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N THE CAl KIiTCHEIN SNUG riANi;.R 1:1 WH;CH EATABLES ARE SfTOV, L AWAY. Mlethods by Wthiich Stm,ores Are Re plenlithed i'hich G;ive Out En Route-The Itoom For the WValtera. The Cooks alnd 'heir Work. The actual stand:nig roon in thie car kitchen consists of in :lisle only wide enough for two ule;l to pi:ss each other and about 1ifteon feet long. (On one side is an unlbroken row of ran.ges, the very best sort Invented, for when men do women's work they are not content with makeshift tools. On the other side is a steam tallle for keeping things hot, other tables andil sonle of tile re frigerators, for there are many. IIot water and cold is held ill cylinders which lie along the ceil ing and look like the projectiles used on torpedo boats. One refrigerator is devoted exclusive ly to tishl, which lie shinitiU otn bIlocks of clear ice as tempting as in any fishl market. Until I h:d actuernally seen this refrigerator it hail l it,: I ny i t It:i ice to refuse ti-hl in traveling. feeltinc there waS Stlt mlystery t itiut its preserva tion, but nohw-illio 1. to such thing. I had fancied the with i t ntit io ked at once in enlortmouis ilt::t:t:tl I s. lie ait sol diers' mtess at mi- tpl:, :. i ;: . a' stidiots car atlpetite had rtitoltd aiild faded away during the first co.rse. hut now I eat with relish. ktnowing the condi ,tion of the source of supply. Another refrigeraltor is enti'rely for meats and giellll, aIlother for fruit, and even itacd :land cttke iare kept it a I'e frigerator that they retain their mois ture. Outside tihe kitchen there is a sacred icebox undler lock and l:key, and no Itman itmay put his hand there(in ex cept hte steward or hlousekeolttper f tlhe dining car. 'there twenty-live kitds of wine are kept, and tathere will be shown to you, with a ianIItr awed btit proud. the royal family of cehItlni:itie with cool, gold crowned heads siltilg on ano icy tthronlo. But. to go back to the kitchen, that apartment is oc.iup,'i l by tr 1'( meni all In white, with perhaps a blue cor don for tradition's sake. who serve deftly and capably th: hIiiveful of wait ers that swarm at the open square at the inner end if the r-Im. It is a wise pir ;vision that pr'events close con tacts. for cooks are apt to be "redhot" at the crucial hour of dinner serving, and, besides, the car kitchen can con tain no more men than the three cooks, who broil, roast. stew and fry the numberless fancies of the pantrons' pal ates. These men work hard. The head cook, whose salary Is about $70 per month, stands farthest from the window where the waiters clamor and is a bit more serious. The middle cook, on $-15 salary, Is lively or sub missive according to the man he ad dresses, and the end cook finds tinme to chaff the owners of the dark faces who call orders. and som.:'tinies he sings as happily as a c nceited b',y who fancies his future on the operatle stage. These three mnll t::!;e up the white capped trio we ser pr wtingi out of tilhe windows of the dinin t c:r as it slips Into the station!. All the othelr liem ployees of the tlrai: c.:n' into coret:it with pa:lssc!gers and h:ave ilnterestiing expleriences, bult thiis'! all' e eiil,,d ill the galley and ire eager for siant glinlpst's at the tin' :ii1. s lo titmes the car ihai s a little I;nlo!ly at tlw eii d, where til y ian i ,.: ',,_ the h..at of their qullarlt rs. Ia I ,i: 1 r ,.lief in sulm - mer tine-. The v:Ilt, rs have : ,:ntry adjoining the kitcehnI 1 aind f l,:.i:ng into it ro:ty by the little s;qua,!' i l i .:ow with a countli on either suit'. Vi'iill your' or de, is Liven and tlh wa:iter dislaplears, this is where hie ii s gone. Ilitre are kept suppllies of dishiis and silver, anl,1 here it is the w:liter l all',t i up the dishes of e:!les, fruit and cihoose you call for with which to tie up tie ends of your apl,,tite. Before the dlning car is driawi away fromll the ienryard:i ti:' slpeciia l hunse keeper iwho has it in i llite lll st see that every sort of supply is on hand and in sullirient, but nt not too lavish, quantity. Sometimes there are ninety perusons to feedl, soiletilies one-third lat lnmbler, but the iprolcllde numlliiber ion