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About The Murray news. (Spring Place, Ga.) 1896-19?? | View Entire Issue (March 19, 1897)
e A North Dakota fanner clams that strips of newspapers soaked] in sour milk and fed to hens greatly increase their laying qualities, Orowi if You Mur{ But also appeal to a meant? of rettf of the tor¬ ture—If physte&l -vrkUiti groduci the groan, It** liheumatlttiu 1 » a prolific source <1 agony In. acute Inflammatory or chronic ptm». Hw may he annihilated at He hlrth vvth Hoe tetter « Stomach iiittore, which, unlike he polwuia In minute do#©* often preacrlbed to? it, lsp<ti iootly «afe. In malarial, kidney, hlllotf, dy»p*I >Uc 01 of nervoue relief. all men ta the Bitter! U a certain source The cartoon is a tune hated Ir tko politician at which it I# sung. No-To-Hac lor Over 400,000 cured. Why »•< l«‘ Ne-To-Bsc regulate or remove your <l<ylro lor tobacco? Save* money, inake« limit) manhood. Cure guaranteed. 50 coat* “ud wl,w, M all druggists. / ___ v “Into each Hie some ralumustfall,” hutsome ’lives appear to get it all. 1*100 Howard. *100. The readers of tills paper will be pleased to leant that there Is at l«l«t “DO dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its stages, and that Is Catarrh, ifalfs Catarrh Cure Is the only posture euro now known to tho medical fraternity, ,'atavrh being a constitu¬ tional disease, reijtgres a constitutional treat¬ ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure la token Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous sur. faces of the system, thereby destroying tho foundation of the disease, and giving tho pa¬ tient strength by building up the constitution The and assisting nature In doing Its work. proprietors have so milch faith In Its curative powers that they,offer fine Hundred Dollars for any vase that It falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. .1. CtiKNKy Jk CO., Toledo, O. Hall’s gold hy Druggists, 7Bc. Family Fills are tho best. UAecmm stimulate liver, kldnnya SO t J Kurds. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; lOo. Merit Win*. The Invention of Alabaetlne morkod anew sf ■rain the wall building coatings, and from most the standpoint Important owner was a discovery, it has from a small beginning branched out Into every country of tho elvi Mseii world. The name ‘"kalROinlne” has b* fnnnn so offensive to proiwrty owners that manufacturers of cheap * alsomin* prepara¬ tions are now calling them sell by some Alabas- other name, and attempting to on tho tlno company's reputation. advertising personal Through the merit* extensive of the durable AlnbaeUno and nee, nro so thoroughly known that the people insist on getting these goods walla and for will possible take no chance of at of spoiling the most their but few cents. a Thun saving it is again a demonstrated that merit wins, and that mitn ufacturers of lirst-ciosa articles will be sup ported by the people. ■5H5KH? A RUNNING SORE On My Brother’s Foot and White Swelling on His Knee ICept growing worse In spite of medical treat¬ ment. I often heat'd of cure* by Hood's Sar¬ saparilla and persuaded my mother to give it to him. Soon he was able to walk about the room. We continued giving him Hood’s :iar KaparlUaand he la now cured.” Miss Mauv M iner sur, Aurora, Indiana. llemember Hood’s Sarsaparilla s the best—the One True Blood purifier. Rood’s Pill* Potash is a necessary and important ingredient of complete fer¬ tilizers. Crops of all kinds require a properly balanced manure. The best Fertilizers contain a high percentage of Potash. AD about Potash—the results of Its nse by actual ex* jteriment on the best farms in the United States—is told In a little hook which wo publish and will gladly mad free to any farmer ia America who will write for it. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. MALSBY&COMPANY, 57 So. ForayIh St., Atlanta, (1», General Agent* for Krl# City iron Worhe Engines and Boilers Steam Water Ileatcn, Steam Furape and ; Fenberthy Injectors. * SaS&K: Manufacturer^ and Dealers In SAW MILLS, Corn mile, K,«d Mills, Cotton Gin Machin¬ ery and Grain Separator*. SOLID and 1J4SERTEU Saw*, Saw Teeth and Ioicke, Knight’. Patent Doge, Bird,all Saw Mill and JKnrlne Kegalre, Governor., Grate Bar. and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price and quuKty of goods guaranteed. Catalogue free by mentioning tuts paper. S9flfi 00 Reward in Sold l ftivUt Well WurfU Trying For. lathe wotd BEAUTIFUL »re nine letters. You are smart