The weekly banner. (Athens, Ga.) 1891-1921, October 20, 1891, Image 6

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' ?; mane athens banner: Tuesday forming, October *». 1891 A NEGRO STATE. The Enquirer-San says, there | seems to be a well-organized attempt made by a colonization society,head* eil by E. P. McCabe, formerly Audi tor of Kansas, to establish in Okla homa a negro State. The work has been going on for over two years, and Tma ath*ks OAJM:.mm »■ «h«jj | it is still prosecuted with some mea- REMSSN CRAWFORD Managing Editor. 0 1>. VLAMIGBM Business Manager. by carrion In them/,.or mailed, i to any a<ldnaa at the following rates: $&oo per year, aaouf or six month. ,tl.so for three months The weekly or Sunday bannzb f i .00 per year, postage I tes: #6.00 sure of success, although it may be N cents for WIU13I* WMPOiuwmma I 'I — o— -- fore* month? ,y inwSbiy‘caffi r 5^dI doubted if the influx of negroes will *» able 10 overcome the preponder,. '^SfiJuMswIuto charged at the rate olio the lands newly opened has brought touVeSHorex^dcdpe^^whMsapMtSntMS in a considerable accession of whites will bo made. I Remittances may bo made by express, postal from Kan8&8, but it has also given a *°aj\ I baaine«8 oommnnication* sbonid ho ad-1 f re sh impetus to the immigration of dressed to the Business Manager. impetus to the immigration negroes from the South. There are SINE DIE. I even now more settlers in Oklahoma Those mysterious words, that can of the latter race than is generally be twisted into various meanings, known. A recent examination of will be pronounced over a defunct tbe statistics of population shows A SOLEMN PROTEST A BIG STRIKE AGAINST UNJUST AND (UNWAR RANTED DISCRIMINATION IN FREIGHT RATES. AMONG THE OPERATIVES OF THE CHECK FACTORY. THEY GO BACK TO ftORK The Citizens of Athens Will Present Their Case Before the Commission —And If They do Nothing In the Matter, Will Pursue the Question Further. After Having a Consultation With Mr. Bloomfield—About Thirty Girls Dissatisfied With Their Wages. legislature to-day, Deo Volente. As Speaker Howell brings down bis gavel upon tbe desk and in his solemn and impressive voice pro nounces those time honored words, all the members of the House will rise up in their seats and the Speak er will come down and bow to eacli side of the House, and the members that of the 8000 people at Guthrie, 3000 are negroes. Laogston City has 1000 negro inhabitants and no white men. Tbb Boston Herald thinks Gail Hamilton is making things very lively for Bav. Moncurb D. Conway. The latter’s declaration that Mbs. May- brick ought to be hanged prompts her will rap on the desks and cheer, and I to say that the unfortunate woman dur ing all her life never, committed a sin that can be compared in enormity with the criminal ignorance, falsehood, and recklessness displayed in the letter of this Jbboboam, the son of Neb at, who would make Isreal to sin. This is quite the jig will be up. A like mysterious proceeding will take place in tbe Senate, and a qui» etus will be put on that august body “Sine die”—those words consti tute a puzzle iu all instances where j Ga1l Hamiltonsque a legislature adjourns. What do they mean ? What do they signify ? Perhaps a correct interpretation would be that the session has been If there are two Southern dailies more welcome to the Banner’s ex change table than the Charleston News and Courier and the Augusta Chroni cle we have not as yet torn the wrapper that binds them hidden. These are concluded without a good day’s work two old friends that have stood tbe being'done, and again it may be j storms of civiljstrife and reconstruction, that it has been finished without los ing a day’s time. Wise and knowing ones have said that it means that no day has passed withoat some member rising to a and like good wine they grow better by reason of ag. An exchange remarks: “The Kan sas husbands are kicking against their wives who are serving as mayoresses, . _ but they are not manifesting any se- question of privilege and giving vent rious objections to tbe women folk go to his pent-up indignation, while >°g out into the wheat fields and doing others declare most solemnly that its men ’ 8 work there - That ’ 8 different * correct interpretation is that the leg islative body will never be inflicted I upon daylight again, as their future been selling the identical copy of the Stonewall Jackson Bibles are now in the market. A New York man has life will be in darkness. Tbe true definition to our minds is that the term simply means that from the time it -is pronounced, henceforth and forever, for all mem bers who have not voted for measures Scriptures that the confederate