The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, September 10, 1908, Image 7

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CHICAGO. |^y
A TALE OT TKE BUILDERS
OF THE WEST
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YN0P3IS.
*
I
The story opens during a trip of the
“Overland Mail” through the Rocky
mountains. "1'ncle Billy” Dodge. stage
driver. Alfred Vincent, a young man. and
Phineas Cadwallader, introduced. They
come across the remains of a massacre.
Later at Anthony's station they had the
redskins have carried their destructive
work there also. Stella Anthony, daugh
*r of Anthony, keeper of station, is in
troduced. Anthony has been killed.
Vincent is assigned his work in unearth
ing plans of enemies of railroad being
built. He returns to Stella, each show
ing signs of love for the other. Stella hears
from her lover. Gideon, and of his phe
nomenal success. Finds letter of im
portance involving plans of opposition
road. Plot to destroy company’s ship
Flora Is unearthed and incriminating evi
d» nee against Cadwallader found.
Phineas Cadwallader faces prison on
charge of wire tapping. A perfect chain
of evidence connects him with plot to
blow up "Flora.” Banquet in railroad
t- \vn is scene of monopolization of Alfred
by a Miss Hamilton, with determination
on Stella’s part to change her tempera
ire nt. Alfred writes passionately to
Stella, rie-- rying the attention which he
was comve lied to give Miss Hamilton.
Mrs. "Sally” Bernard announces rich.es.
Gidem makes threat against Alfred’s life.
Quickly leaves town on best procurable
horse in search of Vincent. Race to beat
opposition company’s stage a success.
Si* !la fails to hear of Gideon. Stella re
ceives a letter: “Promise to marry
Gideon Ingram or Alfred Vincent will
die.” AiV-r conference Stella decides to
flee. Y- rs pass. Stella becomes known as
Esther Anthony, becomes a rich woman,
cdu ■ cites hers* If at Vassar and steps into
highest San Francisco satiety. Kidnap
ing changes Alfred greatly and when
he and Stella meet in ’Frisco society, she
passes him without recognition. Stella’s
love for Alfred and his for her is revived.
However, neither shows recognition of
the fact to the other. Stella visits Mrs.
Sally Bernard, now in top notch society
and wealthy, bring known as Mrs. Lansr
Bernard. Anthony romance Is unfolded,
showing Gideon, who loved Stella, to be
her own cousin. He repents deeds and
tries to even up score in interview with
Stella. Alvin Carter. Viola’s lover when
the Bernards were poor, visits them and
Sally B. consents to their marriage,
despite the fact that several sons of rich
sires are asking the girl’s hand.
A
CHAPTER XXVIII.
The Battle cn the Cesert.
Out in the sage-covered wilds a
horde of pigmies charged the ice
bound earth with pick and powder.
Fighting desperately against endless
malignant obstacles. George Gregory
forged on toward Salt Lake, the goal
of his dreams.
Side by side, mile after mile, the
rival companies ran their grades, the
Central Pacific working steadily east,
the Union Pacific rushing west from
their main front, and pushing east
with the grade they had begun at
Humboldt XVells. They hoped to out
run their rivals and meet their own
iron far west of Salt Lake.
Thus the days sped. Gregory's life
became a profane prayer for iron. For
ten days his men worked but four
hours a day. The rest of the time
they slept, visited or tramped. A few
quarreled, some gambled on the sly.
Yet these men averaged well, and it
was not for them Gregory held his
sleepless vigilance, but for the tide of
riff-raff setting westward from the on
coming Union Pacific, from the remote
mines and camps, and taking toll of
mischief as it passed.
One night, worn with fruitless court
ship of sleep, Gregory rose and went
out into the desert cold, striding
noiselessly down the sleeping tented
town. He turned the other way,
passed the boarding train, the com
missary. the shops, and on by the
Chinese camps. Returning, a slight
noise caught his-ear as he neared the
wheeled bakery. He stopped, listened,
and sent his lantern ray against the
door. It was ajar.
Presently a man came out with a
loaf of bread and climbed down the
steps into Gregory's light. He was a
recent comer, thick, sturdy, with
beetling brows and fierce, resentful
eyes.
"What are you doing here?” thun
dered Gregory.
"1 walked too far to get back for
supper, and went for some bread,” the
man answered readily enough.
“Mow'd you open the door? Wasn't
it locked?”
