Plymouth Republican, Volume 45, Number 38, Plymouth, Marshall County, 8 August 1901 — Page 6

Angus Sorbly

9 C A Story of Early Indian Life and Northwest of the '

BY A WRITER OF MARSHALL COUNTY.

CIIAITER 7. THE BUFFALO HUNT. (Continuation) T lihas led his little party, as little encumbered with baggage as was possible, into the depths of the richly glowingOctober forest,the crimson and golden plumage of the foliage, burned by the autumnal sun, reflected its brilliant colors upon the dark bosom of the river and the sharp, clear air was full of vigor and exhilaration. The first day no game was killed and they made their supper of green corn, a small supply of which they had with them, but from that time the hunting was pursued in earnest and the woods teemed with game. Angus and two Indian boys gathered nuts in the woods and wild plums aloL? the banks of the numerous little Brooks and there were plenty of black haws and paw-paws to be had for the picking. The wild terries had disappeared before the hunt began. " , Sometimes Angus was permitted to , carry a gun, being a good marksman' but foi the most part his duties kept him with the squaws, where his former experience in handling furs and j hides made him very useful. The camp kettle was always well supplied with wild pigeons, squirrels, raccoons, turkeys, ground hogs, and venison and not infrequently. they had tear, while J every stream contributed a good mess offish. Now and then a tee trcej would te despoiled of its store of honey , and it was considered a great joke if j one of the party should chance to be stung on such an occasion. The westerly movement was pur- j pied for at least several days while the surrounding country was scoured for big game, and the resulting skins were dried on rough frames made by setting poles in the ernund and tying them together with strips of elm or lynn bark. One fine afternoon the hunters came into cciap hurriedly and excitedly and announced that they had come upon a fresh buffalo trail which they suspected led to a salt lick not far away. Straightway the camp was in a turmoil of preporation for a great buffalo hunt in which all the men and toys were to participate. Guns and paraphernalia were carefully inspected and put in order and arrangements were made to move the camp to the sla jghter ground in case the hunt should prove successful. They set forth in tbft early morning and in due time reached the vicinity of the buffalo i trail. The location of the herd was not known, nor the number of which it was composed, and great precaution was used to avoid alarming the huge animals and stampeding them. The most skillful woodsmen detached themselves from the party, which remained in close hiding, and warily and poiselessly made their way -through th brush In search of fresh tracks. They were not long in finding a heav ily-beaten path through the timber and their savage woodcraft told them that a considerable herd had recently passed that way. Stealthily and patiently they track ed their prey until they were reward ed by a distant view of about twenty of the animals, bulls, cows and calves, unsuspiciously grazing in an opening or little spot of prairie, one edge of which was bordered by a silvery creek. Taking note of the surroundings and of the direction of the wind the Indians, except one left to watch, returned for tbe- hunters, who soon came up and were disposed at long intervals on either side of the traih JL wo men men maue a iue ul-iuui and came in on the windward side of tb,e herd, opposite the ambuscade. Presently an old bull jerked his head into the air and sniffed the wind suspiciously, then others did the same and all stopped feeding and moved slowly into a compact bunch, the cows and calves inside and the bulls pawing nervously in a protective outer circle. Wishing to start them toward the puth without alarming them too much the two Indians crept closer without disclosing themselves, and the game,- catching the unfamiliar scent more fully, began to walk in rhe desired direction in single file but jrowding closely. They had penetrated the forest but a little way on their retreat when a single shot rent the air and a fat cow fell with a bullet in her heart. The entire herd, nor thoroughly frightened, broke into a run, heads down and tii!i erect, and a fusllade was "sounded all al or. j the line, the two Indians in the rear running forward and addizz tfccir fire to the rest. Come of the aninials fell dead in tcir tnc-s, ethers dripped blood as I

