"ihesicl^r^ad^ein And the Weak Are Restored to Full Vigor and Strength at the Hands of the Greatest Specialists of Modern Times. Are you a perfectly strong, active, vigorous, healthy, happy man or woman? Tf not. you should not delay one day before yon consult a specialist, one to whom the human body is an ; open book, and win* understands every phase of weakness and disease and to whom the proper treatment for a cure is as simple as the adding of a column of figures. The Leading Specialists For over 20 years l»r. Hathaway & Co. have been tbe leading specialists of this country. Their practice h&a been for years larger than that of other specialists. Their euros of all sorts of diseased conditions have been the marvel of the medical profession and the people generally. Their fame has spread into every town and every huiulet. % Those afflicted with all manner of diseases have sought their services in order that they might be made whole by the administering of their wonderful system of treatment. Wrecks of humanity have come to them for consultation and medicines who, a few months later, have returned to them in most vigorous health to give them their thanks. All Chronic Diseases Cured Dr. flathaway & Co. treat all chronic dis eases—those peculiar to men and those peculiar to women-Vital Weakness, Debil ity, Female Troubles, Varicocele, Piles, fis tula. Catarrh, Rheumatism, Kidney and Laver Complaints, Skin Diseases, etc., etc. Every Case Specially Treated Every case taken by Dr. Hathaway A Co. Is specially treated according to its nature, uil under their general personal supervision, and all remedies used by them are prepared from the purest and best drugs in their own laboratories under their personal oversight, and all from special prescriptions of their own. Dr. Hathaway A Co. make no charge for consultation or advice, either at their office or bv mail. g^DR. HATHAWAY Not in Virginia. From Llppincott's. The dusky man servant of a Wash ington official, being granted leave of absence not long ago to visit his home In Virginia, hied himself to an estab lishment purveying travelers' supplies In order to purchase a valise. The salesman seemed to think the darky should purchase something in the way of a large bag. "Here’s a fine one," lie said. "The best alligator bag you can get. Only-" “Look heah, boss,” interrupted the darkey impatiently, “I done toie yo’ several times I don't want an alligator bag. I ain't goin' to Floridy. I's goin’ to mah home in Virginny." 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Accept no counter feit of similar name. Dr, L. A. Sayre said to a lady of the haut ton (a patient): **As you ladles will nee them, _ I recommend 4Gourn ml*a Cream* as the least harmful of all the •kin preparations." For sale by all druggists and Fancy Goods Dealer* in the United States, Canada and Europe. (LID. T. HOPKINS, Prop.. 37 Great Jonas Sinai, New To* SIOUX CITY P’T'G CO., 1,305—31,1909 Pointed Paragraphs. From the Chicago News. Politics and morality are seldom on speaking terms. Many a so-called orator Is merely a hu man phonograph. Love is a disease that nothing short of marriage will cure. Cupid makes a mistake when he grafts a bud on an old shrub. When you meet a stranger get busy and tell your troubles first. But for the limelight many a theatrical star would cease to shine. It’s a pity a man can’t put up a plaster on his conscience when it hurts him. A vegetarian says that his good health is the result of eating no meat and cnew ing it well. There would be fewer old bachelors if single men wrere not allowed to associate with married men. After a boy has spent a year at college lie resembles the picture in readymade clothing establishments. A skirt steak Is not exactly a piece de resistance, or a flirtatious piece, as some thoughtless sillies may think, but is quite another piece, the cheap est piece of a steer. It is a piece of the diaghragm, or midriff, between lungs and bowels, and makes good steak, stew or sausage, having the great advantage of being absolutely fresh, being too cheap to be kept in storage. Ask Your Druggist how Alien's Foot*Esue. “I tried ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE recent* Iv, and have just bought another supply. It has cured my corns, and the hot, burn ing and itching sensation in my feet which was almost unbearable, and I would not be without it now.