euevigb to m&kv fourteen words, we tee! gur«; amlif von do you will receive a reward. I>o u#t nm a letter mure time* than it occur* ia the word BEAUTIFUL. Use oulr English words. Iho Household Publishing ami Pnattn ( % 0o., prtmrietors in Thfi Household Companion, will pay Sotuw gold tmUae pevRou able to make the longest list of Euii*p4*ora* from the letters in the word LLA l - Tlfvrm&0.M for for the the second longest; tiro, and $so.w 85.00 for «?aol the ion IMrd; $biM wb UmgfHt lists. next The above rd» for the next teu rewa are given frce.aud aoielr for the panx.se of v-; ine attention to cuy halolsome COMPANION, ladies' comuimng utaga.uie, THE HOUSEHOLD illuetratod, Latest Fashions fort v-eiaht panes Floriculture. finely Cycling. Cookery. General Articles on and stories by the heat stamv Household Hiuts, etc-, monthly. *rd authors; making published it the lowest-priced j>nc© xnagiuine per {n America. year, In order to enter the contest it is neceeaarv for vo« to send wi:h your list >>f wonts FOURTEEN S-c-eui stamps,-. r ^ cents subscription in silver. which will H( )0$EH0LB entitle vou to a iMbiMON. half-year's In addition THE C sending *© the abov* prut's w« will give word* to everyone kundaowe all¬ ns. a lint of fourteen or more a 's. v€r souvenir spoon. List* should be sent aa so on as Possible, and no; later than April id, MSW, so that %e names of successful contestant s HOUAEHOLD mar be pub |mk 1 in the April tau* of THE mercantile •X5TANION. We refer you to any %ev as to our standing. monftbhold Publishing A rrintinu <0.4 f .VI UlevcUer Ht., New York i'Uy .LABASTINE PEfMANCHT WALL COATING. Alab&st ine does not require to be takeo off \ V to renew, does not harbor germs, but destroys them, nnd any ouo can brush it on. wflh \ 6 oM by oil i»aint d«Uers. Write for card •samples' ALABASI1NE CO., Grand Rapids, 8ich. nODUIMC U fv It* E.,i'ureU Opium and WhlakyHabit Never falls. nr at boitie 1 lareli Home Cure Co., Aliu.n'V, INI) THE FIELD OF ADVENTURE. THUILLINO INCIDENTS AND DAH INQ DEEDS ON LAND AND SEA. Adrift in a Sea of Ice—A Hunt For Kidding Comanches— Attacked by a Cougar. A FTER a battle of [eighteen hours .with an immense ice floe, says the New Sork Her¬ ald, Captain “Mose” Tyrrell, a veteran oysterman,reached his home at dawn nearly dead from exposure and exhaustion. Ho had spent the greater part of Friday and all of that night in a small open oyster skiff that had be¬ come wedged in an ico pack and had been carried to sea before he could extricate his boat. Captain “.Mose” started early in the morning to visit one of his oyster beds in Raritan Bay in a sixteen foot skiff. There was but little ice in the bay, and the water was as smooth as glass. After working awhile ho started to row ashore, and was star¬ tled to find that, unnoticed by him, a vast expanse of heavy ice, which he had believed to be frozen solid in the Raritan River and Btaten Island Sound, had become loose, and was coining down on tho ebb tide. He made a gallant pull for the shore, but his efforts were vain, for in a minute his boat was surrounded and wedged in by tho drifting pack. Hour after hour he worked away, trying to chop his way out of this tteacherous, icy embrace, but it was love’s labcr lost. Finally, exhausted, he conteuted himself with warding off tho huge cakes that came crashing toward his frail boat, threatening every moment to smash it to pieces, “That was the toughest trip I ever made in my forty years of life on the bay,” said Captain “Mose” to a re¬ porter of the Herald. “Twice tho ice got under tho boat and raised it out of the water, and it nearly turned turtle both times. All the time I was trying to get out of the ice I was drifting toward the point of the Hook. Along toward dark I looked over to the south’ard und saw that I was not alone in the ice floe. “Hardly half a milo away I saw another skiff containing a little girl, a woman and a man. They were caught fast, too, and drifting helplessly toward sea. I tried to reach them, thinking that two of us in one boat would stand a better chance of getting out, but I had not made a hundred yards in their.direction when dark¬ ness fell, and that is tho last I saw of the other boat. “When it became dark I came to the conclusion that I was in for a night in the cold. I could see the lights on tho Highlands, and then I began to realize that if I did not get out of the pack soon I was good for a sea voyage, which did not suit me, for I had not stored up for such a trip. Just then I would have given