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About The Santiam news. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1897-1917 | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1904)
Rheumatism Does not let* go of you when you apply lotions or liniments, it* amply loosens its hold for a while. Why? Because to get* rid of it you must correct, the acid con dition of the bloo'd on which it depends. Hood’s Sarsa parilla has cured thousands. Rom» Plebeian Provender. The Romans were great sticklers for formal dinners. Their appetite-produc ers consisted mainly of egg salad, spiced fruits, oysters, asparagus, and snails In vinegar. Then, having stirred up the juices of the stomach to the point of keen expectation, they pro ceeded to realization by way of fish— principally mullet, which was regard ed as the “top-notcher” of fishes, serv ed with a paste prepared of the flesh of the sea hedgehog reduced to pulp, with oil, pepper, onions, dates and mus tard; while, when the emperor was served with the priceless liver, the dish was but faintly seasoned with salt, pepper and oil, and served with chick en livers garnee. After fish and game, pork was the most esteemed meat dish, and it was served In the form of a roast stuffed with sausages. The dessert was formed of fruits In season, the luscious grape being u close com petitor with the apple. It Pays to Read Newspaper*. Cox, Wig., July 4.—Frank M. Rus sell of this place, had Kidney Disease so bad that he could not walk. He tried doctors’ treatment and many dif ferent remedies, but was getting worse He was very low. He read in a newspaper how Dodd’s Kidney Pills were curing cases of Kid ney Trouble, Bright’s Disease and Rheumatism, and thought he would try them. He took two boxes and now he is quite well. He says: “I can now work all day and not feel tired. Before tfting Dodd’s Kidney Pills, I couldn’t walk across the floor.” Mr. Russell’s is the most wonderful case ever known in Chippewa county. This new remedy—Dodd’B Kidney Pills —is making some miraculous cureB in Wisconsin. Little Country Town. LAST BUFFALO HUNT. Ho aits there at the fireside, where the mellow light is gleaming O’er the columns of th» little country paper that he holds. PONCA INDIANS CHOOSE CHIEF And something be bus read there seems AND COUNCIL. to set his fancy dreaming. While memory's panorama of forgot- teu days unfolds. Tribe that Was Once Part of the Bloux Its quaint and homely phrases all in Nation Select. Ruler. In Traditional cline him to reflection. Some sweetness of enchantment as he Manner—Recall. Practical Extinction of American Bison. lays the paper down. Strips the bitter peel of sorrow from the fruit of recollection, There Is a touch of pathos In ths He tastes the mellow sweetness of the story from Oklahoma which recalls little country town. the practical extinction of the Amer He sees at ere. a cottage with the lamp ican bison. It appears that the new chief of the Ponca Indians, who live light dimly straying Through the window, thickly bowered In Oklahoma Territory, was to choose with the honeysuckle vine. his advisory council. In the old days To hla ears come strains of music, there’s when a new chief selected bls coun a sound of someone playing cil, they were taken from the band On a little cottage organ, and the notes that was most successful In a buffalo of "Auld Lang Syne.” lie hears the tea things clatter, sees a bunt. It was arranged to Imitate this ancient custom, but the contrast was woman's figure flitting Here and there, belike some fairy, and almost painful for the old-time hunt ers who can remember when millions the shimmer of her gown. And longing leads his fancy to the place of the shaggy beasts roamed the plain* where he is sitting, in freedom. Three buffaloes from a Just across from her at table in the small herd In captivity were obtained little country town. for the purpose A slxty-acre tract ivas Inclosed with a substantial stockade, Yet he sits here alone, with all the at different places were ten small cor- dreamy shadows dancing. And silent save for voices that his memory may hear, The eyes that o’er the columns of the little paper glancing Like violets, dew-misted, In the pass ing of a tear. From some, as he, are missing from the circle once unbroken, And one be knows lies sleeping where the autumn leaves are brown. Ills hair is white like silver, yet in fancy he has spoken With all those lads and lasses of the little country town. hunt are selected as the council, and when one of them dies the next best hunter among the remaining fifty ebo participated In the chase Is