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Wit* "s fefilSiehoiea ian aero ira&WIt Choice 'IF, •O :t $ I' t\ ttSl 320 acre Vra£t only .'wo 160 1 resorts. $1266 acre tracts St5!' .' $650 each :. 'Nice little residence property with two lots fof sale on easy pay ments. $850. •,: jf' Four well located residence lots. $100. Cal| on us for anything in the Real Estate line. W. I. CHAPPELL, Sec'y Evans Block, GO HOT SPRINGS, S. DAK. S0MEWHERE1 Special to California: Low rate Summer tours to San Francisco and Los Angeles about half rates until May 18tb,also June .8th to 15th June 2'2tid.to July 5th. Slightly higher daily commencing June 1st: small extra cost via Portland and Seattle. Big Horn Basin: run personally cou ducted homeseekers' excursions May 7t.lx and 21st, June 4th and 18th under guidance of D. Clem, Denver, Gen eral Agent Laud seekers In forma tion Bureau, to assist settlers to secure an early hold at cheapest ivss', rates of magnificent irrigated lands K-? in the Big Horn Basin write about these lands. Round Trip S20 00. f^Cheap Rates t, ^-East. s'WA To Jamestown Exposition daily .'s-- low rate»:via New York slightly higher. During the Summer low excursion ratos (o Atlantic City, ... Saratoga Spring*, Phildelphia, also the Sea&hore uud Mountaiu ilfiRocky Mountain .Tours: To Colorado, Utah Black Hills, \rl Uttfl I &t* il *J4 -i IV i, vV.S •Vyi 'A •St* fee 1 ft' A A Cody, Sheridau, Yellowstone Park. Daily low rate tours after Juno 1st. W. L. Baldwin Ticket Ag't Hot Springs, S. D. W. L. WAKELEY, G. P. A. OMAHA. NEB. Time Table. Hot Springs, S. 9. Lincoln, OMAHA, CHICAGO. 8T. JOSEPH, DCNf'KK, KKt.ES A, HUTTK, PORTLAND. SALT LAKE CITY, SAN FliANCI^CO, and all points west. KANSAS CITY, ST. LOUIS, and all points cast mid south TRAINS LEAVE AS FOLLOWS: No. 212. Passeuprer, daily. Castor. Hill City, Deaihvooil. J.enri City uud Spearlish: also for the west. Leaves at 10:00 a. 111. arrives at 11:30. |». m. No. 214 Passengers for nil points eapt and A south. -v. a Leaves 2:20 p. m. arrives at 8:80 p. m. Free reclining chair cars on all through trains. Tickets sold and bufipraBO checked to all points iu United States and Canada. .. For information regarding1rates,timetable, etc.,call on or write W.L. Baldwin,agent, or L. W.Wakeley,general pussenper agent,Omaha Nebraska. I B—Location of the appendix. The disease of this organ causes APPENDICITIS Dr. Conrad Adlcr of Berlin, Germany, wrote a treatise on this disease. This book tells all about appendicitis, how it is caused and how it can be pre vented. It tells why DR. ADLER'S TREATMENT cures appendicitis without an operation and how through its occasional use this disease is positively avoided. Appendicitis id often treacherous and occurs when least expected. Toil may have it tomorrow—no one can tell. Better read the book, pet posted and be prepared. Free copies of this book can now be had at W. R. MORGAN'S Drug Store India Relish. Chop fine a small head of cabbage, six onions, twelve green peppers and two quarts green tomatoes. Sprinkle with one cupful of salt and stand aside overnight. In the morning drain off the liquid and put the vegetables in a kettle. Barely cover with vinegar. Add one-half cupful mustard seed, one teaspoonful celery seed and half a cup ful sugar. Cook five minutes, take tjom the fire and pack in glass or stone jar. You way add more sugar if you like it sweeter. Lastly put. in one tableBpoonful English mustard. SiisKKmBBmiBMRm&mk&'mBffl-jwmmtV'r I nraa J-onng solicitor without pnu Mr. Van Scoop, a typical American, broad nhouldered, tall, ueatly dressed. "Do you wantVreal, live, exciting sort of Job?" be asked. 1 "Let's bear abont it," 1 replied. i' .'' "Weil, I've made my pile, so it's not much consequence to me, but there's one man on the face of God's earth that: if I could only lay iny bands oh I'd be worth* another" $S0,000. if you can bunt him down anywhere, I'll pay you well." "What's he like*" "He's the dcad image of me, as like as the halves of a split pea—what you call over here qjy double. Qe's got his Initials tattooed on the soles of his feet." "What!" I exclaimed. "¥es, on the soles of his feet. It's a ticklish job, adailt." Vau Scoup entertained us with a long rigmarole as to how lie had only to find this double, whom he knew to be iii London, aud to produce him in New York to have him convicted of an impudent fraud by which he had abso lutely got immense sums of money by personating Van Scoup in several places iu the States. Of coursu I never gave the matter a moment's consideration until one night I felt I should like to have a Turkish bath and so found myself in Northum berland avenue luxuriating )n true eastern.fashion. I had not been in one of the hot roams long before I saw the big, burly form of tlici American coming through the