—Mrs. W. J. Walker, Camden, N. J.” Sold by all Druggists, 25c. The Morning Grouch. How do you rise in the morning? Gloomy and sad and sour, Or glad of the rest that was given you And brave for the battle hour? Do you rise from your couch at day break With a smile for your loved ones true? Come, tell me, now, is a churlish frown The best that they get from you? Do you rise in the morning merry, Or gloomy and cross and sad? Do you growl and snarl at your morning meal Because the coffee is bad? Don’t do it, for life has troubles. Ah, many, and greater, too. For the simple tilings in the morning hours To bother a man like you. Got up with a smile and wrhistle; Get up with a cheery word; For a morning grouch, when you think of it, My brother, is so absurd. Reserve your growls and your bitter w'ords For the time when a real grief frets youi What chance have you in life’s big affairs If a trifling thing upsets you? —Detroit Free Press. Sn=CA$TORIR ffiji_2D] ! For Infants and Children. Pi rtmm The Kind You Have ll UHl Always Bought H|| ;; ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. ; A\bgetable Preparation for As- ^ ,1 BaMi simulatingtteFoodamlRcguta UeaiS tlie ■Bun I mg the S tomaelis andBowels oi' • pi Eg^Spi^d Signature ■811; PromotesDigeslionJCheerfu!- rv-p ■HI ness and ResLContains neither VA Ipd: Opium.Morphine nor Mineral ■B lj - Not Narcotic. HI'!, Hecipe of Old DcS4MLr£2J^fUSEIl Ul ll • Plaapkin Seed" « nil £3Si- ) * In Hi AusrSmt* l I II Wm- abbs**, / Eli BSfc ) Use Aperfect Remedy for Consfipa- I ■If tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea P^u iSflSii : Worms,Convulsionsleverish l« f| T I g V P T BII'SI ness and Loss of Sleep- I III U I ul FacSinuk Signatureof TL Vaaka ife Tn r y Years / IlSiiCASTORIA Exact Copy of Wrapper. TMC ctMTAUB Com»nt. »■ »o«> citt. THE INDIAN WAR DANCE The Chippewas, of White Earth Res ervation Preserve Tradition. >•——-— -- ———- — ■ Keith Clark, In St. Paul Dispatch. ! The dance is held on a high hill. 1 overlooking the trading post of White Earth to the east, and overlooking the Tar-stretching, down-dropping hills of the reservation to the west. A flag pole stands in the middle of the ring, carrying aloft the American flag, where once it was like a totem pole that carried the Chippewa flag, a long pennant made of eagle feathers, like a w'ar bonnet. About the foot of the flagstaff are squatted the drummers, four, six, or eight, as the energy of the dance demands, each with his drum stick, the drum itself, a large six-foot expanse, rich and low in note. Each drummer has but one stick, for he is expected not only to beat the tom-tom, hut to sing, high or low as emotion de mands, this hi-yl-hi-yi of the dance song. | And you cannot believe, until you hear it. the infinite possibilities of the single drum-note, of the single word phrase. | - | The dance begins at 4 o'clock in the afternoon, lasting till sundown. The Chiefs and the warriors gather slowly, coming by ones and twos and threes, ifrotn the tepees that dot the hills for a mile and more about, bright splashes in their gay array of buckskin and bead work, with many a modern color 1 worked into the caparison. As they come across the hills they are wrapped in bright blankets, or more often, in ithe very patchw'ork quilts which the squaws are making us deftly as the white grandmothers did: indeed, the ; patchwork quilt fits into the picture i perfectly. And the braves are close I on the reserve, tall, slender, an Intelli gent face, the finest example of what civilization does and does not undo. There was Nay-ah-tah-wab, of the Red Lake band, for the Indians of this reservation come down to make merry with the White Earthmen. Nay-ah tah-wab Is stout and joyous, quite the life of his very lively hand, and not at all hearing out his translation of "Man who-sits-alone.” There was Pl-pl-ya, a Sioux, whose name translates into The-one-who does-things. And indeed he does things, for while the Ojibways are u. worthy people and their dunce full of grace and meaning, It Is the Sioux who dance the best, the Sioux who are the orig inal dancers. For this very dance we are watching was borrowed less than 30 years ago from the Sioux, It is the Sioux who discovered the tom-tom, who Invented even the squaw dance. And that squaw dance! It Is the Christmas of the Indian. For no one dances In the circle but those who have given each other gifts. Men may give to men, women to women, but more often It Is men and women. The one who Invites crosses the ring, throws the gift at the feet of the Invited, returns to the ring, and the other must follow; they make a rlow shifting foot move ment about, shoulder to shoulder, some times hip to hip, with just a suggestion of ancient Egyptian motion—may I say hoochee cooehee? The gifts vary from maple sugar cakes, calico strips, hand kerchiefs, to shawls, blankets, quilts, rings, pipes, bead work, rlfies, even ponies are brought into the ring and given. IN BUI Old Resident Bug: “Whew! This i • boy!" 1 wrapped, the blanket covering even the head dress, and coming down to the moccasins; they seek the effect as pos itively as masquers who throw aside the domino. Must I confess that I saw but one headed buckskin shirt? For "bucks” | cannot wear buckskin when bucks grow I scarce. There were gay calico shirts, and one of royal purple, which I might venture to call taffeta silk. There were a few pairs of painted legs on the very j young bbys, and there were several suits of pajamas serving as "glad .rags” ! In this ceremony. But generally the ' warrior wears the white man’s shirt and trousers, putting his gorgeous | beaded double bags, his beaded clout j and belt, his beaded knee garters and i leggings over these, but wearing still the grand headdress of eagle’s feath I ers—if he is entitled to eagle’s—paint ing his face in ancient, honorable fash \ (on, and carrying tomahawk or club ! Into the ring w ith him. 1 The ring becomes a wonderful kalei doscope of rainbow colors, with 40 or SO warriors dancing about the tom tom, repeating the hi-yi-hi-yi of the drummers, very dignified and full of Intention, the step restrained, only the I young men lifting the foot much from j the earth, and only the younger men I bending the body backward and for i ward. For the young braves have the I joy of living in them; the old chiefs have long memories of what has been and will not be again. There was Chief Mah-ge-ke-geshieg, still chief of the tribe, in spite of the fact that tribal relations are no longer recognized, a magnificent old man, be tween 80 and 90, who would attract attention anywhere, splendid in much green and many beads, and an eagle headdress as chieftain. v There was Chief Joseph Charette, Wain-che-mah-dub in the Chippewa, a poetic figure in Ills bright scarlet, the long flowing hair, touched slightly with i gray, as beautiful as though he had just stepped out of mediaeval romance, us beautiful as French salon ever saw. There was Ojib-way. father to Peter Parker, the old man of such age as to have lost all relation with years, the younger man. a vigorous brave of mid dle age, In spite of the fact that he served Minnesota in the civil.war. There was young John Lufkins, dls I clplinarian of the school at Ponsford 5VILLE. s th’ wust storm we’ve had since I was There is no one so generous as th® Indian; no where is socialism so strong ly entrenched. They are dancing yet, this very aft ernoon, most of all this very evening, up there, on the reservation, so much farther from us than a mere 250 miles, as far as White Earth was from Gran ada hack in 1492. Most of all they art dancing tonight, for the beginning last Monday was only the beginning, all this week they have been on with the dance, each evening later, each day more madly, each time with more gen erous surrendering of those gifts, even the very trappings from their bodies, which marks the final frenzy of their meeting. Yes, I should like to see the danc® tonight, when after a week's slow sloughing off, they have dropped civi lization and are come back to that state which was theirs long ago, even if only so short a time as 30 or 40 years. The sound of the tom-tom is irre sistible. Perhaps if you have heard it only on exposition grounds, where these wilderness folk have been brought for show, heard it mingled with the sound of “civilized” noises, you will not be lieve. But to hear it far from this civilil zation, in its place, to hear it sounding over the hills, faint, just suggested, to be drawn by it willy nllly, to find your self standing there for hours 1s—is per haps to find that you, too, are aborigi nal. Somewhere, back In an apparently unsullied ancestry that runs to Ameri can beginnings, 1 am convinced that I must have crossed hands with the first folk. For not the fate motive of Wag ner's "Nibelungen Ring," nor the Eove Potion motive of "Tristan and Isolde” commands me more, or more definitely, than the hypnotic tom-tom-tom of the OJibway dance ring. Do you remember that final drum which closes all the music drama of "Tristan?” Then, per haps, you will understand the tom-tom. About 2,000,000 of the natives of Siam are kept busy cultivating rice. Several varieties are cultivated, some requir ing only two months, while others re quire up to six months to ripen. East year 500 American motor cars crossed the frontiers of Germany in tour. I THE MARRIED MAN. "It’s 60 pleasant here, professor; stay awhile longer." "Impossible. But I will leave my package and umbrella here, and perhaps my wife will eend me back for them." ' MUNYON’S Eminent Doctors at Your Service Free I Not a Penny to Pay for the Fullest Medical Examination. If you are