The Kadoka Press (Newspaper) - May 8, 1908, Kadoka, South DakotaBABY’S
Favourite
? ¦ , 3“
Skin Soap
Warm baths with Cuticljra
Soap followed, when nedes-
sary, by gentle anointings
with Cuticura, the gjeat
Skin Cure, preserve, purify
and beautify the skin, seaip,
hair and hands of infants
and children, relieve. eq&fy
. • mas, rashes, itchings, irrita-
tions and chafings, permit
rest and sleep and point to i
speedy removal of torturing
disfiguring humours whei
V all else fails.
Sold throughout the world. Depot*: LoaSn*.
Charterhouse Bq.: Part-. 5. Rue de la Path* Atartn-
ll*.R. Towns A Co., Sydney: Indi*. B.
Cohutta: China. How Kong Dru« Co.: J*p*lt
Murujra. Ltd.. Toklo Rural*. Ferrel*. Moecor;
So. Africa. Lento.n. Lid.. Cape Town, ne.; iJJSM.
Potter Drue A them. Corp . Sole Crop*. BMM.
a*“P(wt Free. Cutie,r* Booklet on th*Sk/O.
f THE DUTCH '
K BOY painter V \
/ STANDS’’OR >
v IPAI NT QUALITYjara T
I IT IS FOUND O LYON I
I PURE WHITELEAD
\ MADE Bp /
X THC Wx -J •
X. OLD DVTCH .
P rq: t.ss.
¦ awwe ggsfe.
What a Settle- Can Swear* In
* WESTERN CAMBA
V ISO Acr**Cr*l*4lrovi**Land F*DL
20 to 40 Btuhola Wkra t to tho A***.
40 to 90 Bukhola Oat, o th* Aero.
35 to 50 Bushels Barter to the Asm. i
Timber for Feocing aaj Bui Idtoga PML
Good Laws with Low iaaatioe.
Splendid Railroad Faci ides aad LowFalta.
Schools and Churches ( onveuient.
Satisf actor? Markets ter all PiWvctfoaßk
Good Climate and Perioct HeaWL
Chanc es for Profitable 1n vest manta.
Some of thelchoieest it' Mln-prodoctef tends te
Saskatchewan and Alberta may now boacqulred
te those most healthful | J prosperous sections
under the ’
Revised Homestead Rephtions
by which entry may be.m4 le byprosjdrtl curtate
s conditions), by the father.mother, sofFtenchtar.
brother or sister of intend* r £ homes alter.
'
Entry fee in each case ia SIO.OO. Fo «amphlet,
/ p **LastBest West," particulars as ton a, routes,
(best time to go and where to locate. »ply toW D. Scott, Superintencent of I niaration,.Ottawa, Canada, or E. T. Ho’mej, < JacksonSt., St. Paul, Minn, and J. 4 MacL Sian, Box
I lib, Watertown, SO. Dakota. Author) d Go veru-
j > meat Agents
Pleaae say whsrs you saw this adrartiM >at*
i 20 MULE TSAI.
I BORAX
IN A NEW PACK GE
U 5 lbs.
I Most ecooomtaU to toy. AU <l. »l*r». Bar*
Ji lb* package top*; e*cb ar* woitb 12 cou-
I poo* la exchange tor nreaeata. Premium1 U.t free ot PACIFIC COlAkt BDBAX CO.,
¦ Chicago.
3 WIDOWB'“W|IW
I PENSIONS B. a
1
’
I
to Shililu* th* Kvapuq.
-T Teacuer —Mr*. Clubber?
1 n Clarguce frequently coiues I
' -L bIM face unwashed.
W
J
Mr*. Clubber—Why, got
W Miss Lipsicum, what do you I
Janitor for!—Chicago Tribui
wc
COM
.u’he pension and the District of Colum- I
A.l appropriation Jiill* were pgate-d by the
•»j late Tuesday. In additions the special
message of the President urging a legis-
ia| ve prO£r&lD WES PPBd, Atkd another I
eipter of Senator Warner’s/speech on I
th Brownsville affray wa* heard. The
.solution of the House to rive govern-
iLnl aid to cyclone sufferer* In the South
ins passed. The resolution to extend the
Mie when the commodity clause of the
P.Broad rate law shall becoen* operative
t|*f called before thejSenate by Mr. El-
lins, but went over under objection from
Sr. Culberson. Ostensibly considering
fie sundry civil appropriation Mil. the
Souse devoted most of it* time'to-day
b spci-ches covering a wide range of sub-
lets and concluded the session by- giving
n attentive hearing to the President’s
pe< ial message referring to the multi-
nillionaire “whose ton Is a ftiol and his
laughter a foreign firincese” wa* readied
here was a storm of applappe.
