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I Indian 1 They Are Frequent in } Missouri is an Algonquin word and n: it meant Canoe People wherever that v< language was spoken. "Big. Muddy" fe was the definition to another word, n; The Missouri Indians, a tribe long Si since extinct, dwelt at the ?onfluence tt uf the Missouri and Mississippi rivers tl In the days of the early explorers, oi Their chief seat was between the two b< great rivers, the waters of which K '.hey navigated in canoes, often to the c? embarrassment of their enemies, K until the terrible Iroquois from the tt East came and drove them from their iz ancient homes and dissipated them th I to find shelter among other tribes. K The Missouri Indians were known gi among the neighboring tribes as the Ancient Missouris. Their mythology sc was widely accepted among neighbor- n; Ing tribes and constituted a part of lo the practical religion of Algonquin G peoples. It was the universal cus- n< torn of the Indians arriving in can- Ir oes, where the waters of the Mis- h< eouri and Mississippi rivers came to- ai gether to throw some present or sac- ai rifice overboard to appease the great ti' Manitou, the Indian's deity, whose fr abode was known to be in these tb depths, from the fact that a boat tt loaded with Missouri warriors was R swamped at this place by the of- fr fended and vengeful god and the oc- pi cupants drowned. gi The most distinguishing trait of pi the Missouri Indians was their skill re in navigating the great rivers bor- 01 dering their land. They owned a th great many canoes and spent much hi time on the water. They were fii known far and wide as the Canoe b< I People of Missouris. The appellation sr was current with the surrounding al tribes, from which the early French gi voyagers acquired it, though for a ai long time the French explorers b< Bought in vain tc give the stream K some name arbitrarily selected. It tt was at different times called the Yel- th low River, the Osage, the Riviere sr Langue and the Pekitanoui. But the it popular taste ever returned to the w name of the Canoe People, and after w many changes in spelling settled st down to the present form, Missouri. The Missouri Indians called the sc river Pek-i-tan-oui, which In their pc language meant "Big Muddy." Ac- ai Isording to tneir definition aig Muaay pt Is a proper pseudonym for the Mis- SI souri River. bi The name of the Mississippi River le has clung tenaciously to the Indian gi form in use among the natives when bi the French first penetrated to the fe West, although many ambitious ef- in forts were made to select a name m which it was thought would be more n; appropriate for the great stream fa than an uncouth savage term. For fc brief seasons and among a very few ti che Father of Waters has been called cl Espiritu Santo, Conception, Colbert Ir ind St. Louis. But here again popu- bi lar taste asserted itself and pre- ir served for all time the beautiful In- w Jian name. The word Mississippi is ef derived from two Chippewa words Ir and therefore originated in the Far s: North. The Indian word Meseha ai means great; the companion word, hi Cebe, means river. From Meschace- st . be, great river, we have evolved, by Ii simple changes, the euphonious Mis- w sissippi. It is notable that many of si >ur great rivers deriving their names ci from the Indians conferred the same on great States, as the Mississippi, H the Missouri, the Kansas, the Ohio ta and others. bThe word Kansas is of Spanish ori- fi: gin, according to George F. More- e: house, in Volume 10, Kansas Histor- w leal Collections. The first mention v< of the Kansas Indians is made by tr Juan de Ouate, who in 1601 came e: from New Mexico with a company of L joldiers. He found a wild and pow- ai ;rful band of Indians bent on pluniering their docile neighbors, the tl prosperous Quivirans. Ouate admin- K I'stered severe but condign punish- C nent on the wild tribe, which he w jailed Escansaques, a troublesome tl Deople. Dropping the suffix and affix ti !he word Cansa remains, a Spanish >1 rerb which means to harass, or mo- d S lest. Mr. Morehouse says: "This C !amous historic word Cansa or Kansa p is neither of Indian nor French ori- tl gin, and it is useless to look to those r< languages for some strained and s< fague signification. The word is tl plain Spanish, and as such has a s< well-defined and expressive meaning tl when applied to an Indian tribe, and vi specially when used to designate 1 that Indian tribe from which our v State takes its noted name." The A LIFE 01 I Impression the Biblical G ?Rnv's, 1 Among tHe recently published "Memories," by Robert Collyer, one h recalls the Sunday-school in Chicago s which