"Yes, sir; but I got the key. 1—”
He got no farther. Gregory dropped
his lantern and flew at him. Hot an
ger and the power of authority rein
forced Gregory's more than usual
strength. He rained blows and invec
tive on the offender; fisted him and
booted him; kicked him under the
wagon finally, with a last irate charge.
"Lie there, you dog! till daylight, il
you want to; but be out of this camp
before I see you again, you son oi
iniquity! Blast your eyes! I'll see ii
stealing can't be stopped here!”
Gregory hurried away, but not fast
enough to escape the man's defiant re
joinder: “Taking a loaf of bread in
place of supper's no stealing. I'll be
even with you for this, you damned
slave-driver!"
1 ne voice was weak, but Gregory
felt the venom, and its threat.
"There's a man under the bakery
that I've ordered out of camp,” he said
to the watchman, as the two met. "See
that he goes; but give him this—on
the quiet, you understand.” The watch
man took the five dollars. “He's only
worked two days; there won’t be
much coming to him, poor devil,” the
superintendent said compassionately.
It was this side of Gregory's varied
character that won for him the alle
giance and service of the men he
drove hard, though less hard than he
drove himself.
Gov. Stanford established headquar
ters at Salt Lake City, and Superin
tendent Crocker flitted up and down
the line to the Front whenever the
Sacramento office did not claim him.
The movements of the directors
seemed fatally slow to Gregory, the
man of steel, who must ask no ques
tions but execute their office-made
plans. He chafed more than ever ovet
delay in forwarding materials, for he
was desperately near the end of all
* the rails on the coast.
r "Why don’t you get iron across the
Isthmus?" he asked of Mr. Crocker
when the latter had told of the de
layed ships carrying iron, locomotives
and other supplies.
L
"What?" the superintendent cried in
dismay. "Pack iron across the Isth
mus? Preposterous: The directors
would never consent. Hopkins—he’d
go crazy! We—”
"Good heavens, Mr. Crocker! Don't
let him—let them hold us up now!”
"But, Gregory, we’re planting money
under every foot of track, finished and
unfinished. Think of the things that
need to be done, rebuilt, mended. And
last week we killed 20 Chinamen.
We’ll have—’’
"Dead Chinamen needn't bother us;
it’s live ones we want.”
“Yes, but the dead ones make it hard
for us to get more live ones. And they
fear the cold, too. They say, ’Too
niuchee snow! Too muchee kill!’ And
you're always howling for more
Chinese, you know.”
“Yes, sir. Never have enough. Can’t
you do that slick trick again. Mr.
Crocker? Catch another shipload on
the fly and yank them over here be
fore they have time to find out wheth
er it's hell-hot or heaven-cold here?
And white men, too. Great guns!
Men! Men! Anything that can drive
a spike!”
“But what do you want of men if
veur iron's nearly cat?”
"You'll get me iron across the Isth
mus”
“Lis There, You Cog! Till Daylight.”
“We can't. It'll cost—”
“Jove and all the little gods! What
does money, piles of it at any interest,
if you haven't got it on hand, count for
against more than 150 miles of road
for all time?”
“A hundred and fifty miles? What
do you mean?”
'It's that far from here to Ogden.
The U. P. people get every mile they
can clap iron on first. Yet their iron's
away east of Ogden; and I can beat
'em there, if you’ll get me the iron!
j Think what the business of Salt Lake
valley will amount to in 10. 30, 50
years! You've simply got to have that
piece of road!”
“You can't do it, Gregory!”
“By the eternal. I can! I've set my
pins for it ever since that blamed spy
hornswoggled me last summer. The
minute the engineers cut out the Pali
sade tunnel I knew I was O. K. Now,
don't play Pharaoh on me. Mr. Crock
er! I can't build your road without
iron. Get it for me, if you have to
steal a foundry and pre-empt the Isth
mus of Panama!”
“It can't be done in time.”
“It can. sir! Telegraph the governor
at Salt Lake. He'll telegraph the order,
rush the foundries, a dozen of ’em. By
jiminy! You can put the iron afloat in
a week, have it here in 40 days!”
Mr Crocker caught fire. “By George,
Gregory! I believe we might do it.
I'll have a talk over the wire with the
governor.” He was about to turn
away, but stepped to give Gregory a
paper. "There’s Tuesdaj s Clarion. In
teresting reading there. They're beg
ging the Union Pacific to fly by us.
come into California by Beckworth
pass and snatch our trade."
"Let the Clarion blow. We're giving
j the U. P. about all the knitting work
i they can 'tend to, we and those dried
beef-colored Sioux.”