Uity ran, cad a lew go& away unnurt, bet z'A kept the path except one old

s Captivity

(? 9 Adventure in the Territory C Ohio River. f 9 9 maddened bull which, stung by a misdirected ball, plunged into he tangled brush and had one of the Indians down so quickly that escape was impossible The men were all so completely occupied that the victim's plight was not observed at once and he was in a way to be pawed to death, though he fought bravely with his knife as he lay prostrate, when Angus, hearing the snorting - of the beast and the crushing of the bushes, ran toward the scene of the encounter and perceived the Indian's danger. The undaunted lad dropped instantly to his knee, raised his gun and made a clean shot to the buffalo's heart, but without waiting to see the result he dropped the piece, grasped his huntingknife and tore through the undergrowth to the fallen bull and with all the force he could summon ripped the tough, hide back of the shoulder in search of the dead animal's heart. The bruised, lacerated and half-fainting Indian got slowly to his feet and began to laugh, grunting "Huh! Let go, him dead, "for the excited boy was still thrusting his knife into the inanimate body. 2s iglit soon fell upon the sticcesful hunt and at supper Angus for the first time in his life ate broiled buffalo. The stolid Indians forebore to praise him overmuch, fearing to spoil him, and he completed their admiration for his character by proceeding calmly, about the work of the camp as though nothing unusual had happened. The following day the squaws arrived with the baggage and a long stay was made by the salt lick, during which they packed the buffalo hides, prepared some jerked meat and made some salt. The jerked meat. was made by drying and smoking long strips of the flesh, in which state they packed it away for future use. Chapter 8. THE HUNTING SEASON. After an interval of cold rains and raw weather at the salt lick camp the skies cleared and the glorious Indian summer succeeded. The shriveling leaves began to carpet the forest and the great trees were covered with a thin veil of autumn haze. At the close of dav the sun sank with a warm, voluptuous beauty and in the morning it arose from a sea of glowing mist. The air seemed warm and yet the camp fire was comfortable and the campers preferred to sleep within their covered lodges. The buffalo herd having unexpectedly increased the store of hides-to the full carrying capacity of the party, Tullihas determined to send all the able-bodied men to take the packs to a point on the headwaters of the St. Mary's and there leave them to be picked up at the end of winter,'the bearers returning to resume the hunt. As the loads were very heavy their progress was slow and nine or ten days were consumed in the round trip. Having no time to hunt resort w as had to a meager supply of dried corn and jerked meat carried "along for subsistence, which change of diet was far from be ing comfortable, though it was eked out with haws and hickorv nuts and one wild turkey that was imprudently dilatory in its attempted escape from a club. The Indian whose life Angus had saved took special care to assist him with his burden and get him an ample supply of rations. The skins being deposited and secured from the weather the carriers returned to the camp and a council was held to discuss the future movements of the party, of which the conclusion was to move over into the hunting-grounds of the Miamis and establish a winter camp on the St. Mary's river at or near the place where the skins had just teen stored. The biting winds were already whistling and howling amid the naked gray branches and some snow had fallen on the crisp dead leaves under the trees. The time was at hand when the shelter of the frail temporary lodges would be insufficient against, the bleak, cheerless and Snowchoked winter and the experience of these children of the forest told them there would be days of famishing as well as days of repletion, though even with the recollection of former sufferings they were not apt to bv; as provident as they might have teen. Proceeding leisurely westward, then, as before, they one day pitched their camp on the margin of a little hillbound lake not far from the source of the Scioto river. A storm- was rising and haste was made to erect their rude shelter of bark-sheathed poles and gather a lit,tlestore of dry fuel. Angus, carrying his gun, as he was allowed to do regularly since his exploit with the mad buffalo, went up

on the level plateau back of the lake hoping to kill a turkey or at least .a pheasant or two for supper. He came upon the the fresh track of a tear and without the sligifest hesitancy decided to pursue it In the hope of surprising the camp with tear steak. Hut the storm increased and night settled down and it was necessary for him to abandon the chase and get back to camp. . In following the track of the tear many turns had teen made and he thought to take a short cut, upon which he set out confidently, but he did not find the camp or even the lake and soon realized that he was" lost, a thought that was humiliating to the young woodsman. He came to a creek, which he supposed would necessarily lead to the lake, not knowing that the watershed was very narrow there and the creek led away from the lake instead of to it, and this he followed for some distance before he began to despair of finding his friends. Unable to proceed further in the darkness and driving snow he hallooed and fired his gun. Xo answer came. He was cold, tired, hungry and utterly confused as to directions lost, without food or shelter from the raging tempest of wind