he established among the for-, sign residents of that city. His work consisted largely in teaching both 3ld and young the English language, a to enable them to qualify as American citizens. Along with this practical work went as much religious training as the good parson could Bnd place for. One instance which b he gives will show the work and how It was done. s A memory comes to me which may cast a gleam of light on our success tn the Sunday-school, and on the way a the pupils learned their lessons. One of the classes had been work- a fng its way through the life of Moses, from his infancy to his call to be the t deliverer of the tribes from their b bondage. t I had noticed how one bright boy would wrestle, head down, with the story. So I picked him out one Sun- o Jay to see how much he had learned, and heres are the questions and an- e swers: a "What have you learned about b Moses, my boy?" "The king's daughter, she foy'nd I him when he was a baby, in a box 7 in the rushes down by the river, and f took him home to nuss him." t "Did she nurse him herself?." t L_ - ^Iames. Missouri ^nci Kansas * j line has been in use for over 300 j ;ars and has been spelled 125 dif- < rent. ways. The tribe gave ihd j ame currency among the early < panish and French explorers and j te river on which they lived too>; j i le same name. During the first half j I : the last century there was a steam- ; : lat landing and small village named ansas. The village grew and beime the City of Kansas and finally ansas City. For a time the village, if river and the Indians monopoled the name Kansas, as no part of le country was so-called until the j ansas-Nebraska bil came up in Con- j ress. The Kaw Indians, like the Mis- ' >uris, had a beautiful and significant j ime for their river. For the fol- I wing bit of striding information 1 eorge P. Morehouse and W. E. Con- j ;lley are authorities: "The Kansas , idian called the Kansas River Pah- j ?h-kah-so-jau (accent- on second J id fourth), from pah-heh-kah, hill, | id so-jah, smoky?literal transla- j on, hills smoky, or hill smoky. The ; ee translation is smoky hill, and j te Kansas Indians, therefore, called i le Kansas River the Smoky Hill j iver. This was their name for it I om its mouth to its head. The . esent Smoky Hill River they reirded as the main stream?the Re- | lblican. Solomon and Saline being I (garded as tributaries. The name j 1 " * '? x1? ?V..?Af emnbo ] lgmaiea in me duuuuaui.c vi , tat gathered along the bluffs and ! j ills bordering the stream, and the j ] ae mind of the Indian saw poetic j ;aut? in these hills as softened by | j noke and haze gathered over and ' i >out them. The Indians burned the j I ass on the prairies every autumn, ! : id in those times the only timber to j 1 ? found was along the streams. The ! ansas River had more timber than ; le others as it was the largest, and j le trough of the stream filled with j noke blown from the prairies, and ! gathered along the wooded bluffs, j hich were the smoky hills from hich they rerived the name of the j ream." The Kaws, the Osages, the Mis- I mria and the Omahas had long held | issession of their respective regions id they have all left great names ;rpetuated in cities, rivers and :ates. The migrant tribes, those ought West by the strong and rentless arm of the Government, left eat names in their native places, i it in their new homes conferred j wer names which found acceptance j . the white man's nomenclature. In j any instances, where an Indian ' ime took hold of the white man's i .ncy, repeated and prolonged ef- i irts were made to prevent its adopon, but li?e the scent of the rose inging to the vase, the immortal idian names persisted, at first being it half recognized as great, prevail:g in the end by some secret charm hich appealed to our country's pion- ' ;rs. The tenacity with which all ; idian names survived is worth our i ncere admiration. When the pride j id arrogance of the whites would I ave suppressed and overruled the j ately and august names which the :dians found to be so in harmony ith the universe, the voice and injiration of nature came in and de eed them imperishable. The Indian was a child of nature, e was also patriotic, passionately atiched to the land of his habitation, i ut how could he in a strange land j Qd those bajpy, tuneful and noble | spressions which his poetic mind ! as capable of deriving from the i ?ry heart of nature? The migrant ibes nevertheless left many quaint, [ tpressive words which some future ! ongfellow may weave into his story ! ad give us another Hiawatha. The Wyandotte Indians gave par- I cular names to the sites of our two iansas Cities. The site of Kansas ity, Kan., their