Senator .Itavis of Arkaneaa created a
mild sensation in the Senate Wednesday
tvL-n in discussing lite reStdrrtion calling
on the Secretary of the Inteilor for in-
formation about the .tribal rail* of the
‘Cb H-taw and f'hii ko-ciwf htdiaAs of Okla-
N)::ia lie declared that 10.000 name*-were
being kept off-the mlj* by th# secretary
aad instanced a case in which he said
tnipe member* of a family wese rated as
negroes and only one a* an Indian. Ad-
vancing toward Mr. Foraker of Ohio, his
voice thundered throughout the chamber
and adjacent halls as he asked, if the
Ohio Senator “loved nigger*” *o well, why
dhl he not come forwand and defend those
members of that race. Only laught'-r
greetisl this and Mr. Foraker requeeted in
a mild ;me that the Senator epeak kind-
er. Later Mh Davis’ resolution was
pasted. All. the pension bill* on the cal-
endar ntid' nlany other measurqi of minor
importance were passed during the flay.
•Tie- sundry divil appropriation bifl was
Under consideration in the House and the
greater part of the time was consumed
in general debate and discussion under the
pve-minute rule. Mr. Fowler, New Jer-
sey. denounced the Aldrich currency bill
’and pleaded for the passage of his bill to
lareate a currency commission. Mr. Will-
Jams. Mississippi, presented, a petition,
; signed by IG4 of the IC> Democrats com-
posing the minority, asking the speaker
fto recognize some member of the House
Ito move the discharge of the ways nnd
means committee froui further considera-
tion of the Stevens bill for the removal of
the duty on wood pulp and pi int paper
1and to pass that bill or a simila * one. Mr.
Dalzell-of Pennsylvania offered an amend-
ment to the sundry civil bill appropriat-
ing SOO,OOO for the establishment of a
national art gallery in the Smithsonian
Institution. The amendment was reject-
ed on a point of order. The House disa-
greed to the Senate amendments to the
navnl appropriation bill and the bill was
sent to conference.
The Senate had under consideration all
day Thursday the agricultural appropria-
tion bill. Practically all the committee
amendments were disposed of except those
relating to the forest service, which will
be taken up Friday. Consideration of
the sundry civil appropriation bill was
resumed in the House. Mr. Townsend of
Michigan offered an amendment increas-
ipg from $50,U00 to $350,000 the appro-
priation for the enforcement by the in-
terstate commerce commission of that
clause of the Hepburn act directing the
commission to cause to be made examina-
tions of the accounts of the interstate
railroads of the country to determine
whether that law is being violated and to
make public the results of such examina-
tions. After a debate lasting four hours
the amendment was agreed to. The House
disagreed to the Senate amendments to
the District of Columbia and pension ap-
propriation bills and sent those bills to
conference.
The time of the Senate was tiken up
for two hours Friday with a *i eech by-
Senator Jeff Davis of Arkansas asking
that the committee on the judiiiary be
discharged from further consideration of
his bill for the suppression of trusts. The
remainder of the day was given over to
the consideration of a resolution by Sen-
ator Elkins, susiiending until Jan. 1,
1910, the commodity clause of the Hep-
burn railroad rate law. 'Hie resolution
provoked so much debate and go many
amendments were offered dealing with
other phases of the railroad legislation
that the whole matter went over until
Monday. The House spent ail of the
day's session in considering and paaaing
paragraph by jxiragraph under suspension
of the rules, the sundry civil appropria-
tion hill. A determined effort was made
to strike from the bill a rertrictioa pro-
hibiting tbe employment of secret service
employes in any detective work other
than the guarding of the President and
the running down of conterfeitsr*, bnt the
limitation was agreed to and tbe para-
graph finally adopted in Hirbotantioily its
original form. Objection by Democratic
members to unanimous consent defeated
the passage of a bill for the printing gad
distribution of 100,000 eopfew of a special
s>rt by tbe Department of Agriculture
icribing diseases of cattle
NATIONAL CAPITAI M0TB&
The conference report on tbe Indian
ipropriation bill was appeared l>y tbe
au. ,
¦*••• MenStc passed Senatrt Mopborwhs
n tailing on the na«*e of ee»-
f the forestry division who have
forestry conventions! and wbeth-
expense has been incurred by tbe
..«:ut thereby.
fte BlßtehrtaFF*
111 some pai-is of HuMiMy It hi the
enstmii for tbe :>rldecT»#nn to pay a
euui to the bride's parents, ind in case
tl»<- parties cannot agree, the mayor
acts as arbitrator. A luaynr, who is a
cnttle dealer, recently had to decide a
case of this kind, and alter insjteitlng
the bride derided that the bridegroom
must pay the parents at the rate of
half a crown for each pound that the
bride weighed. Tbe verdiet wa« ac-
cepted. and tile woman weighing eighty-
six pounds, the brlde-rreom handed over
the equivalent of s.'»3."r>. after which
tbe wedding c—''--.wna performed.