"Hold on, Gregory! We'll be charged
with murder, yet,” laughed the other.
“There's the train!” he added, as a
whistle pierced the still air.
The men walked along the newly
laid track, past the construction train
to the rear and awaited the approach
ing iron train.
“Only five cars!” groan-d Gregory.
“It won’t kec, :he spikers going any
time.”
"Who's that wemnn standing in the
car door? Well, It isn't Sally B.!”
Vlr. Crocker exclaimed, and Trent for
ward.
There she stood, smiling, alert, her
mourning discarded, her traveling suit
the smartest, her strong personality
raying out hypnotically to all within
reach. The moment the train halted
she tripped down the steep steps, and
went quickly toward the two men,
calling out voluble greetings on the
way. First Mr. Crocker, then Mr.
Gregory, she embraced with impartial
cordiality, and kissed each audibly on
the cheek
“It’s the same old Sally B. Time
can't touch her, youth can never for
get her,” Mr Crocker said gallantly.
“Thank ye, Mr Crocker; but it's me
that's got to do the blarneying. I've
come begging,” she said bluntly, yet
with her old, confident smile.
“Whatever I can do for you—” Mr.
Crocker began heartily, when Gregory
interrupted.
“I'll leave you to your business now,
Sally B.—excuse me, Mr. Crocker—
but as soon as you've finished, you go
right forward to our car—first on the
other side of the construction engine
there. The madame’ll hail you as an
angel in the desert. We—”
“But I'm goin' right back to-day.”
“No, you won't! You'll stay all night
with us and cheer up the madame.
Plenty of room.” He lifted his hat
with a grace that revealed somewhat
of the secret of his ability to meet all
situations.
That night Sally B. told her story to
the sympathetic Gregorys. The human
units that swung Gregory's hammers
and cowered under his fierce energy
little dreamed of his gentler side, of
the man who cherished and comforted
a delicate, sensitive wife still mourn
ing the death of their only child.
“Yes. Bill’s broke all to pieces;
won't never be no 'count agin, the doc
tor says. That last buck of his'n
against the stock board tuck his pile,
an' him, too. mighty nigh.” Sally B.’s
acquired culture dropped from he r like
a loosely pinned mant.e. The desert,
the bustle, the railroad, even rudeness
and crudity, appealed to her elemental
nature. Every fiber of her being re
ponded to the life about her. She
bounded to its call as the long
tethered cavalry horse to "boots and
saddles!”
"And all your money gone? How
can you take care of him? It's too
bad! Too bad!” condoled Mrs. Greg
ory.
“Too bad nothing! I'm glad—about
the money, I mean. This is the first
good clean breath I've had in three
year. If Bill was O. K. I could yell
with joy for gittin' away from money,
an’ style, an’ big bugs. Vi's fixed.
Yes, goin’ to marry A1 Carter next
week. His house's all ready—bang
up, it is, too. He's on top; good's
salt-risin’ bread, an’ straight as an
Injun now!” It would have pleased
Alvin's mother to have seen the proud
flash in Sally B.’s eye. “And I'm coin
in’ out here to work for—for Bill."
Her voice trembled.
"What did the Boss give you*-'
Gregory asked a little later.
“Toano eatin' house.”
“Good enough! There's a chump
there now that don't know beefsteak
from a mule's hoof. I’m glad he's got
to go. It's a good stand. You can
hook trade from the ¥. P. outfit there,
too.”
“You bet I will! I'm just dead gone
on Charley Crocker. He's been that
good to me! I'm going to live now,
you bet! I'm goin’ to keep the dog- ,
gondest best eatin’ house this side the j
Bay. An’ I'm goin’ to carry Bill on a j
feather pilier's long's he lives. Pore j
Bill! Lordy! But I'm tired!” She j
finished breathlessly, and collapsed in j
tears—tears that frightened George 1
Gregory, who had not supposed that
Sally B. possessed them.
CHAPTER XXIX.
The Message of the Dancing Girl to
Esther.
To Esther, restless, unoccupied,
came Sally B.'s urgent invitation to
visit her at Toano. Esther accepted i
it at once, deciding not to wait for !
the Hannons. Business had delayed j
the judge, and now fear of small pox
for his wife. A pitted face testified
his own immunity. But Esther had no
fear of the disease; Toano was free
from the scourge; and the breath of
the wide, free desert breezing from
Sally B.'s letter roused the wings of
Esther's spirit.