the various runs is known. In long journeys there are a ll conmlissary sta tions along the way where thie eulr may be restocked, but this is seldom neces sary except with such perishalbles as cream and milk. t1ave you ever heard a porter agitating that subject with station employees at nuffalo or else where? That lOeaus the tonirgeincy has arisen in the dining caur. Such things might easily hal)pen in a larder where demands are irregular and mar kets scoresscores of miles away. It is a won der they do not happen oftener when we reflec at that economy in lperishable things is exacted firon the steward housekeeper. Just before lie sends his black com missary to anlnoulice dinner to tile hun gering lpasengers every man1l slips on jacket and plliion of whitest linen and by this little act of costuming is con verted lit once flromI the lionldescript man of the streets into the most spruce of servitors. Thin, with everything ready in the kitchen ald with his flock of assistants abouit him, the house keeper of the ilinin car awaits the coming of his guests. Alnd in they come, thoughtless blessing takers, with never a rteflection onil the hours of prep aration by the army of nmen that It has taken to give them the degree of comfort which is purchasable for a dollar bill.-Alnslee's Magazine. The river flows quietly along toward the sea. yet it always gets there. It might be well to remember this when you are trying to rush things.-Chlcago dews. ON THE VERGE OF SUCCESS The Easy Steward and the Audan clons "& rafter." A maUn wa:i:ed intto one of the up town , '1:"'' elu;b: one nirning and s:;t flown in the smoik'ing ioi1. His air of lssuranle was hardly in accord with his tattered c!,thes. It was early, and nonle o~f ,ie mmIlobei's wias about. Ilo rang the Ibll, and the steward re sponded. "It seemns good to, get back into the club again,"' h remal!rked. "Yes. sir." sail, thei steward. "I used to 1it a Ineinber here, but I've had hard luck and can't aflord it any longer." "Yr's. sir; I'm sorry, sir." said the steward. "By thl: way. I'm a little short of car fare this morninllg," said the nervy strang'er. "'Could yoUi let nmi have ten cents until I ''il here again?" The surprised steward reached into his pocket andul hined out ia dime. "Thlnk you." said the aInan. "Now. I'm Iso at little hungry, having had no nonkfi'ast. Do yout sutppose you could rather me up a little lunc'heon?" The st ew:rd was stupefied by such a disphly of1' lrve. "And :a little whisky with n d:ash ot bitteris would not go badly with the food." The steward fled as one of the mrom hors lntere'id. The stran.ger saw the new a: rrival and rose hastily. "I am too ea:rly for my friend." he said as he walked towar'd the door. "I will return later." Thon he added in anli unldertonle. which the doorl0y eiard: "Too bad. too bad! That stow aid was easy. Ie'd .iven me the club if I'd asked for it. It's a wonder th se llllllmembers wouldn't stay away." '1Th man of nerve walked down the street with his head bowed in deep thought. '"How to get that luncheton without paying for it" was his theme.-New York Tribune. CATHERINE II.'S RULES. The rules, inscribed on a tablet now In the Hermitage, the famous St. Pe tersltuirg Museum of Art. are as fol lows: I. Leave your rank outside as well as your lihant and sword. II. Leave your right of precedence, yo'uri pride and any similar feeling out side the door. III. tIe gay, but do not spoil or gnaw anything. IV. Sit, stand, walk as you will. without reference to anybody. V. Talk moderately, not loud, so as not to make the heads or ears of others ache. VI. Argue without anger and with out excitement. VII. Neither sigh nor yawn, nor make any one feel dull or heavy. VIII. In all innocent gar-es, what ever one proposes, let all join. IX. Eat whatever is sweet and savo ry, but drink with moderation, so that each may find his legs on leaving the room. X. Tell no tales out of school. What ever goes in at one1' ear must go out at the other before lea:t!::g the room. Whoever offend!s :;;:lnst rlo X shall 1 never again be adnittted. Our igrand-' dam:, will call those run:es her T'en Cornlandlll.e::t1 . The Terrapin Disense. The terrapin is thought to Imve