put In bls place. But the Poncas have been dying fast, owing to the unremitting atten tion of their enemies and the forget fulness of the Federal Government. White Eagle, who was one of the lead ers In the ghost dance in 1890, is very old, and thia fact, together with the small number of advisers left him. mads bis resignation a matter of course. As a matter of fact, this ac tion was decided upon last year, when his eon was selected, but Horse Chief, it 1c said, could not exercise authority until after the formal bunt, when his advisers would be selected. Tbe hunt bore little resemblance to that of forty years ago. Extinction of the li .on. Time was, within tbe memory of many living men. who are not so very old. either, when the American bison, or as he will perhaps always be called here, the buffalo, existed In tbe West ern country In numbers Incalculable. Between the eastern range of the Rocky Mountains and the Mississippi River they roved In herds so large as to seem Impossible to one who never PYRAMIDS OF PAIN tating skin eruptions. S. S. S. is guar anteed purely vegetable, and can be taken with perfect safety by old and young, •nd without harm ■ ________________ to the most delicate ____________ constitution. __ It _ is mild and pleasant in its action, and unequaled as a cure for boils and kindred eruptions. Write us if you would like medical advice or other information. fHt gw/TT SPECIFIC CO., 4 FLA/VTA, 64a "Speaking of canals,” said the en gineer who had been talking about Panama, "a very Interesting canal, and one not much heard of, Is that connecting the Gulf of Corinth and tbe Gulf of Aeglna in Greece. It's some older than any we have In the Western hemisphere, also, for I'erlan- der, tyrant of Corinth, proposed to cut through the Isthmus as long ago as six hundred years before Christ. Superstition stopped him, however. Julius Caesar and Caligula took It up again when Rome had hold of Greece, but It was too much for them. Then came Nero, and he went at It with vigor, but the work stopped when lie died. Others kept pounding away at it for the next several hundred years, but It was not until 1881 that real work of the Nero energy was put upon It. Then Gen. Turr, aide-de-camp to Victor Emmanuel of Italy, organ ized a company and worked on till the money gave out In 1890, the chief obstacle being some kind of a flint which dynamite couldn’t break. “About $10,000,000 was spent up to 1890, and then Mr. Syngros took hold, organized a new company, with $965,- (XX) working capital, and finished tbe Job in 1893. It Is only about four miles long, but It is 69 feet wide at the bottom, about 80 feet at waterline, 26 feet and 3 Inches deep in water, and It Is cut nearly all the way through solid rock, rising at some points for 269 feet above the canal. It Is like a canyon, and ships do not take kindly to It, the entrance being bad, a strong wind blowing through It as through a great air shaft, and there Is at times a strong reverse current. It Is an Interesting trip through the canal, and It saves 123 miles of very rough water and 20 hours of time; but so far skippers pre fer to go around the peninsula rather than through the canal, though with some changes which will be made It Is believed the canai will become of general use as soon as a few ships begin to use It and remove the pre judice now existing against It.”—Com fort. SOME QUEER SUPER8TITION8. Bad Luck Sure to Follow If You Ara Broke on Thursday. "However smart a man may be, however deep a brain, there Is yet a tract of superstition In his makeup,” said a thoughtful man to a writer on the New Orleans Tlmes-Democrat, "and often it exists and controls him In various ways without bls knowing anything about it. If you should tell him that be was superstitious he would resent it and In no uncertain way. But all men are superstitious In some way just the, same. There are little things about which men are a bit cranky and they develop Into well-rounded super stitions. There Is Ople Read, who has a queer little notion that if he gets up Thursday morning without money in his pocket It is bad luck and he be lieves In It so firmly that be will not venture out of the bouse and will not turn his hand to a piece of work If It happens to him. “He Is generally very careful to see that he has something left over Wednesday night, a nest egg, as the saying goes, for Thursday morning. But sometimes he forgets and suddenly discovers that he Is dead broke. That settles It. Not a step will he take from the house on that morning. Now, how is that for superstition? Yet, call him superstitious—well, you