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41U TABLE POISONS USED FOR ANOINTING 8FEAtRS AID ARROWS. SUWaming Plant Whese Active Prin I I la 1Milar to StU. rlinle-. 1see Trooee-aitt*We lpdelgonee *MkJC4r to Tok'e. Of curative drugs the east African Milltests but little knowledge. Near tike Ugombo a small wild aloe, welih ale green skin has been peeled off, forms a eIe cold and healing application to turs; and in the neighborhiodmn of Dar aui-alaam a highly aromatic plant, with %lry purple stalks, called arnaza. wudl. is reputed a good native cure for ains in the stomach. The Sonialia oc. iMionally eat the lo *al vartityofdrann's bleod, a resiu of acilulous flavor olbtained the moli tree Drac. (ena achizanthal. een Zansibarand Dar-ea-Saluam ooc mnr a creeper with bean like, hairy. S absped podls having severe stinging pow. en; it is abhot four naches lhat. of yel %riah brown calo, and ai called ulupn. Spain yields to cowdung and w,'id Yabes. In the sameregion ahrrnd blnaled called mwanga mwitu enjoys some as a styptic. ARIOW POISO!(. Arrow poionns come much more prnmi Sently within the range of native stldyv. m omt tribes use some descriptiou of stable poison for anointing their seM and arro vs. The most impolrtant a apei'es of itrophanthus. elther S. Idus or S. kombe. which will proha. 'y prie to be the sole source of thlis else -.. poison used on the eastern coast, from anzihar to Somaliland,aad even far into S iterior. The plant is a runner. hear I larr'. rough ribbed leaves, arrnm.ed i elusters of three or four thoeti:er. leh shoot consists of three branclhe- of ich one bears the seed and the ither o the leaves. The flow ,r is vellw, with cnriously tailed peta!s. 'Te sed has the form of a hnute ,milit:"vy frig butt. n. w-ith lobea nine Ince'ic lonn. and is he dirvect -nurre of the .on on. This,. nc eaordlin to St. Vincent E.sk;ne, is called mintsuli in eC.n or south. rn Mznambionuc, nd is Mn ect.r.etic that nen woundeld by Wrow in the fleshy pn.t of the l la hnve beef known to die w thin thr'e hours, and with smnll hnck+ the poison takes e~eet before they ca, run out of sikht. le likens the active principle to strych mine. These facts quite nccord with the d acrption given by R W. Felkin and A. W. Gerrard of the poiswm used by the Wanika Wakambs tries, west of Mombalia, that several roots are supposed to m lbute to the deadly effect. These mention an antidote composed of ~ndry roots rednced to charcoal, wh'ch, Lhwever. proved a fallre on trial. (nre itt investigation of the umtsnli reveals te fact that it is a powerful carcr;ne poison. as powerful asdigitalin and more powerful than veratria when Injected under the skin. But it causes only nawea. vomiting and some weakness when taken by the month. THE "POIS TRUm." 'The fles! cf animals killed by this bon is eaten b the hlacks without ill ta. Pmhably dentical with this is "poiison tree." from the roots of wlhi-h the nativesof Somali land extr:act a 1!:lk and nitcshv snh.tance for poisoni'.e "eir arm' ·. PPe' '',s. alan. the pit 'h li.e oenm obtained 'mro the hbaled ,l., n rk o n tree user on the Rnlji river for appliration to arrows. laie,'. tll n It vn bullets, and the muavi or pois",,.~tou u. cetlion of the Ibrk of a tree emn,.ivl d in Se trial hy ordeal of the nativt ,of the NyaWsa and Zamwhe-! valley, i I:. e saLme article under another cr'ew. Indlulgnce in na:rrt (5 apeTW5- ', Ioe eruantd to tobacco. which is very ',rn. onmal grown under eultivatron It i a special product of the Handel district. Whence conslderable quantites of the "-:t dered leaf. beaten into little mronnil flat esaes tshot twro Inches in di.ameter, ire Sent down to Pngani for export. The tobhncr is coarse and strong ),i,' if birly doo flavor. The Ki'wirh ,ti ~.e water plpes (klkn-madenof oinrl.,f vri ens shap;es. They suwadllow t!;, funms a voklfng and seem to enjoy the pnroxrsm er con thinn which results.