own reservation, as in their language Kyoo-de-zha-ri, le land enclosed by the junction of xo streams, in this instance the tissoiri and Kansas. The Wyanotte name for the site of Kansas | ity, Mo., was Kvoo-ra-doo-hi, the oint where the rock juts out into le water, so-called for the high, Dcky bluff at the'west end of Fifth :reet. They claim the water washed le base of this rock when they first iw it. Turkey Creek emptied into le Missouri River near this point hen the Wyandottes arrived in S43. The great flood of 1844 dierted Turkey Creek into the Kaw. -Kansas City Times. ? MOSES.' I Account Made on a Mind. "Xo, she nired a woman to ni>ss | im, and it was his own mother; but he didn't know that." "And what did Moses do then?" *'He grew to be a man." "And what did he do when he was ; man?" "He killed another man." "Then what did he do?" "Buried him in the sand." "What did he do after ne had uried him in the sand?" "Ke run away and went to keeping heep on the prairie." "Did he stay there all his life?" "Xo, he quit that because he saw bush afire." "Did that scare him so that he ran way and lost his sheep?" "Xo, something talked to him in he bush, and told him to go back I lome; and it was the Lord what allted to him." "And what did the Lord say?" "He told him to take his boots 'ff." And here ended our lesson on the arly life of Moses, at which I smiled nd said, "You have done well, my ioy?very well indeed." A Parisian antiquarian has paid 50,000 francs for the famous Marels collection of watches made in he sixteenth and seventeenth cenuries, ' New York City.?The bodice that Includes such a garniture as this one is one of the latest and prettiest that d ;he season has brought forth. The garniture can be braided or embroidered or made from fancy material, and it gives a distinctive touch with3ut involving any great amount of labor. This blouse is made of pongee, and is braided, while the yoke and 3leeves are of net in matching color, but the model suits the thinner materials as well as it does the heavier fabrics, and for the guimpe portions sither the net or a fancy all-over or tucking or something similar will be found appropriate. In this case the p blouse is wom with a high waisted fi ^3 0^ skirt to give the modified Empire ef- a feet, but it extends to the waist line a so that it can be utilized for the regu- p lation skirt as well. If It is to be f joined to a skirt in princesse style the S skirt can be arranged over it either c at the natural or at the high waist c line and Joined at the upper edge. ii The bodice is made with front and s backs, which are tucked and joined to f the narrow, yoke. The garniture is e arranged over it. The under sleeves p are long and close fitting and the lit- v tie cap sleeves are snug without being e tight. nnv?? nuortff+Tr r\P mofonnl rprmired c A UQ VjUUUMb/ V<- uiu?bV* *? ? w ^ _ for the medium size is two and five- f eighth yards twenty-one or twentyfour, one and seven-eighth yards thirty-two or one and three-eighth yards forty-four inches wide with two yards eighteen for the yoke and sleeves. Wide Collar. A wide collar of handkerchief linen cut in points and embroidered in a neat design is a pretty decoration for a wool school dress. The collar is made separate, and by its frequent changing the lLttle gown is kept look^ ~ rtvtsl nrtnn ill& apii-n. auu opau. BraJding is the Rage. Broad flat silk military braid is used as trimming to an unprecedented extent, narrow soutache representing a close rival, while in many cases coats are bordered with broad bands of taffeta ribbon or with velvet. w Dutch Neck. j Pretty, simple, fine lawn dresses j, show the Dutch neck and short puff t sleeves. Some touches of color are v introduced at the belt, on .the sleeve q bands and outlining the low neck. Irish Crochet Lace. Real Irish crochet lace has been r added to the list of real laces showing a figures of color. a Hand Painted Neckwear. Hand painted neckwear, the foun- | ation being a fine batiste, is one of ie latest novelties. . | Oriental Embroideries. The Oriental embroideries give one j 'ho can draw many good ideas for j esigns for her eofa pillows. Lingerie and Lace. In New York City one sees lingerie ! eavily trimmed with Irish lace, but ie general verdict is that it gives too eavy an appearance; Valenciennes is ir softer and more appropriate. Fad For Stenciling. The fad for stenciling has extended j nd mothers are decorating the hems C skirts, yokes and collars with this rtistlc work. No Change in Sleeves. There will be little or no change 1 sleeves later. It is probable that n-r> A KnrHnQO wHl hO TY1 f\TO UJ CQJjCa auu UVU1WO f???? vv W juare over the shoulderB, and in that ase