much influence in cusinllg sickness, and the terrapin disease is itlher a rheumatic alliction about the chest and ribls or possibly some p.;m.:nnry tr"ulie. T'e'! associltoti. (,f the terrll:pin with dis:e:ass: in this Ipo'zioni of tile body. doubtless lor.i llllnes frl'on thei fact that the 'ibs of the torr'tpil are not free, as in the caset ouf iost of the higher animnals, Ibut 11e united illto one lice. An I!luian who was ill alpplield for re lief to it shaman and was asked, "Did you not when a boy tie strings to the terrapin's tail and worry the creature?" The patient admitted that he did. "Well," said the medicine mnan. "that is what is the matter. It is the terra pin's iuli'n now, and the terrllpin is pay ing of oold scores. You have the terra pin sickness, and all your ribs have grown together and to your breast bone." Tilhe shaman administered the proper remedy prescribed in such cases-I for get what it was-and the man thought he was cured. Doing Hil Beat. In the early morning I went to the postoffice in an Alabama town to in quire for mail, but found I was half an hour too early. I was walking away when the colored janitor who was sweeping out called to me and asked: "Was yo' procrastinatin' around yere arter yo'r mail, sah?" "Yes, but I see I'm too early." "Yes, sah, too airly. An' was yo' a stranger in dis town?" "Yes." "An' hain't yo' no one to talk to?" "No." "Din, sah, if yo' don't keer to elimi niate about de street fur half an hour yo' can stop right yere, an' I'll do my best to considerate de reciprocity of do situashun an' make yo' feel to home!" A Civil Word. A French king once said: "If a civil word or two will mike a manlli happy, he nlutst he a churli indeed who would not gi\ve them to hinl." If this feeliŽng were aeteil on, how much haippier the world would be! We may say of thils kindly temper that it is like lighting annlther iman's candle by one's own, which loses none of its light by what the other gains. Slow Payer. Magistrate (to the Chinaman)-What's your complaint against this young man, John? Chbinaman-He's too muchee by and by.-Baltimore Jewish Comment. All Han,'. Smoking. Tobacco is in Tehuantepec a grea' Industry. One evening some of oui party of sixteen were kindly given t nlght'b shelter, Mexican fashion, at , hacen!la or farmhouse. Hotels, ex cept in the large towns, are unknown It was about 0 p..m. when we arrived Sitting on the wide veranda to receive us we beheld the entire family. On the right of the door was the lady of the house in a white cotton gown, smoking a cigar. Below her were the daughters and handmaidens, also smoking. On the other side of the door was the ranchero or master himself, with his sons and manservants. Every one was employed in rolling the tobacco leaf into cigars, and every one was smok ing, including a little boy not quite three years old, who had a full sized cigar In his baby mouth, while in his left hand he hcld a banana from which he took bites between the puffs, occa slonally stopping to play with a small puppy dlog. "Does he often smoke?" I asked in ama zemn 'nt. "Si, soeoraf. He smokes three or four cigars a day. All our chi.ldren have done, so at that age." Adaptability of temperanment to climate!-Fortnightly Review. Passing a Bargain. "Perhaps you've had a man offer you a big bargain in a diamond ring?" queried the Boston drummer as he heaved a sigh and his face went cloudy. "Yes, several times," laughed the Pullnman conductor. "I was in Pittsburg," continued the drummer, "and while standing on a street corner a chap came along and offered me a shiner as big as a bean for $30. He was a stranger, hard up and all that. It looked to be a ring worth 8350." "And you gave him $50?" "No. IIe hung on for half an hour. but I turned him down. I'm no man to be roped in thatevay." "Then what-what" "Oh, another fellow bo!ught the ring." "And he was out his lifty?" "He was in $300. That ring, sir, was O. K. and all serene, and a jeweler priced it at the figure named. The man was honest, and I was a fool, and you will please excuse me while I retire and kick myself for not knowing a piece of glass from a pure water spar kler." A Savnage Bluejay. A sportsman camping on