and snow. He knew that to lie down meant death, yet his courage and strength had departed. Now wandering aimlessly alxmt, more to keep moving than with any other purpost, the half-frozen boy stumbled in the darkness against a great tree, which he found to be hollow and with a small opening near the roots. Into this shelter he crawled and to his great satisfaction found it unoccupied and it turned out to be a chamber about four feet in diameter, not very high, and lined with masses of soft and decayed wood clinging to the walls. Angus danced up and down in his narrow house until his blood was circulating .warmly, then went out and with the aid of his tomahawk peeled a sheet of bark with which to make a door and prepared to te as comfortable as might te. The opening stopped, he cut away the dry, rotten lining of the tree and got a thick, soft floor upon which he curled himself and had a tolerable night's lodging. In the morning, when the lad left his den, the storm was unabated but by daylight he was able to judge of the lay of the land and so to prtceed in the direction of the camp, in doing which he soon met some of the Indians out searching for him, by whom he was guided to a steaming mess of venison boiling in a very smoky little wigwam that seemed like paradise. In answer to the questions, of his Indian friends Angus described his night's experience and was commended for his fortitude and resolution. They were in very good humor over Ids return and fell to joking him, one saying that he should not go on so crooked a path when trying to run away, another that he must have teen eating too much rabbit because he preferred to burrow in a stump rather than to dwell in a w igwam by the fire, while stiil another suggested that he ought to te put out on the ice to catch fish where all might see him through the dav and lead him safely home at night, all of which rallying he, enjoyed with much laughter. Before departing from this camp, which the band of Tullihas occupied for several days because of the fine fish they secured through holes in the ice, they killed a noble buck elk, the only one they had yet seen that season. Tullihas himself tracked the elk to its jaunt in the woods, held its attention by skillfully imitating the voice of its mate while he cunningly insinuated himself into a favorable position, and fired the shot that pierced the great buck's heart. There was a great feast that night and until the fat elk meat was all consumed, and the hide was put "away with unusual care, for it was the most valuable prize they had hitherto secured. At length, well along in December, the cache on the St. Mary's was reached and the store of hides was found untouched. A suitable spot was selected for the winter cabin and the work of construction began without delay. They cut small logs about fifteen feet in length and with them raised the two side walls of the house about four, feet high, holding each wall in its place by setting posts in the ground at the ends and tying them together at. the top with bark withes. The side walls were about twelve feet apart. At the middle of each end of the cabin they drove a forked pole and lay another pole in the forks, perhaps ten feet above the ground, for a ridge pole, against which they placed the small poles ex tending from the tops of the side walls, all securely fastened with strips of bark, wid thus they had their rafters. They spread upon the rafters the flag mats the squaws had made from time to time In the temporary camps, and over all they fastened broad sheets of lynn bark, enclosing the lodge with logs and poles at each end and completing it by stuffing leaves, moss and small pieces of bark in the crevices. At each , end was an opening left in the door, overwhich they hung mats, and in the roof near each end was an opening in lieu of a chimney. In the interior

bark was laid upon the ground next the walls on either side and on this all the large fur skins were spread for beddingpthe other skins being kept under cover on the outside. On the grrund and along the middle of the cabin fires were kept burning by the squaws, upon whom, by the way, the Indians always put most of the labor. From this winter camp as a center the hunters covered a wide region, sometimes being out for a week at a time, with varying success but accumulating a good store of skins. Toward the end of December the bears sought their hibernal retreats where they remained inactive until spring. The Indians would seek out t hese tear holes, to which they were guided by the scratches made by the tears in climbing the trunks. "When they found such a' tree they felled a sapling against it close to the hole and one climbed up to drive out the sleepy brute whil'j the others stood ready with their guns. HO BE CONTI SC ED.)

