money and valuable Jewels. Wherever the countess stopped there was always mysterious, Inexplicable robberies baffling the police. Valu ables disappeared from the rooms of rich Americans In the most puzzling manner, for the doors were all found locked and the windows fastened. Suspicion Aroused. Gradually, but vaguely, the faintest haze of suspicion began to be directed towards the Countess of Montell. The cautious agents of the department of French surety Investigated the history of the countess. They found that she had been born of a respectable French family and that her maiden name was Amelia Condemln. She married a man named Portal and came to live in Paris. Afterward they separated and Mrs. Portal went to the United States. Two years later she returned to France as the Countess of Montell. For several years Bhe held brilliant sway In so ciety. 8he visited the leading water ing places on the continent, but es pecially the winter resorts of southern France. It was several years ago that the first thoughts of police suspicion drift ed toward the counteBs and her sensa tional arrest at Nice at one of the famous hotels Is the culmination of long and patient watchfulness by French detectives. Her undoing came In a moment of overeagerness to rob. Detectives found her enveloped in a long and beautiful cloak, bending over the door of the room of a wealthy American tourist. When the woman was searched the police found hidden In special pockets of her clothes pincers, files, screwdrivers, and no fewer than 27 pairs of small, delicately made nippers used by burglars to un lock and lock a door with its own kev when the key is on the Inside of the door. The detectives will seek to prove, moreover, that the masquerading coun tess Is, in fact, the active director of a band of hotel robberB, mostly men, some of whom have been arrested and whose aggregate loot is of great finan cial value. When Words Are Superfluous. Philadelphia Inquirer: A. J. Ulrich, traffic manager of the Keystone Tele phone company of Philadelphia, has re moved the word ‘‘please" from the vo cabulary of his exchange girls. They will hereafter say ‘‘Ring oft” instead of "Please ring oft," "Call again,” instead of “Please call again," and so on. “The word 'please,' ” Mr. Ulrich ex plained to a reporter, "was used In our telephone business 900,000 times a day. Allowing half a second for Its utter ance that meant a dally waste of 125 hours. Why shouldn't all these hours be saved, saved for some better use?” “You know,” Mr. Ulrich went on, “1 believe In few words. Wasted, super fluous words mean spoiled effects. What, for Instance, could have been more telling, more effective, than the note, containing not a single super fluous or wasted word, that a man once wrote to his physician? "This note ran: “ ‘Dear Doctor—I had a few words with my wife last evening. Send me a bottle of lotion.' " Mark Twain’s Dog Story. New York Sun: Mark Twain blos somed out with a new dog's tale at the weekly banquet of the Pleiades club. at the Lafayette Brevoort. The theme of the humorist was "How It Pays to Be Honest— When It Doesn’t Hurt Yourself.” He said he was starving with a chap named Davis In Washington in the lat ter ‘60s, and Davis told Twain to go out and rummage for $3 for Scotch whisky, while he’d stay home and pray. Twain said he walked Into a hotel and came on the prettiest dog he had ever seen in the lobby. General Nelson A. Miles came In with three months’ salary. Miles saw Twain fondling the dog, and offered Twain $10 for the animal. "I haven’t any right to sell this dog for $10.” answered the humorist, “but If you’ll give me $3 you can take the pup away.” Miles paid the $3 and took it away. The real owner rushed In. “I’ll find your dog for $3,” said Twain. The owner agreed. Twain walked up stairs. told Miles the situation, and got the dog back by paying $3, then re ceived $3 for restoring It to the owner. He took three quarts back home to Davis, who drank It all and ignored Twain. A Treacherous Memory. The Bohemian: Little 5-year-old Har old's mother was of the new school and thought that baby days were for play and not the conning of catechisms, One day when Harold came to her with the question, "Who made me?” she an swered "God,” and as the child was apparently satisfied without any ex planation as to who God was. the con versation dropped there. Shortly after a reverend, distinctly of the old school, called on the family, and after the manner of his kind began to question the son and heir as to the do ings of Adam and Eve, Solomon and sundry of his sort, and was sadly shocked to find that he knew far more about Mother Goose than sacred his tory. At each unanswerable question the child’s self-respect sank to lower depths and he was on the verge of tears be cause of this revelation of his abysmal Ignorance when, In extremity, the rev erend gentleman exclnlmed: “At least, my poor child, you can tell me who made