one of the lakes of Sullivan county, N. Y.. offered to bet $10 to $1 that nobody in his par ty could guess how he had received an injury to a finger which he held bleed ing before the spectators. No one guess ed, and the mar2 went on to explain that while standing by the lake he had seen a bluejay flying over so close above his head that he instinctively threw up his kand to stop it. The bird neither stopped nor swerved, but in stead dashed straight for the hand, striking it with such force that the bill penetrated to the bone and sent the blood spurting as though the man had been struck by a knife. This sort of actocn is in line with the general conduct of the jay'. It is one of the most aggressive birds on the con tinent, robbing the nests of other birds and sometimes even killing young squir rels. The chief good tLing that c:n be said of' it is that it often robs the nest of the English sparrow. The Maori and the Witnes1s. Captain Hayes in his book, "Among Horses In South Africa," tells several amus!ing stories. A friend of his in New ZA:lnmd had boeen a government interpreter amlong the Maoris alnd had many stolrics to tell about these people. On onte i.cnsion a native chief, who was t-under cross exalination in court, on being asicd why he had not brought a cer; in man vwlth him replied: "I lhave brought him." "But," said the barrister, looking in vain round the court, "I don't see him. Where is he?" "IIe is here," chuckled the Maorn proudly, stroking his massive chest. Peculiar Taxation In Hollann. Some of the most peculiar of taxa tions recorded are to be found in the archives of HIolland. In 1791, for in stance, there was in existence a tax imposed on all passengers traveling in Holland. In 1S74 a duty of 2 shillings was levied on each personi who entered a tavern before noon. on those who en tered a place of entertainment. on mar riages and deaths and on many other' things. If a person was buried out of the district to which he belonged, the tax was payable twice over.-Pittsburg Dispatch. The Horses and Saddle. A man bought three horses and a saddle for $220. If he puts the saddle on the first horse, they cost as much as the other two horses; if he puts the saddle on the second horse, they cost two times as much as the first and third, and if he puts the saddle on the third horse they cost three times as much as the first and second. Find the cost of each.-Mathematical Puz ::les. Mr. Thomnasson's Lesnon. "Yes," said Mr. Thomasson, "I went home intoxicated one night about ten years ago. and the lesson my wife taught me made a lasting impression on my brain." "What did she say?" "She didn't say anything. The last ing impression I refer to was made by a flatiron. See that bump?"-Indianap olis Sun. A man's labors must pass like the sunrises and sunsets of the world. The next thing, not the last, must be his care. Why is it that gloves worn by pall bearers are always too long in the fin fers -Atchison Globe. A BUDDING HUMORIST. IMerry Memories of a First Meeting With Artenius Ward. On going into the Cleveland Plain Dealer editorial rooms one morning I saw a new man, who vwas introduced to me as Mr. Browne. HIe was young, cheerful in manner, tall and slender, not quite up to date in style of dress, yet by no means shabby. His hair was flaxen and very strnight.; his nose, the prominent fea ture of his face, was Romanesque quite violently so-and with a leaning to the left. His eyes were blue gray, w'th a twinkle in them; his mouth seemed so given to a merry laugh, so much in motion, that it was difficult to describe. It seemed as though bubbling in him I was a lot of happiness which he made no effort to conceal or hold back. When we were introduced, he was sit ting at his table writing. He gave his leg a smart slap, arose, shook hands with ma and said he was glad to meet me. I believed him, for he looked glad all the time. You could not look at him but h., would I:bugh. Ile laughed as he sat at his table writing. When he had written a thing which pleased him, he would slap his leg and laugh. I noticed that George Hoyt and James Brokenshire at their tables were pleased with his merriment and in dulged in broad smiles. As I bade