TRANSPORT DISABLED THE LENNOX ADRIFT IN PACIFIC WATERS WITH SOLDIERS FROM MANILA' With Broken Shaft and a Shortage or Precisions the Ship rioated Helplessly for a NVecK-GoN'emment Tug from San Trancisco Sent to the Rescue. San Francisco, Cal., Aug., 3 Seven men of the disabled transport Lennox, bound from Manila to this port, who were picked up in a small boat off Piedras Biancas lighthouse and brought to this city by the steamer George Loomis, tell a story of a broken shaft, dearth of provisions, and the drifting of the helpless ship in the current that -sets down the cuast. The men are Third Mate J. Spratt, J. Lee, Frank West, P. T, Flaherty and James P. Scanlon, exsailors and men-of-war men; David Rankin, of New Jersy, a government' clerk returning from Manila, and F. L. Rose, a reporter, formerly connected with the Manila Freedom. Thev constitute a volunteer crew that put off from the transport in search of assistance. On the Lennox are seventeen cabin and forty five second-class passengers, nearly all of whom are discharged sailors and soldiers, and English officers and a Chinese crew of about thirty men. There are no women on board." One of the crew said: 4 'The Lennox left Manila on June 27 and Nagasaki on JuJy 5. Suddenly, on the evening of July 25, the shaft broke within three feet of the propeller. For nearly a week we looked in vain for as sistance, meanwhile drifting to the southward and in toward the coast. "What made it really serious was the shortage of provisions. Captain Williamson asked the Chinese crew to man a small boat and attempt to reach tbe coast. The Chinese refused, and the chief officer came to us sdil ors and asked for a volunteer crew. Twenty minutes later we were off in a boat. The boat was rigged with a sail, but there was no wind, and until we were picked up by the Loomis, twelve hours later, we were at the oars, and had come within sight of Piedras Biancas lighthouse." It is expected that the government tug Slocum, which was sent in search of the Lennox, will find the transport. She was eighteen miles south of this city and forty miles at sea when the small boat left her. The Lennox is a chartered transport. She was returning to San Francisco in order to be turned over to her owners. Destruction Wrought by Boys. -. - . Terre Haute, Ind., Aug. 3. Raymond Gardiner, George Poland,' Elmer Lewis and Thomas Hall, four boys, whose ages range from 7 to 11, admitted in police court that they, set fire to Hudnut's' hominy mill, Thursday, causing the total destruction ol the mill and a damage of $50,000. They are all confined in one cell at the county jail. Their parents accompanied them to the jair. The boys got hold of some matches at the match factorjr near the hominy mill and by putting them through the cracks of the. hominy mill set fire to some sacks. They say they did it "just for fun."

SUDDEN GROWTH

THE TOWN OF LAWTON SPRINGS UP IN A NIGHT WITH TFN THOUSAND POPULATION Momeseckers la Oklahoma Make a Rush tor the New Town Sites Selected by the Government and Lawtan Proves to be the ravorlte. Fort Sill, O. T., Aug., 3. -A town of 10,000 people, to be known as Lawton, has grown up just outside the Fort Sill limits, within a night. Following the close of the land lottery Thursday at El Reno, thousands of homeseekers who drew blanks started for the three points picked out by the federal government for town sites in the new country, namely, Anadarko, Hobart and Lawton. A majority of the people favored Lawton, which is twenty-five miles inland, and thousands are camped in and about the proposed townsite awaiting the sale of lots on August G. Already Lawtcn has 400 temporary business houses including a grocery firm and a newspaper, and three streets have been laid out. A national bank has been projected. "Every form of gambling known on the frontier is being run -wide open, side by side with fake shows of various descriptions, and to add to the picturesque scene a thousand Comanche Indians have pitched their tents near-by. EI Reno Deserted. El Reno, Ok. T., Aug. 3 After the last of the 13,000 names were drawn from the wheels the great boxes containing the 150,000 names of unlucky applicants were taken to the school house. There the work of drawing was continued, but no record other than numbering envelopes and notifying the owner of the name therein is being made. It is be lieved that no less than 20,000 names a day will be drawn from now on. The closing scene was tame and unmarked by any kind of demonstration. The streets are lined with prairie .schooners and eleven are headed south. WAR SHIP WRECKED British Torpedo Boat Destroyer Goes On The Rocks. London, Aug. 5. The torpe do-boat destroyer Viper, the first of her class io be fitted with the Parsons turbine engines, has been totally wrecked on the rocks off Alderney island, in the English channel. No lives were lost. The crew of the Viper have arrived at Portsmouth. The boat struck Renonquet rock at 5;30 o'clock Saturday afternoon during a fog which set in while she was chasing destroyers of the opposing maneuver fleet. The Viper fired signals after she struck, but the other vessels did not heed them, believing that the firing was part of the maneuvers. The crew did their utmost to save the vessel, but a racing tide caused the anchor cables to part, and compelled the crew to abandon her in small boats, leaving all their belongings aboard the vessel. A French fishing smack acting as pilot, helped the crew to reach the shore. Narrow Escapes in a Fire. Chicago, Aug. 5. Three persons were hurt and many had narrow escapes during a fire which destroyed two dwellings and damaged five others in Ashland avenue between Fifty -First and Fifty-Second streets last evening. The flames spread with great rapidity, fanned by a strong "wind from the sea. The occupants of the dwellings did not have time to save any of their belongings: When the first fire company reached the scene the rear portions of five houses were blazing. A -second-alarm was sent in, which brought nine engines, and after an hour's work the flames were subdued. , Henry L. Sbattuck of Shellsburg, Iowa, was cured of a stomach trouble witii which he had been afflicted for years, by four boxes of Chamberlain's Stomach and Lirer Tablets. He had previously tried raaay other remedies and a number of physicians without relief. For eala by J. W. Hess.