She timed her going to catch Uncle
Billy's train out from Winnemucca. j
Through all the years she had written
him at intervals, sending her letters
at first through Sally B.
She wished to surprise him. He was i
therefore quite unprepared for the tall,
elegant young woman who waited im
patiently at the rear enu of the car
to greet him. She saw him glance to
ward her as soon as he entered, and
her heart leaned. But he came calmly
on. from passenger to passenger, stop- j
ping here and there for question or
direction. He looked her way inquir
ingly once or twice, but blankly.
When he was yet a few seats away,
recognition came. He sprang to her,
his face transfigured. Thought of
stranger eyes, of official dignity, fled.
He caught her hands in his own.
“Honey! Stella!" lie cried softly as
he kissed her on the cheek, the years'
hunger for her shining in his m’siy
eyes. “Where undeli the canopy did
you come from, honey?”
She smiled her joy, but said no
word.
He still lmld her hands, her rings
cutting under the pressure neither
marked till later, his eyes searching
her glowing face. Her mask had
dropped; her soul was open to him.
He made her as comfortable as pos
sible in the rough car that did duty as
sleeper, coach, parlor and emigrant
car all in one. When the meager busi
ness after leaving each infrequent sta
tion was dispatched he came to her
again; and the long day was not half
time enough for the tale of Esther's
eventful life, every detail questioned
and appreciated by her rapt listener.
Esther opened her eyes the next
morning upon a strange life, new, yet
old. The Wizard Desert wrapped her
again with the mantie of his enchant
ment. As of old, the hills walked out
of their spaces to meet her. She was
back in her own world, back to Sally'
B.’s loving arms, to Uncle Billy's ten
der solicitude.
“Are you happy, Mrs. Sally?” Esther
asked, following her from one to an
other of the rough rooms, as the mis
tress deftly touched each chaotic spot
to order.
“Lord love ve, child! I didn't know'
how powerful pestered I was there in j
Oakland an’ the city till I got back
here where I b'long. There's folks of
ccurse that's made for totin’ society's
pack; same of 'on's soft, squashy crit
ters. an' some of 'em s plumb good like
Freddy Bryan; but the plains, an’
work, an' men with blood in ’em, an’
freedom—that's what I was born to;
an’ it's what I’m fit fur.” She was
tearing an unspeakable bed to pieces
with merciless scrutiny. “Gosh! The
way a man runs a hotel without no
woman is nough to make a skunk
sick! ”
Esther marveled at Sally B.'s rever
sion. Nothing of her violent effort at
culture remained; and her old speech
and manner seemed doubly vigorous
for the long rest.
“If only Bill was—was right peart
agin—” Sally B. began, but stopped
abruptly and shook a pillow danger
ously near to its undoing.
"Did you hear about Blowhard Cad?”
she asked a little later.
“I overheard his name in the car
yesterday, but learned nothing defi
nite.”
“He's arrested for stealing from the
company.”
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Mother Instinct Was Strong
Old Lady Ready to Aid Any One She
Thought Needed It.
A woman who looked as if she had
a commuter's ticket in her handbag
kept a long line of customers waiting
in a New York bank one morning re
cently. She was writing something
and was in no hurry. She was uot
one of the fashionable “no hips" crea
tures, but wai of such generous pro
portions that she could not be cir
cumnavigated. There was nothing to
do but wait and wonder what her busi
ness was. The cashier himself was in
doubt, but waited politely to see.
"There, young man,” she announced
triumphantly to the cashier after put
ting her pencil in her mouth for the
fiftieth time, "there is a prescription
that has been in our family for 50
.' cars. It will knock taat cold of yours
endwise. Hustle right out end get it
filled and be sure and soak your feet
in hot mus-ard water to-night. Don’t
let your cold run on.”
The smiles that went round were
kindly ones, it seemed so good to meet
a universal "mother” re3dy to coddle
any human being t; ;t she thought
needed her ministrai. :as.
Ignorance of South America.
One of our contemr raries referred
yesterday to “little Paraguay.” That
republic is four-fifths r.3 large as Ger
many.
Many persons have erroneous no
tions as to geographical sizes and
lengths in South America. They have
not the slightest idea that Brazil is
nearly as large as the whole of Eu
rope, that the distance between the
north and south ends of Chile is as
great as that between the North Cape
of Europe and Gibraltar, and that
steamers ply almost straight north and
south on the Parana and its Paraguay
affluent for a distance about equal to
that between New York and Omaha.—
New York Sun.