doors. I rose from the marble slab to greet him. "Well, Van Scoup, tills is a queer place to meet you. Why, we're dining together tomorrow evening." "So we are, but that's no reason why we shouldn't enjoy ourselves to gether tonight, is it?" .. "Of course not." He took one of the wooden lounge chairs beside the marble slab on which I was extended at full length, and we had a very intarosting conversation. "I've not found your double yet," I said. "Have you seen or heard of him?" "Xo I've net. But you wouldn't ex pect to find,him hero, would you?" I laivrliingly replied: "Xo perhaps not. Of course you would be able to sec his foot here, wouldn't youV* lie "Ah. so you would! Novo:- thought of that. I ought to have lift(1 a private detective put on at every Iv.th in London." I sr.jr:est3d. "It wouldn't have been a bad plan il' it was worth the trou ble." "Oh. It's wort:i the trouble!" Time parsed :. and my companion wan 1'::' f.vt to announce his inten tion of bolnrr shampooed and left for the cooler room. I stayed a little longer than I an ticipated amt was rather annoyed at finding a considerable rush on the shampooers. so that possibly I was not undergoing that delightful process of being thumped and banged about till quite twenty minutes after my friend had left me. Shampooers are a very communicative sort of men, and the one operating upon me was no ex ception to the rule. "That's a fine piece of tattooing work upon your chest," I said, looking at aii immense design covering his whole chest, a crucifixion, *iu fact. "Yes, it's about a's good as you'll see in a day's march, but it's a silly game to phy w'th yourself. It gives you no end of pain at the time, and it doesn't give yon a chance if ever times go bad with you." His words seemed to burst upon me with a new thought, a splendid idea, better than the pl«n of Van Seoup's of having private detectives at the baths —ask all the shampooers. So I asked: "I suppose sometimes some of the bathers themselves have been tat tooed?" "Oh, heaps of 'em, especially those that have traveled!" "Seen any lately?" I asked. "Why, there's never a day passes without seeing some of 'em. Only the turn but one before you—a big Ameri can he was—he had been tattooed on the soles of his feet." "What!" I exclaimed, jumping up and almost running out of the shampooing room regardless of being in puris na turalibus and that my head and eyes were covered with soapsuds. "Stay a moment, sir!" the man ex claimed, but I was not to be stopped. A sort of frantic frenzy seemed to take me as I dashed from the shampooing room, slipped accidentally into the plunge bath, swam to the .other end, seized a huge white sheet from the as tonished attendant and rushed madly up the stairs to the cooling rooms. "The man with the tattoo marks on the soles. of his feet!" I exclaimed. "Where is he? Where 1s he?" By ttiis time my curious appearance had attracted considerable attention when a small boy attendant ran up. "Do you mean a.tall gentleman, with black hair and artuft of hair on his chin like a goat?" "That's the man!" I almost shrieked. "Well, sir, he's gone. He went al most as soon as he came up from the hot room. He said he couldn't stop, and he told me to say if any one asked he had forgotten an appointment and would not be at the dinner party to morrow." I dined the next evening with my American client, but I didn't tell him how near I had been to earning his dollars.—New York World. Problems. "It takes a great deal of intelligence to amass a colossal fortune." "Yes," answered Dustin Stax, "and a. lot more to know just what to do with It when you've got It."—Washing ton Star. Aw AmtrliaM tent iUrtf. Wheri KiM. Kmma Barnes applied to the conrtr for a decree of divorce Cram her arttst husband, Julian Story, few of her friends wftte surprised. Mm*. Eames has Hot been living with ber husband for some time, and It Is known that they ban *not consld' end themselves temperamentally com patible. Emma Eaiaes was married to Julian Story in London In 1801. It.Is said that Julian Story was then a poor artist struggling to make his living in £urls. Mme. Eames was born In 1867 in Shanghai, China, where ber father was cwrTSmu JS.rMK EMMA EAUES. a lawyer. She was brought to Amer ica when a child and educated in Bos ton. Later she went to Paris to study music and made her debut in 1889 at the Paris Grand Opera in Gounod's ••Romeo et Juliette." Her success was immediate. She made her debut in New York in De cember, 1891, in the same opera with Jean and Edouard de Reszke. Since then she has added to her repertory and created many parts. Mr. Story is a son of the sculptor W. W. Story. He was educated at Eton and Oxford and lived in Paris from 1SS2 until his marriage. Senator and Page. Senator Tillman sees more with his one eye than many men see with two, but nevertheless those who see the fiery southerner cannot avoid noticing his misfortune. Not long ago he clap ped his hands for a page from the cloakroom door. Anew page, who had not yet mastered the senatorial names, responded. "Tell Senator Clay," he said, "that I want to see him in the cloakroom." The page ran on the errand, on his way stopping to ask the head usher where Senator Clay sat. Then he ask ed, "Who's this that has only one eye?" The usher, thinking it a question of mythology, replied, "Why, Cyclops, of course." The page delivered his errand in this astounding way: "Senator Cyclops wants to see you in the cloakroom."