-.Jurn oal eeiety of Arts. Where do Whale's Winter? Jast wh!'re all the arrtir whmleq winter bas lonz be.n a nloted question They .e foundI all along the coast of ('nlifor ala drl-inr some of the winter month.. Dut their bree.ling gronds there are the lower ,ntit'les. as at Iagdalena bay and hA the shallov I.ays of the lower Mextras Oeast. It is prdhable that some go dowu as far as the Central American coast dA the r! ht whales o-n along the coast d not enter the Aret:. although it would lem that the greater ,umber do. Many are found In the umnmer seasna in the OkLttsk sea and along the goast of A#ebris. The right whale seeks out his 6snmer feeding groundsin hih latitudes and seeks out breeding grounds In low hlatndt·s. This annual migration and weturan i counted on with the greatest certainty. As many whales come nut of the Arctic in autumn as enter in the lprlng. These facts govern the operations l~t the % hnling fleet. Heace, after the Arctic whaling season Is over many ships dischsare and refit at one and go down the coa*- preparatory to a later truise In high l;attuldes. At several points along the coast in this state there are shore sta 1ons where a oonlderaslbe number of whales are caught as they go up and down the coast.-.4an Francisco Bullettn. nHe Proably W... "Was the early man a savase?" asks a u lrains writer. That depev,,ls. If the ly man rs.e at 8 a. in. ililll rullhed around like mad to reuch the dille;t only to fnd that he was too early by about tair hours. It is safe to sy that he was somewhat savay. Milk YRaled to tfa.. About 17.ww)I pounds of silk erm.mn, Irem~i in I iper pound, have i*.en ra.ied It Utalh during the last year. The In. alytry Is "till In its Infancy, ,ti tihe out tsk is very flattering.-Chicag, Ilerald. The "ale Methl." "The hair moth," which creates havoo d a finle heand of hair, raphily de'troy. I it and creating baldumw*, Is ieing of in New York and Jlrotklyn, and tls sheap barl*r shops are I.lInt blamed Aw the prop.ig .tion.-Chlcan o herald. Leadma'. Great Ezhlbtle.ns. IJadon has had four jgreat exhlbltfons as itany year -the "Firlhcries," tberkis," "Investoriee" and "Colo ýý It Is now propossd to follow these "Yankeries." A /1ags Is T21 has Ja. invfented .t . that Urea ns quartem. of tIM w/Lbs un l bse It .Fako pay 9W re"elly ath e S Seld on the outskirts of Owestry, next t that now used in the grammar school L tb I [. ?M Y a local an b6 M r,' . Doyasutoa, wrote that "the feeble and lairm sull be liev sad bathe la the well e did ere as natil i was iose)a gnooiyuehoql abort sighted or the tardy or erring leg of such as are of weak "understandings." Nowadays It seems chiely to be used as a wishing well and many art the cre monies prescribed for attalaif the heart's desire thereby. One rite too o to he well at midlghI * take swom of the wae up l the head and drink part of it, ai~t seot time formlng the wish in the nld . The rest of the water in the band must then be thrown upon a particular atone at the back of the well, where the eshoolboys think that King Oswald's head was buried and where formerly a carved head wearing a crown projected from the wall. If the voary can succeed lathrow lag all the water left in his hand upen this stone without teaching any other spot his wish will be fulfilled. Whatever ceremony be practiced the wish of course must be divulged to no oae. A young girl at Owetry about three years ago obtained the wish which she had breathed into a small hole In the keystone of the arthover the well. Another approved plan is to bllihe the face in the water and wish whlt. doing so; or, more elaborately, to throw a stone upon a certain green spot at the bottom of the well, which will ase a jet of water to spout up ill the air. Under this the votary must put his head and wish, and the wish will be fulfilled in the course of one or two days. An other plan savors of divination; it is search among the beech trees near the well for an empty heechnit husk which can hIc imaginedlu to hear ,allne sort of like ness I. a human (ie, and to throw this into the water with fa(ce uppermost. If it swin.sa while the diviner eoullts twenty the wish will be fullilled but not other wl.e.