you?" "Yes, I can,” the youngster blurted out, brightening visibly, “or—or—any how, mamma did tell me the name of the man, but—but I’ve forgotten It!” How True! There's on» sad truth In life I’ve found While Journeying east and west, The only folks we really wound Are those we love the best. We flatter those we scarcely know. We please the fleetlr.g guest. And deal full many a thoughtless blow To those who love us best. BUYING PAINT BLINDLY. Many people look upon paint buying ns a lottery and so It Is. the way they do it. It Is not necessarily so, how ever. Pure White I-ead and linseed oil are the essential elements of good paint. Adulterants In white lead can be easily found by the use of a blow pipe. Adulterations in linseed oil can be detected with a fair degree of cer tainty. See that these two elements are pure and properly put on and the paint will stny put. National Lead Company, Woodbrldge Building, New York City, will send a blowpipe outfit and Instructions for testing both white lead and linseed oil, on request When Aldrich Was Taken for the Office Boy. From Scribner's. Willis at this time was beginning to feel the approach of the malady that was eventually to cause his death, and spent much of his time at Idlewlld, Ills country place on the Hudson, leaving Aldrich to guide the more Immediate destinies of the paper. We get, In the correspondence and recollections of that period, some charming pictures of the golden-huired hoy of 20 sitting In state In the august editorial chair, with a dignity no doubt enhanced by the fact that he also occupied the post of what Is quaintly termed "literary adviser" to the lively and kaleidoscopic publish ing firm of Derby & Jackson. A fa vorite reminiscence of Ills was of an occasion during one of Willis' absences, when, seated at his desk, he was com posing with due deliberation an edi torial which seemed to him at the time likely to arrest the ruinous course of national events. His cogitations were rudely disturbed by a loud stranger who, after purchasing from an under ling some back numbers of the paper, turned to the absorbed editor with “Say, bub, get me a piece of siring, will you!" AOENT8—f3 a day guaranteed energetic agents, men or women, selling our house hold specialties. Write today. Box 5M, Baih, Maine. How the Young Idea Shoots. From Everybody’s Magazine. Many of the children are so crammed with everything that they really know nothing. In proof of this, read these veritable specimens of definitions, written by public school children: "Stability Is taking care of a stable." “A mosquito Is the child of black and white parents." "Monastery Is the place for mon sters." "Tocsin 1b something to do with get ting drunk.” "Expostulation Is to have the small pox." “Cannibal Is two brothers who killed each other in the Bible,” "Anatomy Is the human body, which consists of three parts, the head, the chlst and the stummlck. The head contains the eyes and brains, If any. The chlst contains the lungs and a piece of the liver. The stummlck Is devoted to the bowels, of which there are five, a, e, 1, o, u, and sometimes w and y." ALMOST A MIKACLE. Raised Up When Selene* Said Ther* Waa No nope. C. W. L. Nesbitt, Depot street, Mar lon, Ky., writes: "I was a chronic In valid with kidney troubles and often wished death might end my awful suffer ings. The secretions were thick with sedi ment, my limbs swollen and my right side so nearly par alyzed I could not raise my band above my head. The doc tor held out no hope of my recovery and I had given up. but at last started using Doan's Kidney Pills and made a rapid gain. After three months' use I was well and at work ngaln.’’ Sold by all dealers. SO cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo. N. X. An Awful Case. From Life. As Mr. Tippet came In and started to remove his overcoat, his wife came up eagerly. There was a look of anx iety in her eyes as she kissed him. "Did you think, dear,” she asked, timidly, "to get that ribbon?" “What ribbon?” "Why don’t you know. 1 gave you a sample to match this morning?” "So you did. By Jove. It slipped my mind." "And did you stop In at the mil liner's to ask about my hat?" "Dear me, I—I—it quite escaped me." "Did you send the telegram to mother?” "Great heavens, no! You see, I was so busy I-” “And see the landlord about the leak In the roof?" “No. I-” His wife looked at him hopelessly. “Did you,” she asked sadly, “do any thing I asked you to do this morn ing? If you didn't you are certainly the most forgetful man that I can conceive of.” Her husband met her smile with one of the deepest humiliation, as he drew from his overcoat pocket a small rec tangular package. 