had better do it at long range. I know another man In Chicago who has a queer little no tion that It Is bad luck to forget any thing when you nre leaving home In the morning. One morning we bad walked to the car together. He sud denly turned on me with the state ment: ‘I’ll not go to the city to-day.' When I asked him why he said he had forgotten something. ‘It’s bad luck.’ he said, and he was uncere moniously making tracks for the house when he said It. I suppose we all have those little notions and beliefs, but we are not conscious of them and so we are apt to believe, quite honestly, too, that we are not the least bit superstl- tlous. But we are, just the same." A seif-made man seldom mixes mod I esty with the material used In bls con struction. If a friend pulls bis watch on your funny story cut It short. Selected In a Buffalo Hunt. In accordance with tbe traditional laws of the tribe, the chief and bls advisers are .elected In a buffalo bunt. At this hunt sixty bucks take part, forming twelve hunting parties of five tach. Tbs most succeMful ten In the Ayer’s Th* bloodiest battle aver fought with gunpowder waa that at Borodino, in which 62,000 Russian* aud 32,000 Frenchmen were killed. You can depend on Ayer’s Hair Vigor to restore color to your gray hair, every time. Follow directions and it never fails to do this work. It stops YOU CAN EARN $25.00 PER DAY Hair Vigor Getting Water, Oil or Coal with AUSTIN WELL DRILLS fallingofthe hair,also. There’s H great satisfaction in knowing you are not going to be disap pointed. Isn’t that so? Made in all size« and Btylea. Write for Cata logue« and list of users in the West. Beall & Co. “ My hair faded until it was about white. It took Just one bottle of A ver’s Hair Vigor to restore it to its former dark, rich color. Your Hair Vigor certainly does what you claim for it.” —A. M. B oggan , Rockingham, N. O. fl 00 a bottle. J. c. ayir 813 Commer cial Block. PORTLAND, ORB. co., ■MnBSHMMMNMHaH« fOT Fading Hair BUY CUT THROUGH SOLID ROCK. Centuries Elapsed Before Completion of Corinthian Canal. The misty eye of sorrow at the bush of dreams is seeking The rose of recollection with the frag rance of its morn. And in the ear of memory the voice of grief is speaking, The hand that plucks the blossom knows the sharpness of the thorn. His dreams die with the embers at the fireplace—ah, the pity! The paper falls from listle*. hands and idly flutters down. How lonely, lonely, lonely, is the sullen, AN OLD-TIME BUFFALO HUNT. smoky city, When the heart has come from stray ing in the little country town. rals, one for each band of warriors saw them. There Is a well-authenti —New York Times. that participated In an endeavor to lie cated story that the garrison at Fort How Crane Mimicked Hobson. chosen of Chief Horse Chief's council. Kearney actually fired their cannon at When Robson and Crane acted the Upon this occasion the band that suc an Immense herd once to prevent them "Comedy of Errors” together, Mr. ceeded ^flrst In driving tbe buffalo in taking the fort In a rush. Many officers Cruel Youth. "He said I was trill and willowy,” Crane's "Dromlo” was the most nota the corral assigned to it was declared and cavalrymen who were stationed remarked the girl who likes flattery. ble feature of the performance, for the winners. Tbe other bands were on the frontier years ago tell of travel "Do you think I look like a willow while Hobson simply represented him free to Interfere whenever possible, Ing for months at a time and never self In the garb of the Syracuse ser which brought on a kind of polo scrim being out of sight of their countless tree?” “No; you yook like a chestnut,” re vant, Crane* gave an excellent exhibi mage, with the buffaloes for tbe bnll. numbers. The bison was particularly The Poncas sent Invitations to tho numerous In Kansas at one time, torted the savage young man in the tion of bls mimetic powers by duplicat ing the "Dromlo” of bls associate. He owing to tbe fact that the buffalo loud vest. thus describes the opening night: grass was there most plentiful. At Mothera will And Mr*. Wlnelow»'» Soothing "It was one of the most Intensely times the plains were a solid, moving Syrup the bent remedy to use for their children exciting nights I ever experienced be mass of monsters; as far as the eye during the teething period.. _ hind the scenes. In making up, Rob could see they were visible In enor son dropped a huge daub of grease mous numbers. Trains were often de Horry lie Spoke. layed while a herd crossed the tracks "Oh, we have some very strong men paint on the front of bls tunic. Out of