-Shropshire Folk Lore. Archer I the .addhl. "The must peculiar thing I ever noticed about Jockey Fred Archer," said an old English sport the other day, "was the de liberation with which he settled himself in his saddle. It rarely took him less than five minutes to get his Iosiution, but when he did get settled there wasn't a horse on the continent that could shift him. Archer had peculiar legs. They were ablnormally log from the knee to the ankle. and wondi, fully eliatic. These legs stool Archer in ',od stead in a hard race. Withl his knet.- ,reseed dead against the paniers of his sr, lie he could remove his feet from the rrups, and curling that portion of his .s below the knee high upon the flanks ' his nag, rake the flesh with his steels. Archer was the oily jockey in the world who co,,ill per form this feat. It was ebloIm that he chose to do it. but when he dit you could rest sUsured that the race was for blood. The dead jockey won many a hard fought battle in this manner. I have seen his feet suddenly leave the stirrups when he was being hard preesed near the judge's stand, and then watebed his hone spring to the front as the glittering steel on the wiry legs of his ride ank deep into the flesh. No, alr; A. er didn't seem to hare a how in his gs from the knee down. They were is supple as willow twigs."-Chi.ago Herald. Cold and Tobatee mmnking. Dr. Chudnotrki p ',lishes in The Run sknya Medlitsina ani tount of a .rens f o~~ser\. li.'n made twelve soldiers in a nilitary hospital, hlo were perfectly healthy with the ex' lion of %light inh juries, with the obje. of determlining tU. effect of coldl applicat ins to the epigas- I trium upon the rapidity of digestion. The stomawh tube w:as of cour.e freely used. maidi the comple. tn of diges.tion was talken to be marked the disappearance of solid particles in , gastric conltents, as revealedl by dray. them iup through the tube. The ant, f.ound that when cre ,haddleri were ;, el next the skin over the region of i stoma(h, digestion was, retarl.ded in nine out of the twelve 'ases. Six of the ' , n were nsmokers and -ix ioui-smokers. . the furmer the time required for diges' in averaged seven hours, while in the, ..e of the Inon-smok* ers the mean period It (digestion wae only six hobors.-Scientific Amertcan. riftle. Big Clheee. A chess factory ,t East Aurora, N. Y., is flling an order from Glasgow, Scot land, for fifteen che, ..-, to weigh 3,'11O o 4,I0J0 pounds each. .Vith the order esne a package of British gold eotn, mover eigna, which ae put Into the eurd of each cheese when making, and will become the property of thoee who buy the portion where they ae imbedded. It requires the morning sad evening milk o( 8,000 t cows to rake one O these sheses-Ch cago Times. Amoklag to the Britteh Am p. The Duke of Cambridge, the emeuader in chief of the British army,bhu just issued an order partially rescinding the old rule which impoeed a penalty upon all soldiers caught smoking In the streets. Now, during certaIn prescribed hours, the sol diers may appear in public with their cigars, cigarettes or clay pipes, and puf the duke's military genius.-New York Sun. Wa.hlngt.'s Librasry unlldlng. The new library unllding at Washling ton Is so large that the present annual growth of W,(KiO0 volnmes it will take two centulries to fill the building with books. Twenty -two years ago there were twenty five I:trner libraries in the world; now there iare but five larger, and the Wash Ington library will probably distance all others in the United Statee.-Kansua City Times. Orace Church's Day Turtery. The day nursery of Grace churcb en ables mothers who desireto go from hoale nl order to earn their living to leave their children in the charge of Miss Woolsey and her assistants until night. The chil dren are fed. taught, sad washed, and al lowed to dlisport themselves in a large play roo.