in doubt as to the cause of your disease, mall us a postal e questing a medical examination blank which you will fill out and return to us. Our doctors will carefully dlag I nose your case, and if you can be cured you will be told so; If you can not be cured you will be told so. You are not obligated to us In any way, for Ihis advice is absolutely free. You are at liberty to take our advice or not, as I you see tit. Send to-day for a medl cal examination blank, fill out and re I turn to us, and our eminent doctors will diagnose your case thoroughly. | absolutely free. Munyon's, 53d and Jefferson streets, Philadelphia, Pa. Absent All Around. From JJppincott’s. An absent-minded professor returned home one evening, and, after ringing , Ins front door bell for some time to no effect, heard the maid's voice from the I second-story window: “The professor i is not in.” | “All right," quietly answered the professor, “I’ll call again.” And he hobbled down the atone steps.” Mrs. Wlultw'i Boom tv* Bmvr for Chfldrwn teething. »oft«na the gums, reduce* Inflammation. *1 It} • pain, cure* wind ©oil a. ate a bottla. Dressed for the Part. From the Baltimore American. “What subject have you taken for your address at the Civic club?” “Woman's moral obligations as a clti sen.’' “What a lovely subject. And what are you going to wear?’’ “That new gown I brought home with me from Paris. And just think; I had it so cleverly packed in with my old clothes that the custom house inspector never discovered it was there." Her Preference. Said the brunette maid To another quite fair: "For lUrtlng, tis said, You really don’t, care— But it’s oodles of fun To flirt with a fan." “Fudge!" said the fair one, “Give me a fcol man.” —Chicago News. A feeling of security and freedom from anxiety pervades the home in which Hamlins Wizard Oil is kept constantly on hand. Mothers know it can always be depended upon in time of need. In spite of hi** 90 years Lord We myss is still a keen golfer. He was in strumental in starting the golf club at Wimbledon common, about 1862, but when it was made obligatory by a by law of the Wimbleton conservators for the golfers to wear a red coat, Lord Wemyss rebelled and his set of clubs still stands In mute resignation in his locker, tied with a piece of twine. PERRY DAVIS’ PAINKILLER for all aorta of cuts, brulaea. burna and atralna. Taker internally It curea diarrhea and dyaentory. Avoid tub gtltutoa. X&o. Me. and tOo. | Mme. Melba Intends during this year's professional tour In Australia and New Zealand to write a book about the places she will visit. The book, she ex pects, will agreeably reveal tile won derful possibilities of her native coun try. _ _ _ ! Water tanks of white pine used on railway work, states the Engineering Record, have In the past had a maxi mum life of 20 years, while the maxi mum life of cypress Is 25 years. The coal bill of the navy last year, ' Including handling and storage, was $5,544,945, There it only one GENUINE Haarlem Oil Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Now put up in Odorless and Tasteless CAPSULES This is the best of all home remedies. Dis covered A. D. 1696, by Claes Tilly, it has, in the past 200 years, relieved thousands and thousands of sufferers from LIVER, KIDNEY, BLADDER I and STOMACH TROUBLES Holland Medicine Co., Scranton, Pa. In reply to letter, I received a free box ol your Haarlem Oil, and i found them very good, and I got one box myself. They have relieved me quite some. I have tried almost everything, and went to two doctors; I tried Swamp Root; I have tried everything I was told, and your pills seem to have been the best. 1 will recommend them. Y.ours truly, MRS. S. NEWTON, 331 Pearl St. Brooklyn, N. Y., April 8, 1909. Take Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules to day. You will feel relieved tomorrow. Bot tles 15 and 35 cents. Capsules 25 and 50 cents. At all druggists. HOLLAND MEDICINE CO., Sole Importers Scranton, Pa. ! 11 your Druggist cannot supply you, write us direct. ammmmm ;.