chief tain always carried in hia pocket. So far he has disposed of several hundred, and he has but a few more left. The people of Athens mean business in the matter of protesting against tbe nnjust discrimination in freight rates by the Bichmond & Danvile railroad. The action of that road is injurous to the best interests of the city and not only that, it is utterly without founda tion in law or justice. The State of Georgia has a Railroad Commission whose duty it is to regu late just such rates. And the people of Athens propose to appeal their cause to that tribunal. A movement is now on foot to secure a petition signed by the merchants and citizens of Athens to the railroad com mission of Geoffia, asking that body to investigate the rates now beieg Af forded Athens and Atlanta along the line of the Northeastern railroad. That tbe petition will be Bigned by hundreds of citizens goes without say ing, and it will speak right out In meet ing concerning the grievances suffered by tbe citizens of Athens on account of these unjust and unfair discriminations They will ask the commission.through this petition why a corporation can come in, and after reducing the stock of the Northeastern road to a minimum val ue oppress the very builders of the road by unfair rates oh freight. That body could be asked why such rates are allowed to stand when they make a discrimination of four-«ents per hundred pounds on cottou from Mayesville, in favor of Atlanta, al though the latter place is three times as far from Atlanta as it is from Athens It is within the power of the com mission to 8°ttle this question and Bettleit satisfactorily. If that body does not come to the of Athens there is one heroic remedy left. . The merchant has an outlet to the east by the way ot tbe Seaboard Air line, and as soon as that road is built to Atlanta, will have an outlet to the West. Tbe merchants will try the sovereign remedy by giviog all their freight traffic over into the hands of their friends. They will not ship a pound of freight over the lines controlled by the B. & D., where there is a chance to ship it by any other line. The people of Athens are not at en mity with theR & D. road. All they ask is simple justice, and that they intend to have if there is any way to get it in this matter There was a threatened strike among the female operatives of the Check Fac tory yesterday. But it did not mature, and all the would be strikers are back at work. Yesterday morning about thirty girls, working at tbe Check Factory deter mined to ask for more wages. They discussed the matter among themselves aud came to tbe con. elusion that they were not being paid enough for their work. They set to work in a vigorous man uer to remedy|this state of affairs by ap plying for more wages, a'-d went out o' the factory with the determination not to come back until their wrongs had been righted. - They sought and obtained an inter view with Mr. R. L. Bloomfield, and laid the facts of tbe case before him. Mr. Bloomfield very candidly told them that at present he could do noth ing in the matter of raising their wages, but that he had no objection to raising them if any opportunity should present itself for so doing. Mr. Bloomfield is very popnlar with his operatives, and he convinced them that be was doing the best that he could for them, and' that if it were in his power he wonld raise their wages. So they all went back to their work, and the threatened strike was averted McElree’s Wine of Car Ant for weak Nerves PRODUCTIVE WHEATS. The latest suicide is attributed to the driukiug of strong coffee. Tbe habit of drinking coffee isn’t generally re- looking to the defense and support I garded so dangerous as that of chewing and enforcement of the Constitution iQ lieu of * clove, of the State there shall be no more I daylight in their political lives. “Sine die”—these words will end I Years ago I was engaged to a Demo- | cratic girl. I was a republican then. After four years I married her, and by the session of a remarkable legisla- I that time I was a mugwump. What ture ; one that is qnite different in baa happened to me since as to political ... . . , , faith ybn are well aware.