— Lippincott's. The King's Gracious Act. A pretty little incident, it is record ed, took place the other day at the royal luncheon table in the town and county hall, Aberdeen. The king, when conversing with Mrs. Lyon, the wife of the lord provost, who had just received the honor of knighthood, observed the card with her name on it which de noted her place at the table and, tak ing it up, said. "I must alter this." With his pencil the king then obliter ated the word "Mrs." and wrote in its placc "Lady," graciously handing the card to her ladyship, says Woman's Life. Needless to say, this will prove om of Lady Lyon's most cherished niWneutos of a memorable day. Burton of Ohio. Theodore E. Burton of Ohio, who, it is rumored, will be the candidate of the antimacliine Republicans for J. B. For aker's seat in the senate, represents the Cleveland district in congress. Congressman Burton is by very many competent observers considered the ablest man in the house of representa- THEODORE E. BUBTON. lives. There may be specialists or one sided men who are abler than be in certain lines, but they have not Ms breadth of intellect. Even those who do not admit him to ,be4he superior of all others admit that while he has equals he has no superior. Burton is a masterful man and a fighter. He is a man of culture and polish. In his domain of rivers and harbors he has ruled the house, despite any quantity of would be revolts, and ruled It simply by force of Intellect. Mr. Burton is a supporter in general of President Roosevelt's policies and Is outspokenly a Toft man. mmim 1 Cii'r-'SM,.... jilW 'iad OMIdwnT mU3 ptoaiMt taste makes it preferable to violent punratlves. snob as bills, tablet*. **c. Get the booklet and sample of Otino at K. Hargens. The magnificent Beaoford Hotel, of Minneapolis, Minn., located opposite the: postofflce, is the only hotel in the Twin Cities with automatic fire proof doors at all elevator openings. It is a clean, quiet, convenient well ap pointed and popular priced home for all. Buropean plan rooms from 75ots to 8150—private bath's and in suites. Dont forget the Beauford. Mere News from New England States. If any one has any doubt as to the virtue of Foley's Kidney Cure, they need only to refer to Mr. Alvin H. Stimpson, of Willimantio, Conn who,, after almost losing hope of recovery, on account of the failure of so many remedies, finally tried Foley's Kidney Cure, which he says was "just the thing" for him, a9 four bottles cured him completely. He is now entirely well and free from all the suffering in cident to acute kidney trouble. E. Hargets. a A weekly newspaper that publishes twenty-one columns of good, reliable news each week is rare in these days of cheap weeklies intended only to sell some article that the publisher is interested in. Credit is due the Week ly Inter Ocean for keeping.its columns filled with fresh and up-to date news. Give it a trial by subscribing through the STAR—S1.T5 for both. and Chamberlain's Colio, Cholera Diarrhoea Remedy. W There is probably no mediciuo made that is relied upon with more implicit confidence than Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Dur ing the third ot a century in which it has been in use, people have learned that it is the one remedy that never fails. When reduced with water and sweetened it is pleasant to take. For sale by all druggists. Remember that the Minnekahta bath house and little plunge are open all winter, with trained at tendants in charge. Call at our store, please, for a free sample Dr. Shoop's "Health Coffee." If real coffee disturbs your stomach, your heart or kidneys, then try this Clever Coffee imitation. While Dr. Shoop has very closely matched old Java and Mocha Coffee in flavor and taste, yet be has not even a single grain of real Coffee in it. Dr. Shoop's Health Coffee Imitation is made from pure toasted grains or cereals, with Malt, Nuts, etc. You will surely lilse Health Coffee. Sold by R, E. Barnard. To Cure a Cold. Anything that will set the blood into active circulation is good for a cold. Bathe the feet in hot water and drink hot water or hot lemonade on going to bed. Take a salt water