of tbe Union Pacific Railroad. in England,” boasted the new arrival pure consideration for art, I painted a similarly dirty device on my garment. At one time they roamed all over the from London. country. Naturally migratory, the In "How strong nre they?” queried the But Robson nearly destroyed the flue : fabric of consistency, to the construc dians knew their wandering habits, American citizen. and followed them. They were In those “Oh, I've seen them lift cannons, tion of which I bad sacrificed the days of the greatest value to the In cleanliness of my attltre, by walking trucks and even cars.” dians. They supplied nearly all of "Indeed. Then It Is strange that on absent-mindedly in the second act their food, and millions were slaugh none of them can lift such a small ob with a smoking cigar protruding from tered each year for the sustenance of his mouth. Just previous to bls en- ’ ject as the yacht cup.” the red man. Not only did the buffalo trance in the first act he declaimed bls , supply food, but furnished them with speech In the wings, and from thlB I $100 Reward, $100. robes and hides for clothing and The readers of this paper will be pleased to took the key, which I had to hold con learn that there is at least one dreaded disease stantly In mind. My lines were only dwellings. that science has been able to cure lit all Its The Indians made tools from the stages, and that Is t atarrh. Hall's Catarrh partly committed, so that between: Cure la the only positive euro known to the thinking of Robson's peculiar voice i hide, horns and bones of the buffalo. medical fraternity. Catarrh tolng a constitu The hide of the bulls was tanned and tional dl-caso, requires a constitutional treat and mannerisms—which I was expect ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, used for lodge covers. Dried In the acting directly upon the blood and mucous ed to imitate falthiully—and of my I sun after the hair was removed, the surlaees of the system, thereby destroying the own speeches—which should have been , foundation of the .liaease, and giving the pa- hide became almost as hard as flint, tleut strength by building up the constitution delivered with equal fidelity to Shak- anti assisting nature in doing its work. The speare—I sweltered In body and mind and was used for moccasin soles and WHITE EAGLE. proprietors have so much faith in Its curative belts. Laid on the ground, the dried Ktwers that they offer One Hundred Hollars all night—Leslie's Monthly. r any case that it fails to cure. Send lor list Usages, Pawnees, Raws, Tonkawas, hide kept out tbe dampness and form Ills la,tier. of testimonials. — . . ~ Otoes, Missourls. Cheyennes, Arapa ed a fairly good bed. Raw hide was Address. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, 0. When Willie Blank was at the sea hoe» and other tribes in Oklahoma to cut into strands and braided Into Sold by druggists, 76c. Hall's Family Pills are the beat. shore last summer his father wrote to be present. Hundreds of Indians ac ropes. Green hide was converted Into him quite frequently, and hi each let cepted, more especially to see the buf Letties and also into canoes. Battle Easily Done. ter Inclosed 10 cents or a quarter to | faloes, which are now so rare as to shields, which were impervious to ar Tess—Well, I believe I’m rid of Mr. add to the little lad's pleasure. Willie be actual curiosities. A real buffalo rows or lances, were made from the Staylute at Inst. was no letter-writer, but one day he' hunt In the brave days of old was thick hide of the neck of the buffalo. Jess—How ou earth did you accom managed to compose the following very exciting and often attended with No part of the valuable beast went to plish It? comprehensive epistle, which he sent much danger. What a change! The waste with the Indian. Tess—While lie was calling upon me to his father: modern travesty was nothing more Enough has been told to show that last night 1 remarked tlint "all hand "Deare I’apa—I got all your leters, than driving a few tame cattle to some men were conceited bores.” Then and you have put some mutiny In each corral. be said: "Indeed! 