—Gov. Camp- composition from its predecessors; | one that will be praised by coming generations for some of its wise and salutary laws passed ; one that will be censured on the other band for . _ several unwise stSps taken ; one that The Campbell of Ohio baa bumped himself and is coming—fairly coming at a 2.30 gait. Epitob Hknby W. Watterson rises taken all in all, must be considered I to remark that if Mb. Harrison spoke far above the average. And toeday, after three months anticipation, the happy event occurs. Pax Vobiscnm. | of a profiigrate and reckless Congress,” I it was a profligate and reckless Con gress. SWEEPING ON TO VICTORY-. As the days go by the Democratic A many years delinquent came in and paid his subscription to the Banner yesterday. There's life in tbe old land yet. , And Georgia will have a Normal outlook in Ohio grows brighter and J school after all out at Bock College brighter, and the sweeping victory The House has said so; now what will of Governor Campbell seems to be | tbo ® enate B& y ? assured. Will there he another prohibition mdYinley, in the beginning of the flKht in old Wilkes county? It begins fight, sought to switch off tbe De mocracy to a side issue in order to draw the galling fire away from the to look very much that way. The bulletins of Queen Nancy Hanks’ republicans that they were receiving health » re witb anxious.care by „ , „ every loyal horseman, on account of the McKinley tariff bill. Hia little dodge didn’t work. He swapped his tariff horse, all lame for the ***** of tbe3rcit y 88 now and broken down for a free silver thbbb will be more than two bun oharger, bat was thrown on his first dred students at the University after Wb’be all together sure! Athenians were never before more firmly united attempt to mount. The Democratic slogan is “Tariff Christmas. are getting sick of that phrase every open still. day. Tbe bnrnlng issue before the peo- pie of Ohio is the tariff Its bur. dens bear heavily upon them, and they do not intend to snbmit longer to tbe outrage. And to more forcibly demonstrate their dissatisfaction they intend to smash the author of the tariff in« iquity. The sentiment in Ohio is the dom inant one throughont the Union ; tbe fight for the Democracy is for tariff reform ; and just as the Democratic rooster in Ohio is going to crow over KftampbflU’a election, so will that lord ly fowl strut proudly within the louse barnyard in 1892. Wanted: Georgia wants to bear word of information concerning her Geological department. Gentlemen of the League, get together. Demur ratio Athens will get more than the lion’s share of cotton in this section it seems. Song of the legislators: “We’re go ing borne no more to roam.” ^ i » i ■ - Athens is a busy, bustling city sure enough these autumn days. The man who says Athens is a dead town must be some kin to Anhanias. Is drunkenness curable? water before breakfast. HARD AT WORK But no Bills Returned as Yet. The Grand Jury is very busy at its work, bat as yet have returned no true bills. It is said that they are holding them back and will return all in a batoh. From all that can be learned of their proceedings, Solicitor-General Bussell and Solicitor Mell will have their hands full in prosecuting criminals. CONDENSED NEWS DISPATCHES. Domulle and Foreign and of General . Interest. A dispatch from Alexandria, Va., saya that General Lee’s condition is not quite so favorable. Dr. Joseph Benson Trf Casper, Wyo., while confined in the county jail, set fire to the building and was burned to death. The Florida Horticultural society has asked for three acres in which to show an orange grove and make a fruit dis play at the World’s fair. A London dispatch says that the British steamer Norwegian, which ar rived at Glasgow from Montreal, had on hoard the crew of the British steam er Devonshire, from Barrow. Sept. 30, for New York, which was abandoned 650 miles west of Tory island. The alien land law. got another black eye _ in Dallas, Tex. The forty-fonrth judicial court decided that the plaintiff could not evade the payment of a land- secured note held by an alien company on numerous substantial grounds,; The result of the cases carried to court thus far are very gratifying. A New York special says: The dead body of a pretty little girl abont 10 years old, was washed up on the beach at Bedloe’s Island, and discovered by the sentinel patroling the east walk. Her throat was cut nearly from ear to ear. The body appeared to have been in the water several days. The Western Union Telegraph com pany intends te frame handsomely the first telegraph message ever sent, which wus in May, 1844, and exhibit it in the electrical department at the Chicago exposition. The message was received by Professor Morse at the capitdl in Washington, from an assistant in An napolis. * At San Francisco, Maurice B Strell- inger, or Curtis, the uetpr. cht&ged with the murder of Police Officer Alex ander Grant, was held to answer before tbe superior court by Police Jndge Bex. Only th ee witnesses were ex amined. In conclnsion Henry Franst Gardner stated that be had worked for Strelliuger and knew the latter was iu the habit of carrying a pistol. A Birmingham, Ala.,’ special says : The north bonnd train on the Lonisville aud Nashville road ritn over au old mu’i named J. W. Pritchett near Clanton, and killed him. He was walking on a trestle and presumably was deaf. The engineer blew the whistle, and reversed his engine, hat too late. When it struck him he was knocked twenty feet. At Mobile, Ala., Charles B. andC. Miller, membemvof the late banking firm of Thomas P. Miller & Co., of that city, which failed three years ago, have made a nropoeitinn to liquidate the in- Try ice ( dobtedness still due creditors. Thu as signee has Slushed his labors and the — Millers guarantee 2 per cent, per annum Indian summer with a majority in fa- for ten years on all balances, within or of the Indian. which time they will pay the principal. ItMultfiof Experiment* with Twontythi Canadian and American Kinds. The Ontario agricnltnral experiment station in a recent bulletin publishes at length the results relating to twenty- three Canadian and American varieties of winter wheat grown under exactly the .rune conditions. While intended pri marily for the benefit of farmers in the province, a knowledge of some of the important poiuts brought oat will be use* fal to farmers in the states SPREADING MANURE IN AUTUMN. How to Avoid Driving Henry Load, of Manure Over Ground Plowed Late. The advantages urged for spreading manure in antniun. rather than leaving it in heaps \%here thrown from the wagon, do not need to be detailed: but there is a difficulty connected with this practice wheu plowiug is done late in the fall, namely, the driving of h6avy loads of manure over mellow plowed ground. Country Gentleman tells that the difficulty may be avoided by laying out the fields so as to leave strips of land extending through it. on which to drive and from which to scatter the loads of manure, and plowing all the rest. Whon you get the manure all spread yon may jhen finish the plowing of these stripy’ either in antumn. if the winter holds *ar? or else early the next spring. Iff tha* way yon may perform more than three- fourths of the work, aud give a chance to spread the rnaunre after the plowing. The accompanying diagram serves-te explain how this is done. The figure rep resents a square or oblong field. Ex tending around the whole or it inside is a strip of nnplewed land a rod wide. Then the rest of, it is divided off into THE ATHEN8 HARDWARE CO (SUCCESSORS TO CHILDS NCKKERSON & C o j agents fob SMITH IMPROVED Cotton Gins, Feeders and uondensera. Lb or without R ev , heads,with top or f ro ^ r-eders. We are algo agents for Fairbanks and Victor Ofc Whiteley „ ‘“owing Machine! standard Hay Rakes, Also, Dialers General Hardware Sash, Doors, D ,, , Blinds, Rubber and Leather Belting, Correspondence solicited. Price List furnishid upon application. 248 and 260 EAST BROAD STREET, July 11—wSm. GRAND PREMIUM OFFER! .A. SET OF THE • WINTER FYFK—RED CLAWSON—AMERICAN BRONZE. As a summary of results witb the above varieties it was found that the bald wheats have on an average given 9.80 more bushels per acre, or 21.42 per cent more than tbe bearded varieties, but the latter havj| weighedffim au average 1.87 pounds more per bushel. The white wheats have given an aver age of 6.18 bushels more per acre than the red wheats, and they also stand higher in the estimation of the millers than the latter. The bald white chaff wheats gave an average of 18.6 bushels per acre more than the bearded and tpd chaff wheats. Tbe seven leading varieties in point of yield were all white wheats, ex cept the American Bronze. These experiments tend to confirm the. popular opinion that white vgheats, under favorable conditions. giVh more bountiful returns than red wheats, and that the same may be said of the bald varieties as contrasted with the bearded The best fonr yielding white wheats for 1891 were £he Garfield, Surprise, Ca nadian Velvet Chaff and Bonnell, and the four betft leading varieties of red wheat were American Bronze. Early Bed Clawson, Red Velvet Chaff and Jones' 'Winter Fyfe, in the order named in both instances There were only four days of difference in the ripening of tbe’twenty throe varieties. . In this connection it is well to state that in experiments made at the Ohio sta tion through a series of years the differ ence in yield between white and rqd and bearded and smooth wheats was so Slight as to lead to the conclnsion that the one is equal to the other in productiveness and vitality. The Early Red Clawson shown In the ent is generally catalogued by our lead ing seedsmen as the earliest of all winter wheats. Winter Fyfe is claimed to be hardy as well as a good yielder, while American Bronze is considered another desirable hardy winter wheat. LAND LAID OFF.IF STRIPS. 