PMTJJPILE& And other eruptions which mar the skin are more than a disfigurement and annoyance; they are a positive detriment to the business interests and social suc

cesses of the man they mark. Other things being equal, the man with a smooth skin and clear complexion will find it easier to get a good position or a good wife than the man whose face shows the impurity of his blood. That's the real point. The blood is bad. And for that very reason any treatment which is designed to cleanse the skin must cleanse the blood. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cleanses the blood from the clogging impurities which breed and feed disease, and so cures pimples, boils, eczema, and other diseases which have their cause in impure blood. The sole motive for substitution is to permit the dealer to make the little more profit paid by the sale of less meritorious medicines. He gains. You lose. Therefore, accept no substitute for K Golden Medical Discovery."' I have used your 'Golden Medical Discovery' In a case of scrofula, and cured it," writes Mr. Wm. D. Shamblin, of Retny, Cherokee Nation, Ind. Territory. I took five bottles of it for my blood. I had ringworms' on me and I would burn them off and they would come right back, and they were on me when I commenced using 'Golden Medical Discovery, which took them away, and I haven't been bothered anymore." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cleanse the bowels and stimulate the sluggish liver. GORED BY A BULL Misiiawaka, Ind., Aug. 1 John B. Cressey, a graduate of Michigan university and of Springfield, Ohio, college was killed by a vicious bull, seven miles north of here yesterday. He was spending his vacation on a farm. Every rib in his body was broken or detached from the spine. The farmer's wife found him dying. Are You Satisfied. Are you satisfied whsn we pay that every bottle' of Dr. Marshall's Luog Syrup is foU od a positive guarantee? You could cot ask for more. If you have oever used this medicine do not fail to give it a trial. Tbe proprietors of Dr. Marshall's Lung Syrup, in guaranteeing this medicine to give eatisfaction, are thoroughly convinced of ita Buperior merit over all other cough medicines. Years of experience in handling this remedy enable them to know it's great value. Sold by C. Reynolds. The latest design In carpet sweepers has a plate glass top through which, while working the ruachine, it Is easy to see If the brushes get clogged or the dustpan too full. Nasal Catarrh quickly yieUs to treatment by Ely's Cream Balm, which is a greeably aromatic. It is received through tbe nostrile. cleanses and heals the whole surface over which it diffuses, itself. A remedy for Nasal Catarrh which i9 drying or exciting to the diseased membrane should not be used. Cream Balm is recognised as a. specific. Price 50 cents at druggists or by mail, A cold in the head immediately disappears when Cream Balai is used. Ely Brothers, 5G Warrer Street, New York. Mme. Isaccscu, the Viennese lady who attempted to swim across tbe English channel from Calais to Dover last summer, announces her intention of again attempting the feat this year. This time she Intends to make her attempt from the English side. A YOUNG LADY'S LIFE SAVED. At I'anama Columbia, by Chamberlain' Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Dr. Chas. H. Utter, a prominent pbysciao, of Panams, Columbia, in a recent letter states: "Last March I had as a patient a young lady sixteen years of age, who had a very bad attack of dysentery. Everything I prescribed for her proved ineffectual and she was growing worse every hour. Her parents were sure she would die. She had become so weak that 6he could not turn over in bed. What to do at this critical moment was a study for me. but I thought of Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and as a last report prescribed it. The moet wonderful result was effected. Within eight hours she was feeling much bettor; inside of three days 6he was upon her feet and at the end of one week was entirely well." For sale by J. W. Hess. Remarkable Streets. Washington has a street 17 mile? In length; It Is the longest in-the world. The hortest street Is the Rue Ble, Paris, which Is barely 20 feet long. The widest street Is Market street, Philadelphia; the narrowest, the Via Sol, narana. which is only 3 feet wide. The highest street Is Main street, Denver, Colo.; the lowest street, which Is below the level of the sea, Main street, Georgetown, British Guiana. The cleanest street is Regent street, London; the dirtiest, TchangTse street. Nankin. London Tit-Bits. LdDDfirJO r In summer can be prevented y by taking . Ă–ScoU'g Ecnir&ioa Its as beneficial In summer aa In winter. If you are weak or run down. It will build you up. Send for f.ee sample. f SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemwts, 11-409-415 Pearl Street, Ne York.