-Harper's Bazassr. • Two Big Peaiems. Two big pensions were granted at Washington the other day. One was to John 1' \tanc'rief, an insane veteran, whose1*- 1 rl,.,.nt ill amount to $12,224.89. This i- "n"t to he the largest pension yet isueal rThe other ws to Juih Brinard, wbo.e rIi1.' payment will amounut to $11, 917.1l1.-- New York Sun. r hIf iagi'" fl~eilc ImettleuNm.s The ml iid run baa found a (rongjaJ bid In (hirago, where there are 00 fc/Rswei*na 1heale, A ebwterad coliasr r/ Inrtr (105.ad !01ki itea not, eel Stb Irsu pujl. e Rammib. THE I KET AND THE IIBADI A DOCTOR GIVES SOME HINTS THAT MAY 3K USEFUL TO HUMANITY. Oems ft" sad [edahes said to gs Naeed ,n sn o d to ipea--ThI 1es se Why-semed y e the Treble. WUeeil Ilts. The days of cold feet aad headaches have come. Medicine, unfortunately an do very little for these troubles, and persons afflicted in this way must make up their minds to suffer or else give over the habit of dressing the feet after the conventional mode. If headaches and cold feet were all the ills that arise from the improper treatment of the feet and lack of attention to their needs, the foibles of fashion might be followed at perhaps the expense of a few hours' dis comfort, but unluckily these troubles are but the beginning of other disorders and many terrible nervous affections. *"Cold feet and headaches go hand -is hand, as it were," samid a physician con nected with one of the city hospitals to a repiorter. The person who has cold feet is alinost sure to have violent nervous head aches. Why? Because the blood not cir culating in the extremities, is crowdaed into the upper portion of the body and exerts an undue pressure ltiponl t he blood vesels of the brain. Nothing causes coln geation of the internal organs more quick ly than this crowding of tile blood into the body that should circulate freely to and through the extremities. PERPETUATING TIE DIFIrCUtLTY. "The trouble increases in proportion to the continuance of the practice of ignor ing the needs of the feet. The blood ves seis of the extremities become thlickened anal nairrowed by the lock of flot of the vitatl tlhild. andi thus the ,dilic..,!tlc are perpetuated. Per.mns sufferiln in this w:tlv-and who is not to a greate'r or lo-i extent-should soak their feet every night in warm water and take plenty of out door exercise. This countleracts the tendency to congestion, enlnarge,. the ves sels antt helps permanently to .clieve the feet of their special tenden-y to (' ilness. "The conventional shoe, tprhalt;l. " K's more to keep the feet cold than any o,.her thing. A loose shoe. I know, is quit. as uncomfo'irtable as a tight one. I know. also. that a shoe shonld fit as closely at. a stocking. Butwhere it shouldtbeti.It is around the ankle, across the Instep and around the arch of the foot and heel. It should have, however, a loose tIpper and a larI re sole. The Iones of the fot need plenty ,f room for the movement. A oose shoe is quite as productive of corns ani other discomforts as the one that pinches; but if It pulls the muscles of the feet anry, pinches up the bones in ope place anoI lets them spread out in another until they can have no natural ant ion the cireulation must he interfered with. Wmomen are more troubled with cold feet than men. In fact, they are more genler ally afflicted with diseasesofthe feet titan men. There are very few women that do not Ihave corrugated nails, and yet there is no l,,re need of it than that they should have misshapen nails on their fingers. RESULTS OF $AIr TRIATMENT. "Hate you ever noticed at the seashore that oc:asionally you see a womani with every :nail on her feet threaded Iby rouigh line-, alnd the color instead of being a br, healthy pink. is yellow andl ILtn he . ni Then: you have seen the result. of n:u. irlt Ire-sing the feet. Again, yo t . a' t ale I. e diis.eie nl illIfest itself I