him and the others good morning he said, "Come again, me liege." I thanked him, said I would and went my way, thinking what a funny fellow he was. Within a month thereafter appeared in the columns of Tihe Plain Dealer a funny letter signed "Artemus Ward." The writer said he was in the show business, had a trained kangaroo, "a most amoosin' :Atle cuss," some "snaix" and a collection of wax fig ures, which he called a "great moral show." As he was coming to Clove land to exhibit, he made a proposition to the proprietor that they "scratch each other's backs"-the publisher to write up the show vigorously and the showman to have the handbills print ed at his office and give him free tick ets for all his family. So I found my young friend of the gurgle and hay colored hair to be an embryo humorist just bursting into bloom. Artemus. as from that time he was best known, soon had a city full of friends, myself and family among them.-James F. Ryder in Century Magazine. FLOWER AND TREE. Never buy a plant in bloom. Never water plants in flower from above. In planting out an orchard do not plant more than can be manured and cared for well. A yard or lawn always looks barren without some choice ornamental trees and shrubs. On this account every lawn should contain a few choice speci mens of these ornamental trees. Scale insects on plants, such as the oleanders, the fragrant olive, roses, etc., are among the most difficult pests to overcome. A mixture of white helle bore powder with dissolved soap rub bed in is a good remedy. Kecping all young trees carefully staked leads to the formation of clean, straight stems. These in their turn are conducive to the growth of large, healthy, fruitful heads. One stout stake should be placed by each tree when it is planted. Crocus must be planted in October to insure spring blooms. It makes a fine appearance if thickly planted upon a lawn. Make a cut with a spade three or four inches deep in the sod, tuck in a ccuple of bulbs and press the sod back into place with the foot. Habits of Seals. The habits of seals are very interest ing. The very young seal is helpless in the water until he is taught by his mother to swim. She takes him into the water daily on her fin and dumps him in, and when he gets tired of floundering about places him on her fin again and returns to her camp. When the young seals are well grown, they suddenly disappear with their mothers and the bull seals. No one knows where they go, and their return is equally as eudden as their departure. The bulls are the first to put in an ap pearance at the camping ground. When they arrive, they commence at once to prepare a camp for their mates, which they stake off, and for which they fight until they die. In the mean time the female seals remain quite a distance from land, floating lazily on the water and seemingly having a good time. Bound to Sound Their "H." The English middle classes have had so much fun poked at them for drop ping the letter "h" and for carrying it forward and placing it where it should not be, possibly thus to obey the laws of compensation, that they have be come sensitive on the subject, and many aspirate the "h" with double force when the letter should be aspi rated. Instead of saying "before him," as Americans do, with a light aspira tion, they will say "before him," taking a full and deep breath when they utter the second word, shooting it out as if it came from a papgun. Dropping the "h" is not new for ordinary English folk. It is a new trick to aspirate it with double the force required.-New York Conummercial Advertiser Oyster Shells. One thousand bushels of shucked oysters leave about 1,100 bushels of shells, which accumulate in great heaps about the shucking houses. The oyster shells landed on the shores of Maryland during the last ninety years have been reckoned at 12,000,000 tons -a quantity twice sufficient to over load and sink* every sailing vessel, steam vessel, barge and c/nalboat in America. A FISHING FICTION. THE "MAGIC EYE" OF THE SAJULT STE. MARIE iNDIANS. An Old Guide's Explanation of. the Indian. Whitefilsh Hunter's Method of Getting His Glistening Catehl From Under the Rapids.. "The first time I fished