sponge bath and remain in a warm room. Bathe the face in very hot water ev ery five minutes for an hour or so. Snuff hot sail water up the nose ev ery hour or hvo. Four or lire hours' exercise in the opeu air is often effective. Washing Socks. New soclcs should bo rinsed in salt water to set the color. They are never boiled. Black socks are better when washed in separate water from the others. They are also improved in color if, after rinsing, they are put through a deep blue water. «*!This helps to preserve and restore the black dye. Bed For an Invalid. The care of an invalid is always a great burden on some member of the household, and to lighten this burden as much as possible a Pennsylvania man has designed a bed which has sev eral unique features. The head of the CHANGES TO ANY POSITION, mattress is divided into several sec tions, one of which can be raised to any height desired, to be used iu case the invalid desires to be partly raised. Supporting the part of the mattress thus raised is a pivotal frame, the height being regulated by bars register ing in a rachet in the lower part of the frame on the opposite side of the bed. The upper part of the mattress is cut out entirely and is separately attached to a double pivoted frame. By this ar rangement the patient can sit up in bed exactly- as when in an ordinary chair, the change being made without disturbing the patient unnecessarily. Rachet bars are also employed to sup port the framework. Care of Clothing. VvJ Air your dresses well and they will never seem stuffy. Clothes never should be shut up in a wardrobe im mediately after they have been worn. Let the bodice of a dress hang over the back of a chair for at least half an hour before putting It away. The old est clothes can be kept fresh and odor less if they are treated this way. W: a T. u. coiU¥x. A1*' CONDUCTED BY KOS&. BOWER, PS 1'1 27,190*. used'4 per like •Gbtoago, Never supposed I cause so popular the.Chicago Retford soon as the traction way Chicago will prooeed toattaok the liquor trade. 1$ toys as istont of the It wouldn't hurt Chicago to attaok the liquor trade in the meantime. But it is encouraging to know that she's going to after a bit. The Record Herald gives a long article about the progress temperance is making. It tells about Nebraska prying the brewries and retail business apart, the latest thing in anti saloon legislation. Then it says this is only one of many ways the legislatures have been striking at the saloons. It says West Virginia is going to vote prohibi tion, and Tennessee and Kentucky practically have already. About the liquor trade and Chicago, the Record Herald had quoted from Bonfort's Wine and Spirit Circular which said: "If there is one thing that seems settled beyond question it is that the retail liquor trade of this country must either mend its ways materially or be prohibited in all places save the busi ness and tenderloin precincts of our large cities." And it made this particular paper a little spunky I take it and so it said in comment: This alarmist prediction has no doubt a very large amount of truth, but it certainly makes one mistake, and that is in excluding the business and tender loin districts from the region of "dang er." It is just in those districts in cities like Chicago that the liquor trade is most shameless, most corrupt, and most ruinous. It is just there that it links itself with politics and the police to the greatest detriment to the true interests of the city. If we mistake not, it is just there that Chicago will proceed to attack it most vigorously as soon the overweaning traction issue is out of the way." The Record Herald had certainly been reading Mr. Turner's article in the April McClure's on the great busi ness of dissapation, headed, I believe, "Study of the Great Immoralities." I was going to quote from it but couldn't decide what to leave out. The issue is probably exhausted by this time. I couldn't get an extra copy downtown today, but you'd better try in your town. Mr. Turner takes Chicago for ex ample, "not because it is worse than or different from other cities of America but because it is typical and well known." Yes, just read the comments on this article iu anything you pick up and if you don't think the temperance cause is getting popular I'd like to know what you think is. Even the Rapid City Journal says of the "silent lake" in Wind Cave that "it formerly held water but at present it is as dry as a number of South Dakota towns are going to be this year." A nice little tale that was, wasn't it of the Ipswich College boy who, miss ing the train at Aberdeen, walked home twenty-six miles, reaching the polls just before they closed, cast his ballot and saved the day. Yes, Ipswich will be dry and some other towns I could name but not so many as. there