every dollar I ever saw for a good stiff southeaster to break up that ico and sot me toward Staten Island, but it was perfectly calm—not a ripple—and I just swore because it did not blow great guns. “I tell yon, it was cold, and I was hungry, too. It must have been near midnight, when I became so drowsy that I could hardly stand up, but I knew that if I slept I would bo frozen to death, and I fought off the sleep. It must have been long after midnight when a breeze sprung up from the northeast that freshened into a gale. The ice pack broko up, and I was free. “I set ray sail and started for home, keeping a sharp lookout for the other boat that had been wedged in tho ice, but I did not see a trace of it. It may have got into!clear water and reached shore all right, or may have been lost.” Captain “Mose” is an old time water man and has a reputation for nerve and hardiness, but his night on the ico has affected him more than ten years of his ordinary life of exposure would, and he declares that he will pull his boat out and quit the water lor ,ever. A Hunt for Raiding Comanches. “It was a little party, these rene¬ gade Comanches from the reservation —thoy numbered only five buoks and three squaws—but they did a heap of misohief before they were brought to book,” said the regular army officer, telling of campaigns in Texas. “Two wagons outfits they had destroyed, and left no one alive to tell the tale only the bodies of men, women and children. Ranch after ranch they had jumped, killing everybody they found, at them and burning the buildings. Thero were other murders of cowboys, shepherds, and travelers which did not come to light so soon, and which no doubt they committed. It was not easy to believe that so small a band could do so much misohief, and it was generally thought that there was a large party of Indiaus on the warpath. “There were two separate detaeh montsof cavalry sent out against them, a half company each. The Indians gave the troops a long chase, doubl¬ ing and turning, and making night and day marches to throw us off their trail. They were so few in number and traveled so light that they were hard to follow, and all tho time we were chasing them, reports of their depredations were coming It in to us from every quarter. began to look as if they would round out their career of rapine by getttng safe back on the reservation in spite of us, when the detachment I commanded struck their trail hot. By marching all night we came up with them at the breaking of morning while they were still asleep in camp. They were lying on the ground in the open air with tho plun¬ der they had taken heaped up around them. A little distance away the horses they had stolen, about twenty in number, were picketed out to feed, and one horse was tied close to the tamp. that Indi¬ ‘T knew, of course, the ans must be jumped very suddenly, and abort work made of thorn, e!*«S> they would get to their horses ana scatter, ii; which case they would give' us another long chase, with almost the certainty that some of them would get away. At a quarter of a mils from the camp I dismounted half my command, and ordering that the men with the horses should come up at the first firing, I crept with the others upon the Indians and took up a posi¬ tion between them and their horses. Tlio surprise was complete. At the click of our carbine looks an Indian lifted his head and sprang up with a yell. Ho fell, shot through and through, and we got most of the others before they could grab their gune. only We made no prisoners, audit was after the business was over that we discovered that three of the Indians were squaws, There is bo little differ ence in dress and general appearance between the sexes among Indians that in battle tho squaws cannot be distin¬ guished from the bnoks except by the greater ferocity they display. “All but two of tho band fell on the spot where they had slept. These two were bucks who leaped upon the back of the horse tethered at the camp and started him out on the prairie. ^horse, There was no saddle or bridle on the and the way they swung their arms and legs and contorted their bodies in the effort to make him go faster was one of the most ridiculous sights im¬ aginable. I told one of my troopers to go after the two Indiana He gal¬ loped down upon them, und when at the right distance away dropped them both to the prairie with one shot from his revolver. He kept on until he caught the horse, and then as he rode back halted by the two Comanches, gave