in the Saull Ste. Marie rapids," said a well known Lake Keuka sportsman, "I landed in an hour twenty-one brook trout that weighed forty-five pounds; so I wal ready and willing to believe anything I heard or read about the possibilities of those waters or the astounding things that men who fished in them were able to do. "Consequently I believed what they told me about the marvelous feats the Indian fishermen of the Sault Ste. Maric could perform in the way of netting whitefish. Few who have tour ed the great lakes hIave not heard of those same feats, witnessed thetm and, of course, could do nothing but go away believing that they were all they seemed to be. "Particularly will they marvel, as I did, at the Indian whitefish fisherman's magic eye with which he seems to look down through ten feet or more of foaming, rushing water adid see white fish that to the white man's eye would be invisible five inches beneath the surface. It would have been strange if I had not marveled at it. having witnessed more than once manifesta tions of its alleged power. That was before I talked with old Guide Garron. 'The astounding feats of the Indian whitefish netters of the Sault Ste. Marie that the guidebooks and the hotel keepers and steamboatmen Insist on telling tourists about are performed by two Indians in a canoe. One occu pies the stern and manipulates the paddle to keep the .gnoe's head point ed up stream. The Indian in the bow, standing upright, uses a pole to aid in propelling the canoe or in keeping it steady. "Lying ready to his hand is a dip net four feet in diameter, fastened to the1 end of a pole perhaps fifteen feet lo: ;.. The fishing is done at the foot of th.i rapids, where the water boils and tum; bles furiously. With his pole the In dian in the b:hw keeps the boat movin-' about in the rapids and gazes constant ly into the water, which is often ten feet or more deep. "Suddenly the Indian In: the bow will seize the net handle with one hali:d. never ceasing to manipulate the cane: with his pole in the other nor for :a instant removing his staring gaze from the water. The net is not more than in his hand before he has plunged it perhaps ten feet distant from the boat, thrusting it at the same instant to the bottom. Then he gives it a peculiar twist, draws it up and, surrendering the care of the canoe for the moment to the Indian with the paddle, he draws the net up, never without from three to half a dozen glistening white fish in it, frequently weighing five pounds each. "The wondering spect:tor, seeing:. nothing but the boiling water, the sl.:, den start of the Indian and his quice! and dexterous plunging and dr:awing up of the net with its i:,va', rl: l? I!:l of whitefish, can do nothing; but ::c. knowledge to himself the n.icronman.y of the Indian's piscatorial art. I know that I did, and for two seasons gave myself away to the fascination of that mysterlous fishing. Then one day I marveled at it greatly to Guide carron. the shrewd and cunning (;ld French man who knows every Lock and eddy and whirlpool of the rapids and all the wiles and tricks that any other guide knows and a whole lot that no other one does know, and Garron's little black eyes twinkled. "'Ah!' he chuckled. 'Zat mageeck hye. I.e von gr-r-rand homboag!' "Then he explained in his volunlle and picturesque patois the apparent mystery of the Indian whitefish fisher man's magic eye. Whitefish are natu ral denizens of the still, silent w-ate's of the gr;it nlakes. To get fr'om Lake I-uroi, t '-llke Superior these tish must ti.-s.;olr way up the fierce and stubborn Saul!t Ste. Marie rapids. In doing-tihis they travel by easy stages. They can brave the rapids but a short distance at a time, when, alnost ex hbusted, they drop into the shelter of the friendly rocks that pile the bottom of the rapids. "Huddled sometimes by the score ,(e hind these rocks, getting wind. as it were, to overcome another stage of their journey, the whitefish, if the wa ter is not too deep. can be lifted out by the hand of the fisherman, they are so nearly exhausted. The Indians as well as the white fishermen know this and, knowing well the location of these sheltering rocks, have only to thrust their nets down behind them and draw them up filled with fish. "The' cunning of the Indian led him long ago to give vilitors the impression that he could penetrate the troubled depths of the rapids with his gaze and discover the whitefish on the bottom. The wonder of it spread, and it has been one of the fondest and best pay ing fictions of 'Susan Mary,' as the na tives give you the pronunciation of the Sault Ste. Marie."