I.',,' !iler tthat look as if the nail had Itw "*u· *,: ''' elten and was full of little hi, ,' , ' . A poor circulation of tl: Ihi,i I I tt inj from indiget.,In. malarln, or . o.,z'.ug the feet is the cause of all ht. * " unt tll the trouoble' of the eet are un' ry. ('autionn anid tu,'nlln sense W.i! Ipe'nt themn. Of court, there are S,,:c iortlli of joint diseaw. go.llt and rll. :tll ti intl tIntu'iou|, f,"r inti anc.e, w I t hi p"tth"e r not uliit.tlv r -pmn jiluc fr. but even tl ,.e if tl..n itl tinme can it h ere,I. Feet at per'ipire ..lobtI be w h:tih, 'l .very Ii'.:t ail t rutll ,,l with a w't'al. !.t ,ri of carl,. i " til. 'the tt,, , .:,, i~u l l ec::a i. l 'Iitlv ann th-i alliu , . tloluid have iU ttll s t.lilt c(an b. ci:uIz.1'l as often as the stokkintr. The lsliters of the Binvarian artly ire' requlred to Ut lie their feet every day ail anloint them with a pomade made of mutton tal low a:1l salicylic acid. This prevent itiue pler.piration and keeps the feet frol. hlecrun;lg diseased. M,,t feet can be kept healthy and soft by soaking them ai hot water before retiring and using ammonia and soap freely. Then they should be rubbed briskly with a rough bath towel, and have a small portion of glycerine spread ever them. Care must be a-hen, however, to use good aosp. Bad soap s the belanialg of many evils Muckh f the most highly perfumed arl sles knows te the tade is made from the refuse of readering bornes and is full o( alkali. Iuch soaps are positively Injurl ous. Plenty of good soap, warm water, a frequent change of dressing and shoes that fit the fuot will prevent any trouble of a local character, cure corns and hun ions iand prevent headaches and cold feet, and mensible shoes and care of the feet will oftebtimes do In a week what medl iues and the doctor could siever accom plah.--Yew York Mail and Express. The Weeld's 3aa Fall. It ls estlmated that each year from 84, 000 to 1,000 cuble milesof rain falls upon the surface of the globe. What becomes of It? The rivers seldom carry off one half, except In regions of close gralned rocks; the rest disappears by evaporation, by the Ihsorptlon of the earth, and by being tarken! up by plants. aunmals andi mineral nrdatlon. In most partsoftem perate ht It tilde the removal by rivers Is from a thirl to two fifths of bult falls: In warnm latitudes the amount i" le.'. and may hle luneronetenth. The ..1.i-s-ippi carries away one fourth of the rli l la ll of its drainage area; the M.)iourlt three twentietlh: the Oblo one fourth: tile rivers of England and Wales niune-sx teentlhi.--Irroklyn Eagle. Athletes In N7ew Tork. The eraze for athletic exercise has taken on fresll vigor. Half the anlety anll business men of the town now go to the rooms of .rIll' professor of spaurring or of physlral rult'ure and exercise at least one bour eve'ry otlher dily. The nliii' popular and |beeitelil treatment is thllt whlidth adds to ith. exercise itself the rihlrirng down of tli. pupil and the treating him by rnllll.'r r illanllpulation.-Cor. Phil. deiphia lioes lh i 400th Trip Arross. Capt. 1! '`II kntl, of the Iilrlj ini. went Iato the pert of New York for thei 400th Utme. ,;ile'o hIundred and ninety nine voyages actoes the Atlantic, nine trips to ladia and ten to Medlterranean ports have arded the veteran captaln over nearly IO.O, mile of wSae.-New Orleas llltiiiiiiii JOHN & MOSSY, T h GUERILLA. tye agWeOs Zs-Wapdgwe *s a 14* tane*r-...v Iaeld.lteot II. Lite. I am told that John . Mosby, the uerilla general and exaconsul to Hong ong, as agreed to deUiver ffty lectures, tr whith he gets OO a Right. This will mbe $0,000 for Afty lectures, or fpr fifty utterances of one lecture, audit is by no means bad pay. "John Mesby," said an ld Confederate frlend of hs tome "is as poor as a church mouse and he wl give these lectures because he wants the money. He cape out of the war without a dollar and I don't think he saved any thing abroad. His son graduated with high honors