each of them a shot to make sure that ho would remain a good Indian, and then rode back to the command, “There were all sorts of plunder in the Comanches’camp, trophies of their depredations. But tho sight that made my men wild with rage was the eleven fresh scalps that we found scalps of men and women and children. After seeing these I think the soldiers would have liked to kill the) Indians over again. But they were already dead—we had made quick and clean work—and there was nothing further to be done but return to quarters bringing the recaptured horses and tho report ‘Engaged the Indians at daybreak and killed eight, fighting. No prisoners taken. J »1 Attache a by a Cougar. To do battle with a huge mountain lion, seven feet in length and 253 pounds in weight, on a trestle at night, is the thrilling experience that has just befallen Edward 0. Depow, an engineer on tho Great Northern Rail¬ road. The fierce beast leaped at the engine and narrowly escaped the crashing through the window of cab. Al¬ together the episode was one of the most exciting that a railroad man has ever experienced. Mr. Depew’s state¬ ment is as follows: “I was the engineer in charge of en¬ gine No, 219 of tho Great Northern, which was attaoked by a monster con gar, or mountain lion, I was palling the overland passenger train going east, and as we were a few minutes late we wero trying to make up a little time. After we had left Lowell, Wash., and almost two miles east of there, about half wny across a long trestle, my fireman, George Lawrenoe, jumped down off his seat box and carno quickly to my side of the engine. I noticed a startled look on his face, and turning quickly asked what was the matter, but ho did not speak. All he oould do was to glare through the window of the cab and point ahead. I loqked ahead and saw, through the darkness, some black-looking object on the track. My first thought was of somo obstruction on the track. For a second the thought of jumping flashed through my mind, but I aban¬ doned it. This takes quite a whilo to tell, but it could only have been a few seconds, at tho most, in which it all happened. “As soon as 1 saw the obstruction on the track I felt that a possible ao oident was at hand. Nothing could be done. Wo were too close to tho danger, and the fright had tho same effeot on me that it had on Lawrenoe. It took away my power of speech. In¬ stinctively I crawled out of the cab onto the side of the engine. The tram dashed on, and an instant after I had discerned the form I saw the monster’s eyes flashing through the darkness, green and yellow by turns. Lawrence was still in the cab, speechless, with fixed eyes, and finger outstretched toward the animal. His expression was frightful to look upon. As the train approaohed the lion I could see it prepare to spring, and finally when the leap was made the force was aston¬ ishing. To jump then was certain death, for we were right in the centre of the trestle, and yet as the lion made the leap I conld almost feel its hot breath on my throat. -$,“When the engine crashed into the beast, or it crashed into the engine, which ever way you wish to put it, tho lion fell back on to the trestle, writh¬ ing as if in frightful agony, and then, for the first time, I renlized that the danger was over. I learned afterward that the cougar, after we had struck it, lodged in the cross ties of the trestle. It was Tound there by the train crew of engine 498, who picked it up and brought it to Skykomisb. Then it was skinned. The claws were taken by some of the other firemen and en¬ gineers, who had watch charms made of them, which are very attractive, and look somewhat like the emblem worn by the Knights Templar.” The beast was still alive when the men of No. 498 discovered it, but its hind legs were cut off, and when the men got down to investigate they kept at a safe distance until it was known to be dead. In fact, Foreman John 0. Wright would not go near it until he had emptied a couple of chambers of hi3 revolver into it. Then they fastened it to the cowcatcher. PARISIAN IAWIERS. Their Life Is Very Different From That of American Attorneys. Lawyers in Prance, according to a Rochester gentleman, who has just returned from a three years’ sojourn in Paris, do not have such an easy time as they do in this country, says The Rochester Union and Advertiser. There, far from encouraging the bright young men of the land to enter into the legal profession, it would seem that they are discouraged and every obstacle