1 can take a hint one of them. Flense write oftener. There are a little more than a hand as well as the next one,” and left— Your hiving son, WILLIAM." ful of the Poncas left; If the white Philadelphia Press. —Woman's Home Companion. man ever found a good Indian, which tome claim to be an Impossibility, tbe Ponca was a near approach to that Ideal. The tribe was part of the Sioux nation, and the original borne was near n branch of the Red River and I^ke Winnipeg. The Poncas have always enjoyed a reputation for being very peaceable. They were driven from Boils show the blood is in a riotous, feverish their Red River home by their old enemy, the Chippewas, who forced condition, or that it has grown too weak and slug them beyond the Missouri River. Fol gish to throw off the bodily impurities, which lowing them up closely, the Chippewas then concentrate at some spot, and a carbuncle drove them away once more, when or boil is the result. To one already enfeebled 7 they joined the Omnlias, which alli by disease, boils seem to come with more frequency, - ance has had the effect of preventing causing the intense«! pain and greatest danger to the already weak and tlielr annihilation. debilitated sufferer. All skin eruptions, from the sometimes fatal car Although a part of the Sioux nation, buncle to the spiteful little cat-boil, are caused by bud blood, and the the other tribes kept up a relentless only way to avoid or get permanently rid of them is to purify and war upon the Poncas, as did the Paw build up the deteriorated, polluted blood, and counteract the humors ncss Usages and the Kansas Indians. and poisons; and nothing will d<* this so ouickly and thoroughly as What these ware left, smallpox and S. S. S., which is the acknowledged king of blood purifiers and great the white man's vice* nearly finished, TEPEES or THE PONCAS. est of all tonics. Where the blood has become impoverished and is and from a total of about tl.000 there are only alamt fits» now. The remnant the practical extinction of the buffalo poor and thin, no medicine acts so promptly in building up and restor was placed on a reservation, near the was not due to the Indian, but to tho ing its richness, purity and mouth of the Niobrara River. In Ne white man. While the Indian never Allegheny, Pa., June 11, 1903. strength. The time to cure From tho atre of twenty or thirty I wn sorely braska. and here their Ill-luck follow killed more than was needed, the white a boil is before it devel afflicted with large, awful boil« on my face and ed them. This time It was not their slaughtered relentlessly. Then, ! ops, when it is in a state body. Aa soon as they would heal up in one place Indian enemy, but the Federal Gov man too, the white hunter, when he was | they would break out in another part of the body, of incubation or formation and thia continued Uncle a hunter and not merely a tenderfoot for ten years. I tried every eminent which foiled them. in the blood; for boils are, thing I oould hear of to get relief, but nothing Sam neglected the terms of the treaty cut on a sporting excursion, would did me any good. I had but little faith in S. S. S. after all, only the impuri doing me good when I began it, but after taking made with them, and once more they simply take the fur bide and leave tho ties and poisons bubbling it for a short while the boila began to disappear. became nomads, forced to hunt for carcass to the wolves. He wa* very I continued on with the medicine, taking eix bot subsistence. They nearly starved to wasteful, and the "sportsman" xvbo up through the skin, and tle«, and all the boile entirely disappeared. Five this will continue in spite year« have elapeed since that time, and I have death, and. as If destiny had something *l>ent a day. killing off perhaps bun been bothered eince, showing that the cure worse In story for them, they were of poulticing and lancing never was permanent. I had aome thirty or forty of till the blood gets rid of the mn«t painful boils one ever had, and to be forcibly removed to Indian Territory, rid of them by your great purifier, where the unwholesome water killed its accumulated poison. entirely 8- 8. 8., puts ms under a debt of gratitude to off their animals and depopulated HENRY ZINN. The way to stop boils is you. their ranks. to attack them in the blood, Forty year* ago. when Chief White •nd this is what S. S. . 8. S. doei. doe*, All danger of boils is past when the Eagle was chosen, there were about blood has been thorou ughly purified and the system cleansed of all mor H.OtXl In the tribe. Only eight survive bid, impure matter. 