VUULO9K A MIRACLE.
Raised Up When Science Maid There
Was No Hope.
C. W. L. Nesbitt, Depot street. Mar-
lon. Ky.. writes: "1 was a chronic In-
valid with kidney troubles and often
wished death uilgiit
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 hand above
my bend. 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 again.**
Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y.
There are silver ingots in the Bank
of England which have lain there ¦ for
more than 200 years.
State or Onto, Citt or Toledo, i
Lucas Cor sty. i "
Frank J.'Cheney makes oath that he la
senior partner of the flrtn of F. J. Cheney A
Co., doing business In the City of Toledo,
County and State aforesaid, and that said
Arm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED
DOLLARS for each and every case of Ca
tarrh that cannot be cured by the use of
Hall's Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed In my
presence, this oth day of December, A. D.
ISM.
(Seal.) A. W. GLEASON.
Notakt Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally,
and acts directly on the blood and mucous
surfaces of the system. Send for testimo-
nials free.
FA- CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O.
Sold by nil Druggists. 75c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
HT" 1 .
• Glvluic Ulla, a Cbiince.
Sirs. Wilson s husband was often
obliged to go to New York on business
and frequently did not reach Ids home
until the arrival of the midnight train.
Mrs. Wilson had been In the habit of
sleeping peacefully at these times with-
out fear, but a number of burglaries
In the nelghlrnrhoxl durliig one of her
husband's trips to New York had dis-
turbed her calm.
On the night of his return Mr. Wil-
son wns stealing carefully up the front
stairs, as was bis wont on such occa-
sions. so that bis wife would not be
wakened, when he heard her voice,
high and strained.
¦“I don't know whether you are my
husband or a burglar,” came the ex-
cited oues, "but I am going to be on
the safe side and shoot, so if you are
Henry you'd better get out of the
way I”—Youth's Companion. I
Beyond Hl. Power..
Pastor Goodman had preached a .tir-
ing missionary sermon, and the collec-
ion had amounted to 27 cents.
“Brethren,” he said, regarding the con-
tregation sorrowfully. "Solomon was a
vise man. and Samson was a strong man,
,ut I don't believe either of them ever
ould extract blood from a turnip. We
vill sing the long meter doxology and be
’ismissed.”
BUYING PAINT BLINDLY.
Many [leople look upon paint buying
as a lottery and so It is, the way they
do it It is not necessarily so, how-
ever. Pure White Lead and linseed
oil- are the essential elements of good
paint Adulterants In white lead can
be easily found by the use of a blow-
plpe. Adulterations in linseed oil can
lie detected with a fair decree of cer-
tainty. See that these two elements
ure pure and properly put on and the
paint will stay put.
National Lead Company, Woodbridge
Building, New York City, will send a
! tdoWpipe outfit and instructions for
j testing both white lead and linseed
| oil, ou request.
A Capitol Carol.
Co. J,/
.
ro
* JDiixir?) oenna
Lleanses the System Effect-
ually, Dispels voids and neacr
aches clue to Constipotaom
Acts naturally, acts truly as
a Laxative.
Best forMen\vbmen and (. lulok
ren-ybunP and Old. - -
To its Beneficial Effects
Always buy the ( jenuiue wkick
has ike full name of the Coin.
''CALIFORNIA
Jio Syrup Co.
m it is printed an the
front of every package.
SOLD BYALL LEADING
one iize only, regular price 50* p r”bottle
Ninety-three per cent of the theoretical
heat of coal is wasted, and only 50 per
cent of that of oil. ¦ •
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and free from US-
healthy germ-life and 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 and toilet
stores, 50 cents, or
by mail postpaid.
Large Trial Sample
FAMILY’S SKIN TROUBLES.
Enema, Heat Hash, and Scalp Affec-
tion. A illlet Different Member.,
‘ but Cntlcura Cures 3'hem.
“My wife had eczema for five or six
years. It was on her face and would
come and go. We thought we would I
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. 1 now
have a very heavy head of hair. We
used Cutieura Remedies for our baby,
who was nearly bald when young. She
has very nice hair now. She is very
fleshy, and we had 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. Springmire, 323 So.
Capitol Street, lowa City. la., July 16,
1905, and Sept. 16, 1906.”
Exhibit A.
Weerius (dropping in again)—Well.
Mr. Brackett, have you designed anything
Dew lately that you would like ,o show
me?
Busy Architect —Why, yes; I’ve put a
unique ornamental panel on the outside
of my office door. I'll show it to you
presently.