at the Virginia university this year, and I think he has other chil dren. His beautiful and talented wife is dead, and I doubt whether he has a home he can call his own. "John S. Mosby is a slight, bent, blonde man, with a cold gray eye con taining no more expression than a boy's marble. He talks slowly, never gets ex cited, and does not know what fear is. He loves his friends and hates his ene mies, and he carries his fight to the death. I lately heard a story from a captain in the Union army of a scene in which Moshy took part during the war. A Union regiment had driven him with a small body of his men into a ten acre feld. about which was a high fence. They counl see him plainly within it, and they surrounded the field and began to close in upIln Mosby. They wanted to capture him. as he had already killed nearly half their regiment. They closed la upon him slowly, his handful of troops still firing. They had backed him up close to a fence, and they apparently had him in their grasp, when he drove his spurs into his horse and went over the fence like a dash. antd as he did so, turned in the air upon hi. a.:llile and shot a solldier through tihe, hit-al with hist revolver. Thereare few suitch shots, s Mushy, and dulring the wat hlie .hot to kill. "At t.e vcl',-. of the war luHorace Gree eIv .natllltl .hlavy Ioun,. lie denoiunced hint .s n guertlin and mnurlvhrer, and I puall h'td artit ic after article calling ,o theilt pre ident to hang hint. Mosby fledl I the tllnlmntains,. anll he told mei he itntendlel to flight to the last. Gin. Grant was in Washington at the time. Mrs. Joubsy cattle here with a suticking aby on one arm alnd these papers of llorace Greeley ndler the other. Site called upon (rant andl laid the paper lbefore him. Grant todt her to go to her thusband and to tell hint that he would protect him if he would surrender; that lie should go to the nearest station and gi'e himself np and lie would protect his parole as much as lie would thatof Gen. Lee. Mrs. "osby carried this news to John S. Mosby in the mountains. He surren dered and Grant protected hint. Moeby never forgot it, and when the campaign of I7-2 came around, in which Greeley was iitted against Grant, Mosby stumped the state of Virgina for Grant. He car ried Greeley's papers around and told the people how Grant had treated him. The result was he carried Virgina for the Re publicans tile firtst time in its history.- .'or. Cleveland Leader. • I I FOYAI POWDER Absolutely Pure. fI ll. p w1t.rr never VhS ..n. A war* vr1 for .urit I, ,,re a d wh(",IC ra"Wettr'u. (r4r criDriWm.cal than ther ordliuary winds, al cuanntt hr mild in cnmWwtitten with the mnultltude vt lItw (rot, uhort w.ight. alum or phOs" phute ipwdrru. Mnold r ly in cans. ("YAL BAKING "'WDI:k Co.. 105 Wall atr-et, Nw Yfork. K - DE NV4'c ..Uu.f1Ie iW.r McoW r7mr.lH.~ alltAMnn*~a0. at' ag9. 1LtD4 mwo hi. g cueuan." of kiI r"Mcncl It r i ..O rtl. f Saait i Ostrl .VI I'th .( anaL. I mp uta( Sr, cr Ilta. our.Ie b.S.a Etectco Cmi . . IM La$sie. o.: Chi Notice. Know sll meun by tee presents that by a voto e the shareholder, of the MilIs City Water Horks and Eleetrie Light Company, Ihe caspltal stock of the bbaid company is reducedfrom ISt,000 tolt,000. 3. K. ;I|LMAN, Preuiddat. Miles City, Dee. 15, 18SN. Take it in Time. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral in a highly concentrated and powerful medii,cine. It is an anodyne expectorant, andti, if promptly taken, In cases o ('ouugls, Thrust or Lung troubles, srothel aonl heals the irritated tissue's, and quichkly allays all tendency to Consunlmption.l. Rix years ago, I enntracted a ncvere Codi, which islttld on lily Lungs, stel sein deve.lop~ed all the alarmlllnlg s lllep meo ('of unsumitionl. I hs l t a ct-h, Night Sweatr, Bl+ding Lunig. Pail ia l ny ('hest and Bides, and walls o coll. pieltuly prostrated, as to be cntillled t liay bId msnt of the time. After tryilng variomAs precriptiona, withiuml utit,0lel, my phvsilian finally determuilnl to, liv mle Ayer's (herry Pectoral. I tlk it, and the efect was magical. I me, ne.,l to rally from the first dose of llii- Iun-e. icinJe, alld, aflltr using only t hree. ott lel , amn now as well and seitanl act e.ser. telIney Jehamlon, npringliieli, III. I have iIsed Aver's ('hcrrv I'etlral li ttmy fautlily, for ('dIei and C eough, Nit fl iIjnftllJ elltin , ee 1, S min(l ish ld ttot. 