sleeves will set lower on the rms?that is, the shoulder seam rill be longer. Foulard Fineness. A pretty bordered foulard seen reently had a coarse ribbed surface rith a pattern of small groups of tiny ots on an ivory ground, and a traight border of black on white, rith touches of heron blue, rhodoendron purple, jade green and rownish purple, the effect being like hat of a broad band of embroidery. Infant's Shawl Wrap. This convenient little wrap approriately belongs in every infant's outt. It serves the purpose of both hat .nd shawl, and it can be slipped on at . moment's notice whenever the temlerature requires. It can be made rom flannel or from cashmere, or rom wash silk lined with albatross r from any similar material, and it an be scalloped at its edges or finshed with hems that are feather titched or in almost any way that ancy may suggest. The long, point <1, narrow effect is ootn preuy ana iractical, but often a shorter wrap Is ranted, and this one can be made in ither style illustrated. The wrap is made in one piece with asings and draw strings arranged to orm the hood. The quantity of material required s, for the fuM length wrap, one and a talf yards twenty-seven or one yard hirty-six inches wide; for the shorter j rrap one yard twenty-seven or threeuarter yard thirty inches wide. Narrow Skirts. Some of the new skirts are so narow that they look like bolster cases; nd, indeed, go under that name broad. ' SAYS MESSINA WILL NEVER BE REBUILT. n E Destruction Too Complete to Ee Overcome by Incompetent ^ Authorities. a Mrs. Claire C. Sisco who, in con- \ ii Junction with Miss Katherine B. J ri Davis, had charge of American relief j w work in Syracuse, Sicily, after the i ti earthquake, visited Messina on quit- | fi ting Sicily early in the present month. | a In a letter describing the visit she ex- j C presses the opinion that the city cat p never be rebuilt. a "In all the pathos of it," she v writes, "one has a feeling of satis- j " faction over a job thoroughly done, n The ruin is absolutely complete. No 1 Goth, Vandal or Saracen ever equalled this; it's a chef d'oeuvre of desolation. "I knew that with several hun- j. dred Messian acquaintances yho had been under my care as refugees I j would surely meet some to show me ^ about, and that proved to be the case. E "For four hours I was led over piles of debris three stories high, d under standing arches and In the shadow of unsupported walls. The ^ buildings for the most part had thick g walls of broken rock and stone mixed ^ with plaster, all covered with a veneer of plaster painted like stone. This t looked strong, but It was really ready ^ at rittle provocation to crumble into j rubbish heaps. "This rubbish Is not worth carting off. It is like bread crumbs. Excavations merely shift the heaps, removing none of them. Hence after 1 three months the ruin is as misshapen 4 and as chaotic as at the beginning, * and so it will remain. "I encountered strange sights in t my tour. Scarcely any furniture re- B mained whole, but many big oil and ^ wine flasks survived unbroken. I ^ saw lamps resting on shelves four 8 stories In the air. In a doorless T closet a woman's hat hung on a nail. 1 In the mass which was once the best 1 hotel many bodies still lie. No one c will accept the task of excavating there for some of the walls stand and menace death to any one touching the ruin. j t "My deepest sympathy goes out to i ^ TfoHon Thev have a I hard problem^ both on account ol 1 physical conditions here and also be- 1 cause of the Sicilian character, and 1 the official brain is not of the species 1 that we call practical. Had I a palace full of treasures in Messina I * would say addio and start life fresh ^ in new scenes ( "The people who escaped death In Messina were the hut dwellers, so to speak. It is estimated that less than one-fourth of the refugees wore of t the small merchant class, the others * being laborers and slum people. All < who could live in the better kind of dwellings perished. 3 ?"An American wno nas neen en- i * gaged in relief work here for three month3 said to me: 'I feel as if I had given my time to the very unscientific work of aiding in the survival of the unfittest and with the best possible motives I have thus been hindering human progress.' "The bulk of the people now here are better housed, better fed and may get higher wages than before the earthquake. Yet many of them had rather prowl about the ruins in the hope of finding treasure than to earn good pay in helping to build quarters which outside benevolence has placed here. The surviving masses lack selfrespect and there is among them much dishonesty and envy and vicious ignorance. At first I was all sym- * pathy for them, but with increasing ] contact I think that even my powers of compassion have disappeared."