-New York Times: An Anecdote of Genius. The following anecdote of Leigh Hunt was once related by "Or!on" Horne. Horne on a bitterly cold day in winter went to see Hunt, and found him in a. large room with a wide, old fashioned fireplace. He had dragged his piano on to the hearth, close to a large fire, leaving only room for him self and his chair, and was playing with the greatest enjoyment. "My dear fellow," cried Home, "are you aware that you are ruining your piano forever and ever in that heat?"' "I know-I know,' murmured Hunt, %but .t is delicious." Some Reasons Why You Should Insist on Having pUREKA HARNESS OIL nequa ed by any other. enders hard leather soft. specially prepared. eeps out water. A heavy bodied oil. HARNESS An excellent preservative.. Reduces cost of your harness. never burns the leather; its Efficiency is increased. Secures best service. Stitches kept from breaking. OIL is sold in all Localities Manufactured by Standard Oil Company., "PROFESSIONAL CARDS PH YSICIAIC S E '. CIONYNeuiHAM, l1. I).. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Day or Night Calls Promptly Attended to. Office over Cartier's Store, PHILIPSBURG, MONTANA. TRAINED NURSES M ISS H. A. WICK, TRAINED NURSE, Graduate from Danzig. Germany, and recently from the German Yedical College, Chicago. OFFICE IN THE PONGRATZ HOUSE. SANSOME-ST.. PHILIPSBURG, MONTANA ATTORNEYS OSIAH 8IULL. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. NOTARY PUBLIC. Office, rear of postoffice bnilding, on Montgomery street. PHILIPSBURG. MONTANA. M. DURFEE. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office-Opera Honse Block. Sansome Street, PHILIPSBHURG. MONTANA. GEORGE A. HAYWOOD. ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR-AT-LAW. Offie, corner of Broadway and California street PHILIPSBU RG. MONTANA. DENTISTS S A. BROA W . DENTIST Ik'Teeth extracted without pain by a new process. Teeth filled with the latest and beat improved fillings. All kinds of dental opera. tions performed in the most perfect manner. All my work is first-class. Office, Hyde block, PHILIPSBURG. MONTANA. DENTIST. Gold Fillings. (rouwn ang ItOridg. Wrk Ofice, over. McLeod's shoe store. PHII'PSBRUHG - - MONTANA. At (Grantite WVednsdays. In a Glass of Water. Put a handful olfglazed cofl/e in a glass of water, wash off the coatinu, look at it; smell it! is it fit to drink? Give L!ON COFFEE the same test. It leaves the water bright and clear, because it's just _ ure coffee. The sealed package insures uniform quality and freshness. PIMPLES "y11Iy wife had pimples on her face, but she has been taking CASCAIfLTS and they have all disanpeared. I had been troubled with constipation for some time. but after tak. ing the first Casscret I have had no trouble with this ailment. We cannot speak too high ly of Cascarets." FRED WARTMAN. 5703 Germantown Ave., Philadelphia, Pa. CANDY CATHARTIC TRADE MANN 1US0TIIRED Pleasant. Palatable. Potent.. Taste GoOd. Do Good, Never SicLken. Weaken, or Gripe, lO,. 20,0.l. SCUkT, CONSTIPATION. ... Sterllug liemedy Co:.pn.y, l(leago, Montreall, New York. s31 NO-TO-BAC Sold and . .aranteed by all drug . u ists to .t uEo Tobacco Habit. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. It artificially digests the food and aids Nature in streugthening and recon structing the exhausted digestive or gans. It is the latest discovered digest ant and tonic. No other preparation can approach it in efficiency. It in stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulen(ce, Sour Stomach, Nausea Sick Headache, Gastralgia, Cramps and all other results of imperfect digestion. Price50c.and S. Largesizecontains % time, smallsize. Book all aboutdyspepsia mailed fre. Praared by E. C. DeWITT a CO.. Cbicaga Doe & On. and Campbel .Drug Co.