thrown in their path, the re¬ sult generally being that it is only a rich man who can be a lawyer. “Under the regulations at present in force,” says this Rochester gentle¬ man, “barristers, after they have kept their terms and passed a sort of three years’ novitiate, during which they have the title of advocate, but have no choice in the deliberations of the council of discipline, and are not in¬ scribed on the rolls, can plead during the three years’ probation, but it is a sort of empty privilege in nine cases out of ten. When an eminent barris¬ ter in Prance employs a junior it is generally some one inscribed on the rolls; should he employ the proba¬ tioner, the honor thus accorded him must suffice. He does not pay him. “But he must live, and here is where the problem comes in, which is much more easily solved by the American or English young lawyer than it is by his Parisian brother. In the first place there is the outlay for his gown, or beratta, which comes close to 80 francs, unless he prefers to hira it at the rate of 10 cents per day. Then he must engage some one to teach him deportment, for this is an essential qualification in this land. The services of a professor of the conservatory must also be called in to train his voice, un¬ less nature has been kind to him in that respect. But these expenses are mere incidents. He must, above all, not live in small chambers and rent dingy offices. Poverty is a poor key to open the pockets of clients.—Ex¬ change, ____ Her Attitude. “How does your new servant like the place?” asked the visitor. “Oh!” replied the woman who had just moved, “the house pleases her very much. What she can’t under¬ stand is how such people as we are ever came to occupy it.”—Washington Star. What in Tetterlne? It a a fragrant, um-tuons olntraant of great cooling and Reasemaand healing powor. it la good of for tbeaUn. Tetter, King-worm, nil roughness !f It stops pain and Itching at once and properly used will positively euro oven tho worst of elirouto cases. 50 cents at a drug storo or by mall for 50 cents in stamps. J. T. tltmptrlne. Savannah,Ua. Just try a 10e. box of Cascarets, the finest liver and bowel regulator ever mads. FITS stopped Ireeand permanently cured. No fits after flrst day’s use of Du. Kum's Urbat N gjtvn Hkbtorbr. Free $S trial bottle and treat¬ ise. Send to Dr. Kline. 631 Arrii St., Phila., Pa. I have found Pise’s Cure for Consumption an unfailing medicine.— F. it. S.OTZ, 1305 Scott St., Covington, Ky., Oct. 1,1894. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thotnp son’s Eye water. Druggists sell at 26c, per bottle. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for ehlldrsn teething, softens tho gums, reduces Inflamma¬ tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. When bilious or costive, oat a Casc'aret, candy cathartic; cure guaranteed; 10c., S5c. HALL’S Vegetable Sicilian HAIR RENEWER Beautifies and restores Gray Hair to its original color and vitality; prevents baldness; cures itching and dandruff. A fine hair dressing. JR. T. Hall & Co., Drops., Nashua, N. H. Sold by all Druggists. I* NtfcAv .-/. -i I \ kc.’.'v.'-.V.V <vf f •j $ m V C : W.L.DOUGLAS ‘3 SHOE the Best World. In For 14 Tears this shoe, by merit alone, hag distanced alt competitors. Indorsed by over l.OUO.OOO wearers as the best in style, fit and durability of any shoe ever offered at $S.0a It is made in ail the latest shapes and styles and of every variety of leather. One dealer iu a town given exclusive sale and advertised in local paper on receipt of reasonable order. TVrlte for catalogue to W. L. Douglas, Brockton, Mass. MINING bus made many wealthy men. Salaried men may invest email amounts. Ho stock; Full no information promotion, A legitimat e business propos ■sition. and A»ncr*cnTt-('iu»atIian prospectus on application. Development Co., Rookery Building, - * - Spokane, Wash. Don't Be Cut With a Knife. We cui'e any^oaae of Pil^s, without me NT. Instant and permanent relief guaranteed. Send live ^-cent stamps >eVv for FREE package. Address Dept. G. spencer Medicine Co., Chattanooga,Tenn. S$a4€ned4 Qr^cMae Aiigsgta. Oft. Actofti Cheap business board- Semi No text £/ bt>on- Short time. ior ckvaiogue. j 5 ^ - m CUfifcS WH£fi£ All £IS£ FAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use injirne. Sold by dr ugg ists . CONSUMPTION ? ■ fg PICKED UP ON BROADWAY. A True Incident.