0 lands. Bay two rods wide, with' span* t twelve feet wide between them. Thes< two-rod lands may then be plowed when • ever it is convenient. The manure is then drawn ont on these siiaces and scat tered on each side froin’the loads. They are entered at the gate A t»d drive* down tlie nnplowed space B. till the con tents being discharged on one side te ward C. When the wagon is emptied 1 is driven to the end of the Htrip and back on the atrip D The space C being thus manured one-half its breadth, othei loads pass over the nnplowed strip D. the manure from which is scattered right and left tne same as before. Tbe dotted lines and arrow show the coarse of the wagons Wheu the niannre is ail drawn ont and spread, these strips are then plowed; and then the exteriorspace which extends around the whole, fin ishtsl by either throwing the farrow slices inward, or else toward the ex terior. as may be preferred, the only turning of the team being one-quarter at each corner of the field. Tire most per feet spreading of mannre is effected by tbe nse of a niannre spreading machine, bnt many farms of small of moderate size are not supplied with this machine, and the mod? we have described has some special advantages in the facility with which the manure may be conveyed over the field. The Clover Huy Worm. Clover hay that has been standing i» the mow or stack fer some time batten infested by nnmerons small Brown worms which web the dried stems and leaves together and feed niton them This is the insect named above, and its various stages are represented, natural size, in the enj here presented. t „ MeEiree’a WINE OF CAHDUI for torn*I* <Bnr far Pitches'* Caeterla, 4 .--I£-.• At Boonvillo, Iucl., all of the stables and buildings of the Warrick County Fair association were burned to the ground. Nothing bnt a few smoulder ing ruins are left, and th^loss will be abont $7,000. The fire was of incen diary origin and there - was yiot a dol lar of insurance. Wm. F. Wiggins was arrested near Charleston, W. Va., on a charge of forgery in New York city. The arrest was made at a farm house, where Wig gins was visiting a young lady, to whom he was to be married soon. He is in jail awaiting the comiag of New York officials to take him hack. At Liverpool one Tom Brown, diving in Toxteth district upset au ignited pe- raffine lamp, and he and his infant son were burned to death. His wife, terror stricken at the flames, franticallv threw her baby through a window, ami it was dashed to pieces on the pavement be low. She thon jumped through the window herself, aud though not killed outright, died at the hospital. " i m Try BLACK-DRAUGHT tea ior DytpepM* : In Twelve Large Volumes, v Which we Offer with a Year’s Subscription to this Paper for a Trifle More Our Regular Subscription Price. Wishing to largely increase the circulation of thh paper daring the next six months, we have made arrangements with & New Yerk publishing bout whereby we are enabled to offer as a premium to on, subscribers a Set or tbe Works of Charles Dirk, ens, in Twelve Large end Hsadaoms Volumes, witti a year’s subscription to this paper, ior a trifle more than onr regular mb. ecription price. Our great offer to subscribers eclipses say ever heretofore made. Charles Dickens wss the greatest novelist who ever lived. No author before or since his time hu won the fame that h6 achieved, aud his works are even morepopular to-day than during his lifetime. Tney abound (n wit, humor, pathoe, masterly delineation of character, vivid descriptions oi places and incident), thrilling and skillfully wrought plots. Each book is intensely interesting. No home should be without a set of these great aud remark able works. Not to have read them is to be far behind the age in which we live. The CHABLB8 dickens. get 0 f Dickens’ works which we offer as a rim to onr subscribers is handsomely printed from entirely new plates, with new type, •waive volames contain the following world-famous works, each one of which i) pub- sd complete, unchanged, and absolutely unabridged t DAVID COPPEAlFIELD, MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT. ffcCH®LAS NICKELBY, DOR!BEY AND SON, 3LEAK HOUSE, LITTLE DORRIT, OUR MUTUAL -FRIEND, PICKWICK PAPER8, BARNABY RUDCE AND CHRISTMAS STORIES, OLIVER TWIST AND GREAT EXPEC TATIONS, THE OLD CURIOSITY SHOP AND THE UNCOMMERCIAL TRAVELER, A TALE OF TWO CITIES, HARD TIMES AND THE MYSTERY OP EDWIN DROOD. VARIOUS STACKS 07 THE HAY WORM. Clarence M. Weed, entomologist of the Ohio station, describes the various stages in tbe life of this pest as follows: The adult is a very pretty uttle purple and golden moth (5, 6) which deposits eggs upon such clover flay as it has access to. Tbe eggs soon hatch into small brown, worms that become full grown (1, 2) in a few weeks. They then spin mlken co coons (8) within which they change to chrysalis (4). to emerge soon after as adnlt moths. There are two or more broods each season. it will readily £e seen that these in- Sficts are more Ukely to prove tronble- Some when old hay iffleft over from season to season for them to breed in. Conse quently hay mows should be thoroughly ' cleaned out each summer, and new stacks . should aot be put on old fouiffiationsP until all of the leaving* of the previous.