Battleships Scon Wear Out.
Naval experts put down the active
life of a modern battleship at about
15 years. A hundred years ago battle
ships lasted almost six times as long
and were on active service nearly the
whole time of their commission.
Physicians
Castoria
CASTORIA has met with pronounced layer on the part of physicians, pharma
ceutical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physicians with
results most gratifying. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably the
result of three facts: First—JThe indisputable evidence that it is harmless;
Second—*That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimi
lates the food: Third—It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor Oil.
itio
/raps, iiateman's ifrops, iroarrey’s
_poisoning innocent ciuiciren. tiirough giuou uj. uuy
our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by
regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to
the information.—Hall’s Journal of Health.
CENT'.
AYcgete’o!? freparalion&rAs
Promotes Di^r?!mCkerf«!
ness and Rei>t.Comair.s nciifcer
OpiiLT’..Morp!i;oe nor ilmaL
Not V ats mrir. i
JUsrl? el Old i_2J« iij
P^'Jir Sm3‘ . !
jS&iamt* 1
JfeAjfrfifr
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Anafec; remedy forCcnsS^-;
ticn, Sour Sxinkh.OardTa j
.Cori'valsiop.s.fcvtnshj
E^ar: Copy o' Wrapper.
T? v : r — yottot-.tv; 1 y TT-;
Letters from Prominent Physicians
addressed to £ha§0 H. F!elcher.
Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chicago, Ills., says: “I bare prescribed your
Castoria often for infants during ray practice, and Cnd it Tery satisfactory."
Dr. 'William Belmont, c£ Cleveland, Ohio, says: “Your Castoria stands
first in its class. In ny thirty years of practice I can say I never have
found anything that so died the place.”
Dr. J. H. Taft, of Brooklyn, M. Y., says: “I have need your Castoria and
found it an excellent remedy in my household and private practice for
many years. The formula is excellent.”
Dr. It. J. Ilamlcn, cf Detroit, BSich., says: “I prescribe your Castoria
extensively, as I have never found anything to equal it fer children's
troubles. I am aware that there are imitaticus in the field, but I always
see that my patients get Fletcher’s.”
Dr. Vm. J McCrann, of Omaha, Nob., says: "As the father of thirteen
children I certainly know something about 3-our great medicine, and aside
from my own family experience I have in my years of practice found Cas
tcria a popular and ehicient remedy in almost every home.”
Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "The name that your Cas
toria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the
presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorse
ment of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and
believe it an excellent remedy.”
Dr. It. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Ido., says: "Physicians gener: Ty do no!
prescribe proprietary preparations, tut in the case cf Castoria my experi
ence, liko that cf many other physicians, has taught me to malic an ex
ception. I prescribe your Castoria ir. my practice because I have found it
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cian who has raised a family, as I hate, vill join ms in heartiest recom
mendation of Castoria.”
>
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?i£S3EE5 5&S2^KBKKE*iaS^'
How Hammer cf Death Struck James.
The old perish church of Plumstead,
which has just been reopened, is prob
ably at least 1.000 years old. The pic
tureso.ue churchyard, a cherished
haunt of the poet Bloomfield during
his visits to Shooter's Hill, contains a
delightfully choice “derangement of
epitaphs.” One of those, on "Master
James Darling, aged ten." teaches a
lesson of moderation during the pres
ent cherry season to the youth of other
places besides Plumstead. Speaking
from his tombstone, Master Darling
exclaims:
"Tne hammer of Death was give to me
For eating the cherves off the tree.”
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
.r:th LOCAL APPLICATION-. they panrot roach
the seat of the dlv:is<. Cat rrn i1- a blood or ctusti
lutional Oise:****, and in order to cure i* you must take
Internal remedies. Han s Catarr i ' tire is taken in
ti really. and acts directly noon the blood and mucous
rarfac's. Hall's Catarrh Cur** is not a quack medt
tlne. It was prescribed by one of the best physic::*-is
ta this country tor y-.ts .rtc is u retruiar pmoru-lion.
It is composed of the b< *1 t’>r.fcs kr own., combined
with the best bh*od irurKters. act me oH.-ctly on the
raucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the
two ingredients is what produces such wonderful re
sults in curtns catarrh. sr»n<* i-.r testimonials, free.
F. J. rilli.VEV A- CO.. Props.. Toledo, O.
Sold bv Druecists. price 75c.
lak? Hall's Family Fills for constant ion.