? f New York World. I r~" t The Sneeze. t The present "inauspicious June" has not come to an end without the repetition of that ancient semi-medi- i cal statement which tells us that the j sneeze is healthy and should not be j suppressed. It is one of those stock sayings which are always uttered by laymen on the vague authority or I some traditional doctor whose name | is suppressed in favor of the adjec- i tive "eminent." It is one of the! things about which you mentally pledge yourself to ask your own doctor, but when it comes to the point you never do.' Either you do not get the opportunity; or, if a chance does present Itself, an inner voice seems to warn you to let it be until some future occasion. To our own mind, the odds are that sneezing is a wholesome habit, for It is an unpleasant one. Of course, there are people who can sneeze and not look ridiculous, but they are few. Any one caught in the act of trying to suppress a sneeze is a terrible addition to the t landscape, and if you want to sneeze and cannot, what gargoyle could hold f a candle to you? That hideously contorted face, that quivering mouth and j that deflected nostril; why, your countenance is something worth j building two cathedrals round! It is ( as though some mad potter were grip- ! t pine: your facial clay and wrenching it this way and that to amuse his frenzied humor. Have you ever J heard a succession of half a dozen c sneezes? It is an experience that has i an extraordinary irritating effect.? ' London Globe. t Manx Literature. The Celtic dialect still spoken on | [ the Isle of Man is closely related to Irish and Scotch Gaelic, standing [ nearer, on the whole, to the latter. \ ? Unlike both of them, Manx has abandoned the traditional Gaelic orthog- ( raphy and modeled its spelling rather upon English. Manx literature, so* * far as preserved, is scantily confined to the modern period. The principal J Monuments are the translations of! the Book of Common Pra3r?r and the j , Bible. J * General Benjamin Lincoln. ; C General Benjamin Lincoln died in Hingham, Mass., in 1S10. General * Lincoln was famous as one of Washington's officers in the war of the ? Revolution, and for his surrender to Sir Henry Clinton in May, 1780. In I F 17S1 he was made Secretary of War, and in 1787 was elected Lieutenant- ; i Hnvfirnor of Massachusetts. * Chinese Scholar on Marriage. Sir Robert Hart, speaking of mar- P [age and death customs in the Far last, tells a story of a great Chinese :hoIar and high official who said iat our foreign way of letting the oung people fall in love and choose nd the Chinese way of first marry- j lg and then making acquaintance ; eminded him of two kettles of; 'ater: the first?the foreign?was j aken at the boiling point from the I re by marriage and then grew cooler ; nd cooler, whereas the second?the j Ihinese?was a kettle of cold water j ut on the fire by wedlock and ever fterward growing warmer and rarmer. So that," said his friend, after fifty or sixty years we are aadly in love with each other."? 'it-Bits. Impressions of Rome. In a London drawing-room recent7 the hostess said to a comfortable ; DOking ladjr, the widow of a wealthy lidland manufacturer, who had been o'uring during the winter in the suniy South: "Of course, you went to Rome, !ear Mrs. Rich?" "Rome!" replied the widow, aguely and meditatively. "Did we ;o to Rome, Ethel?" (to her daugh en. "Yes, ma; you know we did," was he girl's reply. "You remember? hat big place where I bought those ovely silk stockings."?Tit-Bits. I Flowers Preserved by Freezing. The latest and most approved nethod of preserving flowers during s] ransportatlon is that of freezing ci hem. When this process is em- o >loyed the flowers are picked while in c< he bud and will keep perfectly for v/ ;everal weeks in refrigerator boxes, tl ^fter they have been unpacked and in vater they slowly revive and the bios- b oms develop fully. Such blossoms vill last much longer in a room than d vould be the case had they been g jrought directly from the greenhouse k ir the garden.?Harper's WekJy. n Well, What If He Didn't? For' many years Dr. Francis L. Paton, ex-president of Princeton "Uni- n rersity, wore side whiskers. When- o sver he suggested shaving them there vas a division or opinion in me wm- <* ly. One morning he came Into his vife's room, razor in hand, with his tl ight cheek shaved smooth. d "How do you like it, my dear?" he k isked. "If you think it looks well, I vill shave the other side, too."