•SSSSSSSSSSSSSS^ Shooting for Cigar*. From the Chattanooga Times. During the maneuvers the subject of rltle shooting frequently cropped up at one of the officers' meases. "I'll bet any one here a box of ci gars," sakl Lieutenant A., “that I can Are 20 shots at 200 yards and tell without waiting for the marker the result of each one correctly.” "Done!” cried Major B., and the whole mess turned out early the next morning to witness the experiment. The lieutenant fired. "Miss!” he announced calmly. Another shot. "Miss!" lie repeated. A third shot. "Miss!" "Hold, hold on!” put In Major B. "What are you trying to do. You're not firing for the target!” ''Of course not!" was the cool re sponse. "I’m firing for those cigars.” Reflections of a Bachelor. From the New York Press. An old man with a young wife make* her appear like dancing on crutches. What mukes It easy for a man to wake up early Is If he has nothing to do and could just as well stay In bed late. We are all so susceptible to flattery that we like It even when we ere ashamed to know jve are being made fools of by It. A woman will cheerfully pay J10 a month more rent for a house !n the country that has a name which looks nlco on her writing paper. HERE’S A WAY TO SAVE DOCTOR BILLS. Fhyalclnna Give Free Advice b» Which I'urenla May Profit. It’s a matter of general Interest Just now how one’s physical condition can bo got into shape to best receive the benefits of the summer season. Espe cally Is this true of the children. They have become run down by a winter of unnatural manner of living because of ill-considered food and much time spent Indoors. Spring comes with lt» sunshine, Its fresh vegetables and all else Invigorating, but the children are In no condition to receive nature’s , remedies. Many parents call in the family physician. Many other parents take advantage of what the physician told them when he was first called in con j sultation. All good family physicians i say: “Give the children Castoria." | Healthy parents know this remedy of old, for they took It themselves as ' children. It was more than thirty years ago that Castoria made a place for Itself in the household. It bore the signature of Charles H. Fletcher then, as It does to-day. The signature is Its guarantee, which is accepted In thousands of homes where there are children. Much Is printed nowadays about big families. Dr. William J. McCrann. of : Omaha, Neb., 1b the father of one of these much-read-about families. Here is what he says: “As the father of thirteen children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside from my own family experience I have, in my years of practice, found Castoria a popular and efficient remedy in al most every home.” Charles H. Fletcher has received hundreds of letters from prominent physicians who have the same esteem for Castoria that Dr. McCrann has. Not only do these physicians say they use Castoria in their own families, but they prescribe It for their pa tients. First of all It is a vegetable preparation which assimilates the food and regulates the stomach and bowels. After eating comes sleeping, and Castoria looks out for that, too. It allays feverishness and prevents loss of sleep, and this absolutely with out the use of opium, morphine or other baneful narcotic. Medical journals are reluctant to discuss proprietary medicines. Hall's Journal of Health, however, says: | “Our duty is to expose danger and re cord the means for advancing health, The day for poisoning innocent chil dren through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our knowledge (’as torla Is a remedy which produces com posure and health by regulating the system, not by stupefying it, and our readers are entitled to the inform* tlon.” What He Has. From the New Yoik Times. Apropos of President Taft’s boost fop the 'possum into sudden fame, former Governor Glenn tells this one: Three colored brethren, high church men all, happening to meet at a cross roads one day, fell Into a discussion. Deacon Jackson stated that in Ills opinion the country was going to the dogs, therefore he allowed he was u. pcssimisit. Klder Hightower combatted this view, seeing that the panic was about over and the price of cotton was on the rise. He declared himself a firm optimist. When Deacon Powell was called or> for his opinion, lie scratched his head | ineffectively for a moment and :*nd: “Well, brudderin', hit ’pears to mo [ dat ’simmons is 'bout ripe now, thuffo" 1 spects 1 is u "possumist!’’ Touching. I When women don tlie “pantaloons," ' As fashion says they shall, the men l Can rise as now the women do i And search the things at midnight then. | —Houston Post. I LOW FARES EAST Via New York Central Lines LAKE SHORE MICHIGAN CENTRAL BIG FOUR ROUTE Extraordinarily low fares are being made this year by above routes to New York, Boston, Niagara Falls, resorts on the Sea Coast, at the Thousand Islands and in the Adirondack Mountains. Tickets are on sale every day during July, August and Septem ber, good returning within 30 days; give liberal stop-over priv ileges at Niagara Falls and other points and are good on boats on Great Lakes and Hudson River, in either direction, without extra charge. For fares from your station and other detailed informa tion address Room 456 WARREN J. LYNCH U Salle Street Station Paucngcr Traffic Manager Chicago