1 ii you are subject to l>oilsv then the same causes of those who hunted the buffalo at hla that produced them last season will do so this, and the sooner you begin Inauguration. The Council of Advisers to put your blood and system in good consist of ten, and since lie can no order the better the chance of going longer draw the necessary quorum he through the spring and summer season has retired, and his son. Horse Chief, without boils or other painful and irri takes Ills place at bead of the tribe. BOILS dreds, would not touch the meat, al though tbe knowing ones found the buffalo steak superior to that of the beef of commerce. The excitement of the old-time buf falo bunt was whetted by tbe danger which It entailed, for, while the huge animal of the plains was, generally speaking, a peaceable beast, the habits of tbe bison were such that to become entangled In a herd was a perilous po sition for both borse and rider. They were easily frightened, aud, like sheep, followed their leaders blindly. This fact also made It difficult for the old bulls wbo always grazed at the head of the herd to stop a stampede, when once It occurred. The force behind them would push them forward, and many instances are known where tbe leaders, stumbling or pushed over a cliff, would have the whole herd plied up over them In a mangled mass. It la easy to Bee the perils of a hunter ugalnst a force like this, which, once started, did not stop until exhaustion overtook those behind. Buffalo hunting was a science, and was only to be en gaged In safely by those who thor oughly understood the methods of their prey. ___________________ Special Inducement. Prospective Purchaser—I see you ad vertlse a special Inducement lu engage ment rings. What Is It? Jeweler—Well, we guarantee to re purchase any ring we sell within six mouths. ».Keeley lipuor - morphine - tobacco ’'Eure HANTS PERMANENTLY CURED sjAWiii ,ULL PAATKULAR5 —“ Fine Finish. They had bought a» upright piano FROM YOUR DEALER on the pay-weekly plan. "John,” she said one day, “I want you to stand off and take note of the exterior of this CHAMPION piano. Can you see its finish?” "I should say so,” sighed John. "When the installment man comes.” Plso'* Cure Is a good cough medicine. It has cured coughs and colds for forty years. At druggists, 25 cents. Quite a Pretentious Structure. Marla—What did Martha's new hat look like? John—Goodness, I can’t tell! It look ed more like a basket phaeton full of flowers than anything else.—Cincin nati Commercial-Tribune. riTQ Permanently cured. ivo fits or nervousneM f 11 U after first day’s uaeof Dr.Kline’sGreat Nerv« Restorer. Send fur Free • 4 trial bottle and treatise» Dr. B. U. Kline, Ltd..U? Arch St. Philadelphia, Pa. Draw Cut, no push. Added Power, cuts where others won’t. Prices right. When you buy, Buy the Best. Buy the Champiou Mowers, Rakes, and Binders. MITCHELL, False Hopes. Flaunigan—Say, Moike, this won’t do. People say you are shwate on Mrs. Fla herty—and she a married woman. Mike—I’hwist! Not a wurrd. Thot’s onlj so Oi can go on borryin’ terbacky av old Flaherty. He’s in hopes Oi’ll •lope wid ’er. LEWIS & COMPANY Flr.t and Taylor St.. P. N. U. STAVER PORTLAND, ORB No. 28—100*. [W HEN writing to advertisers plea«« mention this paper. The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne signa ture of Chas. II. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good ” are but Experiments, and endanger the health of Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTOR IA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothbig Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THI CtNTAUR COMPANY. Tt MURRAY STREIT, NEW YORK CITY. n RUSSIAN CURE Your HORSE of HEAVES p HEAVE 1 OWDERS Distemper or Pink Eye with P russian H bavi P owder «. They ARB A GREAT BLOOD PURIFIER AND CONDITIONER, a sure cure for all ailments from which heave« CURED 34 HORSES. ¡have been using Prussian Heave Powders the past eight months and in that time have cured 11 horses of Heaves 14 of Distemper ami p of Chronic Couch. •c Pk<, at Dealers. Mail.Me Free M-Pue Hand Book. ERNEST BEHNCKK. Newark, Newark Pru,9iin Remedy Co.. St. Psui. Mian. PORTLAND SEED CO.. Portland. Or.. Coast Agent« RUSSELL £NGINE bsoiler S mills High Grade stackers 5 Machinery Write for Catalogue and Prices The A. H. Averill Machinery Co. POD AIN 1MPORTA NT S T E IN PLACING YOUR ORDER FOR A THRESHING OUTFIT Investigate the Advance line of thresh, era and engines. They coat leaa to op erate, require fewer repair* and do more and better work in all kinds of grain than any other make. Straw or wood and coal burning engine*. Alao a full line of single and double Portable Saw Milla. ADVANCF THRESHERS ^'ENQINES Thoroughly reliable and moat durable machinery in the market. Honest in const ruction. Satisfactory in operation. Self Feelers, Stackers, Baggers and all attachment*. Drop ua a postal aud our traveling man will call. REMNANT OF A BUFFALO HERO. ADVANCE THRESHER CO. Kraneb Roow>, Plough , Warehouse, near O. R. A X. FreLxht Depot, Bpokaaa loon; Suet, rertlMid. urn ML Bel-