would be if mothers could have their say at the ballot box. In the last White Ribbon Journal Mrs. Johnson of Highmore, our state superintendent of Legislation and Franchise, says of the defeated suffrage bill: Of these forty nine opposers in the house, thirty are foreigners. It seems in extremely bad taste to say the least, that those men who are glad to come to this land of liberty, should ever be exerting all their powers to .prevent one half the citizens who have helped make this country a refuge for the down trodden of other lands, from en joying the liberty so freely accorded them. It now becomes the duty of every self respecting woman in South Dakota to help inaugurate a campaign to retire every man who voted against this bill and try and secure law makers who will represent tne mothers and homes of the state. Yes, I switched into suffrage again, but I can't help it. I'm learning where the opposition is coming from and how close of kin the question is to temper ance. A Rev. Scott of Oklahoma said if he could take a Rip Van Winkle sleep and wake up to find the women and Christian people lived up on one side and the saloon keepers, things and dead beats on the other side he'd know which side to take every time. ROSE BOWER. Free Samples of "Preventios" and a booklet on Colds will be gladly mailed you on request, by Dr. Shoop, Bacine, Wis., simply to prove merit. Preventics are little Candy Cold Cure tablets. No Quinine, no Laxative, nothing harmful whatever. Preventios prevent colds—as the name implies—when taken early or at the "Sneeze Stage." For a seated cold or LaGrippe, break it up safely and quickly with Preven ld by Emil Hargens. A* DISEASES OF CHTOMBlf, OFFICE OVSft HOT SPRINGS NATICiNi Telephone U4 Residene* Cor. KlgfathSt.and Park Ave, Telephone Number l&-3.< L. Bato*!' B. C. V**tasoa. gAFON MATTRSONi GRADUATE DENTISTS. Telephone No. 62 Hot Springs, South Dakota Second Floor Minnekahta Block. G.M.CLEVELAND. M. W.TILDBK. CLEVELAND^ & TILDEN ATTORXEYS-AT-LAW Hot Springs. South Dakota Practice before all state and Federat%ogrtv. General practice, including corporation, win mercial. public land, mium^ and pateuts DEPOSITIONS TANKS'. NOTAllT PUBLIC ^lLSON WILfaON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office in Court House. Hot Springs, South Dakota. C. S. EASTMAN.L' w. LM E I! R. UCKETT, B.DUKMIY EASTMAN & DUDLEY. ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Office in the Evans Annex. Hot Springs, g. Dak ATTORNEY AT LAW, douses to rent, taxes paid for non-residente. Office in Minnekahta Block. Hot Springs, South Dakota. J^OOMIS S. CULL, ATTORXEY AT LAW." Hot Springs, "v South Dakota J. F. PARKS, HENRY MARTY. PARKS I MARTI, Gen'lliisurance Agt We represent the best Old Line companies and write all forms of Fire, Life, Accident, Plate Glass ami Indemniiv Insurance.' Opposite Union Depot. llot Springs Weak Women To weak and ailing women, there Is at least one way to help. But with that way, two treatments, must be combined. One is local, one is constitu tional, but both are important, both essential* Dr. Shoop's Night Cure is the Local. Dr. Shoop's Restorative, the Constitutional. The former—Dr. Shoop's Night Cure—is a topical mucous membrane-suppository remedy, while Dr. 6hoop's Restorative is wholly an internal treat* ment. The Restorative reaches throughout the entire system, seeking the repair ol all nerve, all tissue, and all blood ailments. The "Night Cure", as its name implies, aoes Its irork while you sleep. It soothes sore and inflam ed mucous surfaces, heals local weaknesses and discharges, while the Restorative, eases nervoui excitement, gives renewed vigor and ambition. builds up wasted tissues, bringing about renewed strength, vigor, and energy. Take Dl Shoop's Restorative—Tablets or Liquid—as a general tonio to the system. For positive local help, use as well Dr. vShoop's Night Cure EMIL HARGENS. 'If TRADE MARKS DESIONS COPYRIGHTS4*. Anyone sendlnc a sketch mid description may qulocty aeeertofn our niMiiinn free whether invention tsiprobablv pntentHble. Com mull ica tionS8CT4ctty eoi)tiaent il. HANDBOOK on Patent, tent ttee. OiSest nsenrrv for securing patents. Patents taken tlironch Miinn A Co. recelT, tpedalnottce, witliout cburee, la the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. I.areest cir culation of aJiy journal. Terms, 93 a year: four months, fL Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & 00scientjflc 'lili New York ,361 Broadway, Branch Office. 62o £t., Washinston, D. C. HONEYANDTAR The original LAXATIVE cough reiiiedy. For couglis, colds, throat and lung troubles. No opiates. Non-alcoholic. Good for everybody. Sold everywhere. The genuine FOLEY'S HONEY and TAR is in a Yellow package. Refuse substitutes. Prepared only by Foley & Company, Chicago. E .HARGENS