I GARFIELD
DIGESTIVE TABLETS
From your druggist, or the GARFIELD
TEA CO., Brooklyn. N. Y., 25c per bottle.
Muuiiaty.
Mrs. Vick-Senn's eyes flashed.
“Johnny doesn't get that weak chin
of his from my side of the house 1" she
.exclaimed.
"No, my dee /' meekly responded' her
husband, 9nny has my chin, but he
inherits h> .'mother's tireless capacity for
keeping it in motion."
1 ItYon Have Commo. Sor« Egea,
If lines blur or run together, you need
PETTITS EYE SALVE. 26c. All drug-
gists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y
A Kral < liarily.
Tess— And what do you think? Mr.
Goodhart hadn’t been alone with me
for live minutes before he offered to
tlss me.
Jew
—Yes, that’s one thing about
Jack Goodhart; he's just as soft-heart-
ad and charitable as he can be.—PbU-
Adelphla Press.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the /TJs
-Z/C/L*
**
Signature of (JZajtyX
3
Monotony cannot' be wrong,
This world each year the lesson teaches.
The birds ail sing the same old song.
Just as we make the same old speeches.
—Washington Star.
WITH "MCAATN AND DCAUTV" BOOK DCPTT FRCB
.'ME PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mma,
MJJ.TION THU PAm '¦» nnu« w
S. C. N. U. - - No. 1»—190$.
ffllliaoETz I
'**M€Matß OFTHE S
MEN. BOYS, WOMEN, MISSE3 ANO CHILDREN. g 8
’¦*’• L. Dough a maker and aada more *C.4i C, S
men’a 93.00, 93.00and93,SOaboee **
thi.n any other manufacturer In the
__
ZJfjgX" >.¥
world, becauae they hold their V3KB ¦W'S®/’-
shape, fit better, uroar longer, and
•re of greater value than any other
ahooe in tho vrorldto-day. T6® t’>«<
L. Dougins $4 nnd $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price
'•’A
..W* D” name and price nnt a raped on bottom. Snhetltxxte.
JfaS’*'
...
» <l rice in —---.v--s
8»>1<1 by the best shoe dealers everywhere. Shuts mailed from factory to any part of the world. llla»
Btttd Catalog free to any address. W. L,. I>OlJ€ll«AA, Brockton, Matt.
How to; Exercise the
Bowels
Your Intestines are lined inside with They do not waste any precious fluid of
millions of little suckers, that draw the the Bowels, as Cathartics do.
Nutrition out of food as it passes them. They do not relax the Intestines by
But, If the food passes too slowly, It greasing them Inside like Castor Oil or
decays before it gets through. Then the Glycerine.
little suckers draw Polson from ItInstead They simply stimulate the Bowel
of Nutrition. Muscles to do their work naturally, com*
This Polson makes a Gas that Injures tortably, and nutritiously.
your system more than the food should And, the Exercise these Bowel Muscle*
have nourished it are thus forced to take, makes them
You see, the food is Nourishment or stronger for the future, just as Exercise
Polson, just sccordlng to how long it stays makes your arm stronger,
to transit.
ossACj j\ty'
The usual remedy CMCare,s
this delayed passage I ( X——l to use constant!] as they
(called Constipation) is to
' ’
are pleasant to take,
take a big dose of Castor Oil. « They are purposely put up like candy.
This merely makes slippery the passage so you must eat them slowly and let them
ter unloading the current cargo. go down gradually with the saliva, which
It does not help the Cause of delay a U In itself, a fine, natural Digestive.
frlfle. They are put up purposely Inthin, flat,
it does slacken the Bowel-Muscles more round-cornered Enamel boxes, so they
than ever, and thus weakens thorn for can be carried ina man’s vest pocket, or
their next task. in a woman's purse, all th. time, without
Another remedy is to take a strong bulk or trouble.
Cathartic, like Salts, Cslomel, Jalap, 100 a box at all druggists.
Phoapate of Sodium. Aperient Water, or Be very , 0 f „ tenulna>
any of these mixed. made only by the Sterl ng Remedy Com-
What does the Cathartic do?
pany and never sold In bulk. livery tablet
It mere flushes-out the Bowels with a
"CCC.” nr*
waste of Digestive Juice, set flowing into
the Intestines through the tiny suckers. see
But, the Digestive Juice we wsste in
to
doing tills today is needed for tomorrow's French-tleslrnedGOLD-FLA TTD BONBON BOX
natural Digestion. We cannot afford to tsjK 1AtlA
lose '*• measae«t PW.MI gLfg*—
That'r, whyCascarets are the only safe ote
..
.
medicine tor the bowels.
PUTNAM FADELESS
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