- season are removed. Hay which is thicMy infested by the worms should be burned. New* and Notes. A large oat yield is announced from Ohio. Iowa boasts ef her crop of cereals this year, especially the oat crop. The rice crop is reported above the average. The production cf maple sugar and sirup in Nbw Hampshire has been esti mated os considerably larger ttutn in 18^9, when the figures, obtained the fol lowing ypar for the census, were 2.794,- 946 pounds of BUgar and 78,712 gallons of irirnn. « Aft the conp'e sat by the parlor fire Through tho early hours of the winter night. Horten roused her father's ire As he thought of fuel and light. xow 'houghts of the waste aB the hours grow late * No longer torture tho parent’ soul; The summer « oouby the garden gate - Needs i either Kerosene, gas nor coal. —Denver ten, Deceiving Her.—Miss Scabbs (coyly): Do yo i love for my intrinsic worth V Mr. Hanker: Yes. dear; I love vt u for vour pa value.—Smith, Gray & Co.’g Monthly. _. _ — j people in moderate circumstances from enjoying Bat now, owing to the use of modem improved printing, folding and stitching MlrindaerJ, the extremely low pridri of white paper, and the great competition in the boo* riraftq, we are enabled to offer to onr anbscribers and readers a set of Dickens' work) »t» prie* whM* all oan afford to pay. Every home in the land may now be supplied with * •*• or tee great aufhoc’s works; Our Great Offer to Subscribers to the Weekly Banner. ~*VV t - <* ill send the Entire Set of Dickens’ Works, ia Twelve Volumes, as above described. »1! postage prepaid by ourselves, also Tbe Weekly Banner for One Year, upon r«c i; t of 11.60, which i* only GO cents more than the regular subscription price of this paper. Our render), therefore, practically get a set ot Dickens’ works i» twelve volumes for only 60 cent*. This -* r:et this great premium. If your subscription has not yet expired, it will make no different#, lor it will be extended one year from date of expiration. We will also give a set ot DickeM, --hove, free and post-paid, to any one sending us a elnb of 4 yearly new subscribers. Au dress, -A.th.ens ^Publishing Co., -A.th.ens, Ga. wmm, Thorough, Practical Instruction. Gradu ates assisted to positions, rid* Catalogue FREE. Write to Brjani & Stratton Business * LOUISVILLE, KY. What is fiaetoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants OUldres. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor <rth2r Staitebtie substance. It is a harmless substitute Ifttacffeaic, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor OIL sank. Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by i off Mothers. Castoria destroys "Worms and allay* dfcjWBTigilmesg. Castcria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, -eUtaS" -Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieve* taething troubles, cores constipation and flatulency. Castoria assimilates the food, regulates tbe stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. CaS * toria is tho Children’s Panacea—the Mother’s Friend. Castoria. •* Cssfeorin is an excrilent medicine for chil- hav'^repea.tedly told me of its upon their children.” Da. G. C. Osoood, Lowell, •* OaatoriA is the best remedy for children of which I rim acquainted. I hope the day ia not frir distant when mothers will consider the real interest of their children, and use Castoria in- sterid’of the various quack nAtrums which ore destreyhsg their loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agebte down their throats, thereby sending them to premature graves.” Da. J. P. Kidchelox, Conway, Ark. Castoria. *Ct«tori» is so well adapted to I recommend ttasaupariortoany* known to me.” H A . a*ch»-M. Ov 111 So. Oxford St, Brooklyn. K. • « Onr physicians lr^cUMreoV def£ ment have spoken highly or . i ence in their outside practice ^ ■*and although we only < “*^ r ,ur medical snppUea what ia known ^ products, yet we are free to ^ merits of Castoria has won "• l» KJ* favor upon it" Umtid Hospital aw> a . ..wig Smith, Pret., The Centaur Company, TI Murray Street, New York CUT*