?Ev- h jrybody's Magazine. li Dad Gives Advice. ci According to the Nantucket In- o. luirer and Mirror, the following was lent by a countryman to his son In a :ollege, not many years ago: "My Dear Son?I write to send R rou two pair of old breeches, that you ? nay have a new coat made of them. * Mso some new socks, which your nother knit by cutting down some of C nine. Your mother sends you $10 | vithout my knowledge and for fear ' 'ou will not spend it wisely I have cept back half and only send five, f ? *? x I |l Four motner ana i are wen, except rour sister Annie has got the mea?les, whieh we think would spread imong other girls, if Tom had not lad them before, and he Is the only )ne left. I hope you are well and vill do honor to my teachings. If rou do not you are an ass, and your nother and myself are your affectiontte parents." Sore throat is no trifling aliment. It will lometimes carry infection to the entire ivstera through the food that is eaten, liamlins Wizard Oil is a sure, quick cure. 'Nearly every Japanese son follows the >rofession or trade of his father. 4rs. Wiiislow's Soothing Syrup for Children eething, softens the gums, reduces inflammaion, al lays pain, cures wind colic, 25c. a bottle. Tourist Bromidioms. A statistician who recently reurned from a trip to British Colum)ia is willing to affirm that he heard jeople ask: "How cold does it get here in the vinter?" 2133 times. <4T*T1 A Vi/viffhf nf + ViQt mAnn W Ll?lt IB LUC udgui, v* vmmv ain?" 796 times. v "How far away do yon suppose hat glacier is?" 921 times. "Is this the Medicine Hat where he weather comes from?" 1142 .imes. "How far do you suppose it is over o where that man is plowing?" 1231 times. "Are there any trout in that itream?" 4621 times. "Do the bears ever come down to ;he railroad?" 944 timse. "Where do we change time again?" 5989 times. "Why is it that it doesn't get dark lere until nearly 10 o'clock?" 3108 :imes. "Has anybody ever climbed to the ;op of that mountain?" 2243 times. "Are these the Rockies or the Seldrks?" 9712 times. "Wouldn't it be great if we could lave one of these mountains set down | >n the prairie back of Chicago?" 562 j imes.?Chicago Record-Herald. i t The King of Siam does not confine lis relationship to mother eartfc. He :laims to be "Brother of the Moon, lalf Brother of the Sun," as 'well as 'Sovereign Arbitrator of Mie Flux he Reflux." N. Y.?32. f Ivery package of ^ ^ost Toasties ? ??????? al Contains a little book? !! 'Tid-Bits made with '? Toasties." J* \ couple of dozen recipes! ? Df fascinating dishes, jj V help in entertaining iome folks or company, u ^kgs. 10c and 15c? !F< \t grocers. j t *??T??I?M? ???t :REE! 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He was coming ut of the tobacco shop with the proeeds of his negotiations for "a nick's ort' o' cigarettes" when a philanlropic stranger accosted him. "My boy, I hope you don't use toacco!" "Me use tobacco!" was the rejoiner. "W'y de very idee! I'm Jes ettin' a handful of de horrid stuff to ill de bugs in me rose garden up ear Yonkers."?Washington Star. Not Applicable. Bleeker?"What's the matter, old lan? You look like an illustration -J f a hard-luck story." Meeker?"Domestic troubles. Had scrap with my wife this morning." . Bleeker ? "Oh, don't let a little hing like that worry you. A thun- : } erstorm clears the atmosphere, you now." Meeker ? "Yes, but that doesn't . -j elp a man who has been struck by ghtning."?Chicago News. The Ideal PALATAL'ACr?anlSf rnthartio Castor Oil JILDBBKLICK THE SPOON. K?lIeT?? rmumney, vcrrtca Dlkeatioo. 25C. ALLDHOQOIsTa. LAND?IRRIGATED?LAND^ Perpetual water rights, line water, productive soil, op failures un' lown. 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Insist on llbby'e at your ||| . grocers. t: Ubby, McNeill & Ubby Chicago ivihbi Hniigtr nu NOTHING LIKE IT FOR 'UP Trrru P^ne e*cel? any dentifrice nt I Lb I n in cleansing, whitening and moving tartar from the teeth, besides destroyin| 1 germs of decay and disease which ordinarj oth preparations cannot do. "UP Mfll ITU Paxtine used as a mouth> nt mUU 111 wash disinfects the mouth id throat, purifies the breath, and kills the germi hich collect in the mouth, causing sore throat, id teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much sickness. 'UP rVrC when inflamed, tired, ach? fib Ei T fad and bum, may be instantly lieved and strengthened by Paxtine. 'ATAfiDU Paxtine will destroy the germs I Hainn that cause catarrh, heal the in* immation and stop the discharge. It is a sun medy for uterine catarrh. Paxtine is a harmless yet powerful :rmicide,disinfectant and deodoteer. sed in bathing it destroys odon ?nd MMNMffl aves the body antiseptically clean. QnnU DR SALE AT DRUG SsTORES,50c. 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