'I am. my dear," he exclaimed—"I am. indeed! I admit it. I'm getting more forgetful every day. Why, do you know"—and he flourished the package in front of her teur stained eyes—"I'm getting so forgetful that I came within an ace of not getting I these cigars? And I didn't have one ' left in the house.” Out of the 105 counties which the state of Kansas has within its domains, at least 50 have no paupers. One-half the county poor farms are empty, save for the keeper, who draws his salary and wait for patronage. Some of the sociological students, who add to their philosophy the economics of living, de clare that the poorhouse will soon be an extinct institution In Kansas. The match monopoly produced a net revenue of $5,475,000 to France last year, the tobacco monopoly $75,390,000. 20 MULE TEAM BORAX IN A NEW PACKAGE 5 lbs. Most economical to boy. All dealer*. Sara the package tops; each are worth V> iom pons In enchnnee for presents. Premium 1.1st free of PACIFIC COAST BOBA.N CO., i Chicago. WANTED—Experienced furniture: salesman, good character. Address Davidson Bros. Co., Sioux City, la. NATURE AND A WOMAN'S WOK I j I ^LYDTa B.T1NK Nature and a woman’s work com bined have produced the grandest remedy for woman’s ills that the}, world has ever known. In the good old-fashioned days of; our grandmothers they relied uponi the roots and herbs of the field to cure disease and mitigate sufferings The Indians on our Western Plains to-day can produce roots and herbs for every ailment, and cun* diseases that baffle the most skilled physicians who have spent years ini the study of drugs. From the roots and herbs of the field Lydia E. Pinkhara more than, thirty years ago gave to the womenl of the world a remedy for their pe4 culiar ills, more potent and effica-* cious than any combination of drug*. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is now recognized as the standard remedy for woman’s ills. > Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 616 N.C. St* Louisiana, Mo., writes: “ Complete restoration to health* means bo much to me that for the sake of other suffering women I am witling: to make my troubles public. “ For twelve years I bad been suffer ing with the worst forms of female illaJ During that time 1 had eleven different, physicians without help. No tongue can tell what I suffered, and at times ■ could hardly walk. About two yeare ago 1 wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice. I followed it, and can truly say that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound and Mrs. Pinkham's advice re stored health and strength. It is worth mountains of gold to suffering women.” What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound did for Mrs. Muf^. it will do for other suffering women. The ' automobile stare” is becoming noticeable In New York city. It is th» vacant, faraway, apparently unobserv tng look that comes into the face of •» chauffeur when he crosses streets re gardless of the pedestrians, turns tho* wrong corner or guides and speeds hto vehicle regardless of the rights of oth ers. The Swedish national commission tor the prevention of tuberculosis has rec ommended the gradual establishment of 4,COO retreats for consumptives, to be scattered throughout the length and. breadth of the country. The total cost will be nearly 11,000,000 crowns. It to proposed that the cost of maintaining; patients shall be borne by the inu-, niclpalltles from which they are sent. QARPIELD I DIGESTIVE TABLETS, Prom your druggist, or the GARFIELD, TEA CO.. Brooklyn. N. Y„ 25c per bMtWj --) I What a Settler Can Stem In WESTERN CANADA ItO Acres Gr*it:-Crmrln* Lead FREE. 20 t. 40 Bu*h«li Wbreutoth. Ac^T 40 to 90 Bushels Out, to tha Ac™. 3.? *? »0 Ba,h,U Darby to tha A*™. i 1 unbar for Fancier and Cuildiasa FREE t^od Laws with tow Taxation, onlsnd.d Railroad Facilities and tow Rataac Schools and Churches Con. anient. Satisfactory Markets for aB Productiaw. Good Climato and Porfact Health. Chances for Profitable Investments. Some of thelchofceet grain-producing lands to Saskatchewan sod Alberta may now be acquire# In these moet healthful and prosperous section* under the Revised Homestead RegulatiMS < by which entry may be made by proxy (mi cert aim ,* conditions), by the father, mother, son, dattgfclac. brother or sister of intending homesteader. a Entry fee in each case is flO.OO. For pamphlet "Last Best West,** particulars as to rates, routes^. Hegt time to go and where to locate, apfdy to W. D. Scott. Superintendent of Imrairratios^ Ottawa. Canada, or E. T. Holmes. 315 Jackaam St. St. Paul, Minn.:!. M. MacLachlau, Box n* Watertown. South Dakota, and W. V. Bennett, 801 New York Life Building, Omaha. Keh* Authorized Government Agents 1M«uh« any where yon aaw this advert!—aa» TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiscptically clean and free from un healthy gdrm-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparation* alone cannot do. A - germicidal, disin* feeling and deodar* izing toilet requisite of exceptional ex cellence and econ omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, by mail postpaid. THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Bustoa,Miss. SIOUX CITY PT'G CO., 1,241—19, 19M