—A woman was picked up in the street in an unconscious con¬ dition and hurried to the nearest hospital. On examination her body was found to he covered with sores caused by the hypodermic injection of morphine. This mere wreck of a woman had once held an honorable and lucrative position in a large publishing house in New York. Her health began to fail. In¬ stead of taking rest and medical, treat n ■ ment, she resorted to the stimulus of ; i' 4 V morphine. J The hospital physicians discov . ered that her primary trouble was \l > an affection of the womb, which r could readily have been cured in. vi the first stages. If, when she had felt those se¬ vere pains in the back, the terrible headaches, the constant sense of fullness, soreness and pain in the pelvic region, she had used Lydia 1 E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com I pound, it would have dissolved and U. k passed off that polypus in the 1 e womb, and to-day she would have V been a well woman sitting in her ° ffice - Why will women let themselves |^psP^,«fcpfr^telsa‘‘ , go strange in this that way? It seems like this passing a woman one, * so highly educated, and so well placed, should have de pended on morphine, instead of seeking a radical cure. There is no excuse for any woman who suffers—she need not go without help. Mrs. Pinkham stands ready to help any woman; her address is Lynn, Mass. Write to her; it will cost you nothing. In the meantime get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound at the nearest drug store. The following letter from one of your sisters will encourage y in : Mrs. Bxhtha Lehrmas, No. 1 Erie St., 27th Ward, Pittsburg, Pa. .^writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “I can hardly find words with which to thank you tor what you have done for me. I suffered nearly seven years with backaci and sideache, leucorrheoa, and the worst forms of womb troubles. “ Doctors failed to do me any good. I have taken four bottles of Lydia E. Pinkhamk Vegetable Compound and one box of Liver Pills, and used one package of Sanative Wash, and now can say I am well and have been stead¬ ily gaining flesh; am stouter and heartier now than I have been for years. I am recommending your Vegetable Compound to my friends. Again I thank you for the good health I am enjoying.” vufocaAetb/ /Qandy CATHARTIC ^^CURfc C0HSTIPAT1QH^< ABSOLUTE!,? GDJ 8 iSTKED!?,rs,V, r s:JSS l ."'/”'. 2 ‘^.»^mi£ , and booklet free. A4. STKRBINfJ RRJTEDY C0.« Chlrseo, IfontreaLs Cub., or New York. su. Baker’s Chocolate MADE BY Walter Baker & Co. Ltd., Established ia 1780, at Dorchester, Moss. Has the well-known Yellow Label on the front of every '* i' and the trade-mark, “La Belle Chocolatiere,” package, on the back. NONE OTHER GENUINE. j & Co. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. Walter Baker Wil ♦ ft fcA * the standard PAINT for structural purposes. Pamphlet, “Suggestion* for Exterior Decoration, M Sample Card and Descriptive Price List free by mall. Asbestos Koolinir, llitlldlfig: Felt, Steam Packing, Boiler ('overinnsy Fire-Proof Paints, Etc. Asbestos Non-Conducting; and Electrical Insulating Afatermls. H. W. JOHNS MAMJFACTURING CO., 87 Maiden Lane. New York. CHICAGO: 240fc2<2 Randolph 8 t. rniI.ADEI.PHlA: HO t I!S North 4th St. HORTON: 77 & TB Petr! St, ' IK ft y/ M y a/, r //A WA mim ll j I o -i mm I if J* W 1 II 1 3 A St. Louis paper hanger and contractor, in enumerating some of his past troubles, said : ** My wife and I swear by Ripans Tabules. Many a morning I have gone to work on a job and had to quit. I can^t begin to tell you all the suffering I have gone through. I lost my appetite and nearly starved myself in trying to work up a relish for food ; but indigestion, dys¬ I pepsia, constipation, biliousness and headache constantly attended me. took bitters, tonics, pills, but they didn*t cure me. My wife had also some trouble with her stomach and it was a friend of hers who first told her to try RIPANS TABULES started in together to take them. My appetite soon, came hack^ and I began to feel bully, and my wife is as well as ever she was in her life." * TRUE. * Rice’tGoeseGrease Liniment la always sold under a guarantee to cure all ache* and pains, rheumatism, also neuralgia, sprains, bruises and burns. It is warrant¬ ed to car® colds, croup, coughs and la grippe quicker than any all known druggists remedy. !No cure no pay. Sold by and general stores. LIN1MEHT Made CO.. only Gfjkbksbobo. by GOOSE N. C. GREASE A- N. V. .Eleven, ’97. pliilTiJ SMOKE YOUR ME AT WITH V you can vm ■ ton Grain Statistics” mailed free. JAS.E.TAY* LOR & CQ-, W Roadway. Hew Xork. ReomHij