'icre t , ieI, withOlllt tIhle n I, nll tl n llt cIh the . inl'r m uetih.-elint*tl ' i Iline, liugheaville, e .tyi unII c o t .. 'iea. Ayer's Cherry Peotoral, r by d r..I P. AP Ir ('o, low, wMa. l dbfil n e. A'F $1; iae tte, Pa. Wel.L. asdL St.31 1e.3 Ia Q HEATING AND COOKING' TSYQE, AH, FL sI, I I. fill I.-l Tim Ihop la (.aedeSm with Our Mammoth Hsm,.,w mer. Hsvrng had Thirty YTell Eap.rione W. Will Guarsals. All Job Work a lint Cle. BUCK-BOARDB t STABDLISHED ITy. JAB. XoMILLAN & CO., PROPRIETORS OF THE Minneapolis Sheepskin Tannery,, AND DEALERA IN EDZES, 8IEE IPELTS, 7.PU, WOOL, TALLOW Ginseng and Seneca Root. SHEEP PELTS & FURS A SPECIALTY. 101. 10o 106 seomd t Neeta. MImNwAPOLIs, DINN. Shipmt.-nt Solicit d. Writte for, roula.. Live Stock, Loans, Real Estate and Notary Public LIVE STOCK A SPECIALTY. Agent for the oldeet and meet reliable FIRE, LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE 00,8 And the eldt agent in town. Money Loaned on First Class Security. Cattle and sheep ranches, and improved farms for sale at a bargaim with easy terms of payment. Houses to Rent and Collections Made. Several comfortable and commodious dwelling houses and well located business and residence lots for sale oheap also N. P. R. L. Co., lots and lands, and grasing lands n the Northwest Territory for lease or sale. Montana, Western, Wyoming, Texas sad asters GATTLE FOR SAL~E. In lots to s ~it purcha . Also sevrarl aCol, bands of ,e PWasylvanta "mlack TIo," Ureerd rams Yad bort tharo and grad, balls for sale. WILLIAM COURTENAY, MAIN STREET. Abeat twW R Ip ip 1 luawdI sae a th my eekL ml the dUstls pr - ataced it cancr. I have tried a mumbe e pbysmiena hat wt.shotL sedrvtq y pum. . i at beoeat. Among the amber wen one or two epe ialaats. The mei4cias ta appuh w like Sre to the s. malang tateae pala. I sw a staemet to te papn Ie teili what S. .L . had dome for otherm alarly eact. I procreo some at ace. Before I b. ulad te mecoad bottle the aeiahbar could sotk* that my cacer - sa balq rup. My geIe belth had been a foro two or three years- I b ha backing coga sue iput blond caia. sally. I had a sere pan tn my beet. After taking sia battlee of S. B. A. my reoua left ma and I grew uluer than I bhad been forerveral years. MY cace he healned over all bus a littl spokt aout the size of a hal dime. aod It le rapidly daasppuariag. I would ad.ie e ry osea with..acer lu give p %. b. b. a fair triL M. L iLY.IT J. M1oN.AUlIBT, ake eeme, Tlpporeaos Co., lad. Swift' S pecd It etsrely egtabIle, sad sma to ean eere byr Mlq eat the taImps. IWe hrea the blued. Talt as lo and Mnd Dise malted free. TUB I sIT WUP LIC CO., Drwer , AtaLta, oe. TO STOCK MEN N,.w i, the tinme to PUBLISH YOUR BRANDS IN THE NE WEEKL YELIOIDSTOMIE JOOHll A2" D LIVE STOCK REPORTER, PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT MILES OITY, M.T The Pice for Brma ids $5.00 , Per Year, I. V. BOUGHTO, Manuthoturer of NATIVE BRICK. *o A rnet tMI ei I wst I ao w helqa mass h A.1d army ud a.ld warumth o . eatlse ti.. Am pe.eprtd O AlII all orders hrI 1,0000T 500,000 AT VERY LOWEST PONS. ARTESIAN WELL WATER. I .1, now prepared to deliver ArNmils Wat.r for ath or Latundry a. Lw4 erdern Wright'. IOtb gad Mema 6ret .. 3011 P. FOX. BRICK Uav Imeds l. Wt st u.ar thu slew d11 I will u oe.. lis t---e tmauouhoture of Oof & iy hf qUw lity Sa d 0m sow w . W i. . oU(t far sy vUere icr blum rll.41 UEISTOPUEIR SLYER, Box I iOST OpcOLL lIes Cil & SpfuiS Stage Unn, Connecting at Sparfish with Rodgws Dally stage fhr DEADWOOD %lsl a. o Wlms ap ii0