No Genius.
“He is very clever, but evidently far
from a real genius."
“What makes you think so?”
“Why, he is fairly punctual about
keeping his appointments.”
Your Druggist Will Tell You
Hint Murine Kye Remedy Cures Eyes,
Makes Weak Eyes Strong. Doesn't Smart
■Soothes Eye Pain and Sells for 50c.
Even bearding house landladies
must pay out good money for the privi
lege of boarding street cars.
Lewis’ Single Binder eicar—richest, most
satisfying smoke on the market. Your
dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria. 111.
Labor rids us of three great evils;
poverty, vice and ennui.—Voltaire.
Alien’s Foot-Easc.a Powder
For swollen, sweating feet. Gives Instant relief. The
original powder for the feet, ‘2jc at all Druggists.
Habit, if not resisted, soon becomes
necessity.—St. Augustine.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothlna Syrup.
For children teething, softens ibi para*, reduces fa
dimmatlou. allays pain, cures wind cti-ic. S5c a bottle.
The man who pays bis debts is true
to his trust.
Positively cured by
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They also relieve Dis
tress from Dyspepsia, in
digestion and Too Hearty
Eating. A perfect rem
edy for Dizziness, Kau
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in**n*8 63.00 and S3.50 shoes than any
other manufacturer In the world, b€
caase they hold their shape, fit better,
and wear longer than any other make.
Shoes it All Prices, for Every Member of ttie
Family, Men, Soys, Women, blisses & Children
W.LJDoog;** $4.00 and $5.00 Gilt lira Shot* cancct
equalled at tsj price. V7. 1. l>cu£L* $2.$6 «ad
$2.00 thoc* are the best in the world
Fast Color Eyelets lTsnd JETxciu-tWlfj.
8^-Take Wo Substitute. VV. L. DoupifM
name and price i9 itamped on boltom. Sold
everywhere. Shoes mailt*«l from lacto-ir to any
rL of the werid. Cats! j^ne free.
L. DOUGLAS. IS7 Spark St., Eredrton. Mass.
TOILET ANHSEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptical'y clean and free from un
healthy germ-life end disagreeable odors,
which water, soap and tooth preparations
alone cannot do. A
germicidal, disin
fecting and deodor
izing toilet requisite
of exceptional ex
cellence and econ
omy. Invaluable
for inflamed eyes,
throat and nasal and
uterine catarrh. At
drug end toilet
stores, 50 cents, or
by mail postpaid.
Large Trial Sample
WITH "HEALTH AND BEAUTY” BOOK BENT TREE
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Miss.
[Live STOCK AND
MISCELLANEOUS
E
ELECTROTYPES
in great variety for sale at the lowest prices by
. v EM, logs skwsiupkkoi.. -s w.idu.,gt..cki«(.
PILES
DR. E. R. TARRY, 224 Bee Building, Omaha, Neb.
CURED WITHOUT THE KNIFE. All Recta! Diseases treated upon a ltosittre
guarantee. No money to te paid till cured. A mild treatment. Without the use
of Chloroform, Ether or other general aneasthetics. Examination FREE. Write
TO-DAY for Free Book on Ractal Diseases with Testimonial*.
romoted by Exercise
anil (Moira Soap
In the promotion of Skin
Health, Cuticura Soap, as
sisted by Cuticura, the great
Skin Cure, is undoubtedly
superior to all other skin
soaps because of its influ
ence in allaying irritation,
inflammation, and clogging
of the pores, the cause of
disfiguring eruptions. In
antiseptic cleansing, in stim
ulating sluggish pores, in
emollient and other proper
ties, they have no rivals.
Sold thronghout the world. Depots: London. 27,
Charterhouse .Si.: l“ari:\ 5. Kuu del* Fat*: a min.
Fetter Drug A Cliew drp' Sole Prop*.,’ f'.ontnu!
ag-Post-l ree, CuUcuja Book uu Cure ul the Skin.
lai.1 ojune»; menu, u. jv. raui,
THE DUTCH
BOY PAINTER \
STANDS FOR
PAINT QUALITY'
IT IS FOUND ONLY ON
.PURE WHITE LEADfr
MADE BY
THE
DUTCH /.
PROCESS.
OLD
WIDOWS’^® N EW LAW obUUnefl
pensions bV£2£1£n,KCTs
DEFIANCE STARCH ZZTSZ
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 37, 1908.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color mere
am
wan