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50c ana Ji.oo; au arn-"tt. v - .

PROFESSIONAL CARDS

A. C. HOLTZ EN DORFF C. F. HOLTZEN DORFF, Physicians and Surgeons, Ooirer Michigan and Jefferson Street Night calls answered. DR. I. BOWER, Physician and Surgeon 315 N. Michigan St., PLYMOUTH, IND. Dr. F. M. BURKET, DENTIST Office over Plymouth State Bank, Michigan St Plyrrjouth, Indiana. MONEY AT FIVE TODAY. 5!o It costs nothing to Call or Write. 5o JOHN G. GflPRON, Packard Blk JOHN W. PARKS, Attorney and Counselor at Law Office First Floor Parks' 1 aw Builing, PLYMOUTH, 1XD. Practices in all courts ami in all branches of the profession. Notary and stenographer in office. Brick and Tile Mill with 30 horse power engine, only six years old. Cost $2, 800, includes kilms. Will take $500 cash. J. A. MOLTER, Plymouth Indiana. EXCTjfSIOrlS. ON AND AFTER FEBRUARY 1st cue rjuill run land excursions, at special rates, on the .1st and 3rd Tuesdays of each month, to the finest farming country in Arkansas. Don't delay as these lands are fast being taken up. For particulars call or write, EDWIN H. C0RB1N, General Agent, Corbin Block. Plymouth, Ind., Tli Correct Population of Cities and Towns in the Northwest, Located along the line of tbe Chicago & Xorth-Weetern Railway, is ehown in a booklet just issued by that Company. Copy may be obtained by sending Etamp to W. B. Koifekern, 22 Fifth Ave., Chicago, Iron and Copper and Whe e They Are Found. Fully and interestingly described in the illustrated booklet containing large in dezed map, plainly indicating the region in which this valuable ore is foono, now ieady for distribution by the Chicago & North-Western R'y. Copy will be mailed to any address upon receipt of two-cent stamp by W. B. Kniskern. 22 Fifth are., Chicago. AVOID THE HEAT AND DUST. When You Go East By Travel! uj; via D & C, the Coast Line. The new steel passenger steamers leave St. Ignace, Mackinac, Cheboygan and Alpena four times per week for Detroit, Toledo, Cleveland. Buffalo. Pittsburgh, New York, Cincinnati, and all points East, South and Southeast. A. A. Schajttz, G. P. A., Detroit, Mich .4 . EXCURSION TO NEW YORK. Over the Pensylavanla Line' Taking; iu the Pan-American Exposition. On or about July let, tickets agents of the Pennsylvania Lines will ticket passengers to New York at considerably reduced fares. The trip may be made over Pennsylvania Lines in both directions or going via the the Pennsylvania lines returning via Buffalo with stopover at that point. See nearest ticket agent of Pennsylvania Lines for particulars. THE GREAT PflN-AM&RIGflN EXPOSITION BUFFALO, N. Y. MAY TO NO MBER, 1901. Make am erneut now for your sum iiier va tion, and join jne of the special low-rate personally conducted excursions..... VIA THE Lake Erie & Western The Pioneer Niagara. Fa' Is Excursion Route. Both shows tnis year for one admission. For full particulars, call on agents Lake Erie & Western R. 11, or address O. F". DALV . General Passenger Agent, INDIANAPOLIS INDIANA. Dorrr Be Fooled! Take the genuin, oriiaal ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA Made only by MalM MftJJ" cine Co.. Malifton, Wl. It keep you well. Our trad nk cut on ttch pcciiZ Price. 35 cents. Never oli In bulk. Accent nm btl oonpoMATtoi tuie. Ati your irt;!it