hl Assalis proba- » house ack on States Repre- presen- Presi- inistra- ck lev- weeks et, of: 1perate. fore he en sSen- several yutburst rent un- d* yield- , on the [awney, eo, took ring the i grant- ver an t (New ion lim- of the r para n bill is >gident’s ongress. eral de- detec- - { Dealing asses t is au-’ 't of in- fications rged ne- th infan- cused of ., on the purpose of 56 to er voted passage measure, oosevelt, the Re- ommittee irt of in- consider 1ent and > duty of nd guilty ENT epent at not to Miss iress aft- W. Sar- ent busi- ommitted. > promise. years he’ maniac. the mar- ather, he ‘wore out est as in- S in cus- fter his to. spend inder po- however, both of on that he , paralyti- e district ce signed to an in- st. post serv- ractically h 1, with , a pound 1 pounds. r, will not und limit ce, Hong- pected to 180, ruled flicted on ch govern- . defeat for ENTS - Homes for ms. n K. Van- more than of four ons suffer- moderate ants. - » Ss : ling inter » National d into the sm and at ate senate. been con- eaded by nsideration le controll- s not been to exceed ected. nous vote 1drews was ily elected from New ‘he contest =S FREE ustified hy ct. tzicne, 20 a bride of :d her hus- unable to brutal con- rder in the n. een shown se of her r husband’s a streets. Suse . Home ‘tion, MUST BELIEVE IT. Every Reader Will Concede the Truth of This Statement. - One who suffers with backache or any form of kidney trouble wants a - : cure, not merely tem- porary benefit. Rev. Maxwell S. Rowland, of Toms River, N. J., makes a statement in -this connection that is worth attention. Says he: “Iwas sud- denly taken with an attack of kidney trouble, had severe pains in my back and loins and was generally run down. Doctors were not helping me, 80 I be- : gan using Doan’s Kidney Pills. They brought me prompt relief, and as I continued tak- ing them the pains in my back disap- peared and the kidneys were restored ‘. to normal condition.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. : Ea Random Shots. I shot an arrow into the air, it fell in the distance, I knew not where, till a neighbor said that I killed his calf, and I had to pay him six and a half ($6.50). I bought some poison to slay some rats, and a neighbor swore that it killed his cats; and, rather than argue across the fence, I paid him four dollars and fifty cents ($4.50). One night I set sailing a toy balloon, and hoped it would soar till it reached the moon; but the candle fell out on a farmer’s straw, and he said I must settle or go to law. And that is the way with the random shot; it never hits in the proper spot; and the. joke you spring, that you think so smart, may leave a wound in some fellow’s heart.—Em- poria Gazette. A Cure For Colds and Grip. There is inconvenience, suffering and danger in a cold, and the wonder 1s that pepe will take so few precautions against colds. One or two Lane's Pleasant Tablets (be sure of the name) taken when the first snuffly feeling appears, will stop the pro- gress of a cold and save a great deal of un- necessary suffering. and dealers erally sell these tablets, price 25 cents. you cannot get them send to Orator F. Woodward, Le Roy, N. Y. Sample free. France Alarmed. France stands alarmed by an in- crease of something like 10 per cent in four years in the cost of food, clothing and other necessary supplies. Milk is 13 per cent higher, meat 27 per cent, cheese 16 per cent, oil 25 per cent. The price of rice has doub- led. Rents follow the upward trend. BrATE oF OHIro, City oF TOLEDO, ss. UCAS COUNTY, 1 J. CHENEY makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F.J. Y Co., doing business in the City of Toledo County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay thesum of ONE HUNDRED DOL~ LARS for each and every case of CATARRH that cannot be cured by the use of HALL’S CATARRH CURE. FRARK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my resence, this 6th day of December, A. D., Tes6. . W. GLEASON, ET ; Notary Public. ’s Catarrh Cureistakeninternally,and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur- faces of the eystom. Send for testimonials, F. J. CrErEY & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all ts, 750. lake Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Woman Suffrage in Sweden. Woman suffrage goes marching on, notwithstanding the frequent rebuffs it ‘receives in so many directions. ' The latest notable practical victory for equal suffrage is the recent vote of the Swedish Diet. In the upper house the vote stood 120 to 98, and 134 to 98 in the lower house. Hence- forward both sexes over 24 years of age stand on the same equality. ae 5 Many Children Are Sickly. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, used by Mother Gra Children’s . Y., cure Feverishness, Constipa- mach Troubles, Teething Disor- ders, Destroys Worms. , 25. Ys N.Y. 10 All Sample FREE. A. 8. Olmsted, Le Never Navigated It. The President thought Salt river was a myth until he saw it with his own eyes on his recent visit to Ken- tucky. Such an opinion was justi- fiable in a man who had risen to the presidency without ever having en- countered the stream. — Louisville Courier-Journal. A Domestic Eye Remedy Compounded by Experienced Physicians. Conforms to Pure Food and Laws. Wins Friends Wherever Used. Ask Drug- gists for Murine Eye Remedy. Try Murine. Harrassed by Doubt. When her husband ate the bread she had made her joy was for the mo- ment complete. But presently there gathered the inevitable cloud of doubt. “Is it because he loves me,” she asked herself, “or is it to keep me from making bread pudding?” Not in the inscrutable face of the man could she an answer find.—De- troit Journal. Stiff neck! , Doesn’t amount to much, ighty di > You've:no idea. how quickly a. lttle Hamling Wizard Oil will lubricate the cords and make you comfortable again. Rider Haggard classes Sparrows with rats as “vermin” and recom- mends a campaign against them. I Keep It on Hand! Coughs and colds i y am oe of the family sny time bad cold has of Piso's Cure. hikeit tobreak up coughs and colds. is no x or lung trouble that it will not relieve. B Free from opiates or ine gredients, Fine for children, At all druggists’, 25 cts. Moisten a square of cream cheese, add a little rich cream, and beat with a fork until smooth. Mix with-it one- half cupful of chopped blanched al- monds, and add lightly one cupful whipped eream. Serye cold with a scant teaspoon currant jam on each ‘portion = with salad course.—New York World. : Ye Old Election Cake. Four pounds flour, 3 pounds sugar, 2 pounds butter, whites of 6 eggs, 4 nutmegs, 1 quart sweet milk, 11-2 pounds raisins, 1-2 pint home-made yeast, juice and rind of 2 lemons. Cream thoroughly butter and sugar, divide; with onehalf mix flour, milk and yeast; when light, add the other half of butter and sugar, eggs, rai- sins and -flavoring; beat thoroughly, put in pans, rise till light. Bake" with great care.—Boston Post. Liver Loaf. : Soak a lamb’s liver and heart in cold water until the blood is dis- gorged, then place in a stewpan with one calf’s tongue and one-half pound of lean fresh pork. Add one scant teaspoon salt, a dash of pepper and, tied together in a thin bit of muslin, four cloves, six allspice berries and half of a ‘bay leaf. Pour over barely enough boiling water to cover and simmer gently four hours. Trim off all fat, tubes and gristle and chop fine. Add a little more salt if need- ed and a shake of pepper and just enough of the hot liquor to moisten. Pack in a greased pan, cover with a plate and weight, let stand over night, when it will be ready to slice. It is the best way to let it cool in the Hquor in which it was cooked before chopping.—New York World. That Breakfast. “The young housewife wonders what breakfast should be served to guests. First prepare baked apples and have them hot to be served with cream and sugar ;they are more ap- petizing than cold fruit. Serve well cooked cereal, preferably hot, with cream and sugar, and as most guests are eager for their coffee quite early, serve it hot with heated cream. Thin slices of ham can be served. Do not prepare meats that have previously been cooked and made into creamed hash, especially the first morning. Corn cakes are a delicacy and if the hostess is doing her own work, she should bake the cakes while the guests are eating fruit and cereal. It is not necessary to serve a vege- table. After cakes are served the hostess can place a finger bowl at each plate. French fried toast is very delicious and is made by dip- ping slices of bread into beaten egg and milk, then fried in hot butter. An omelet of finely chopped dried beef in water without sugar, then dropped into a thick brown sugar syrup in which a stick of cinnamon has been boiled, make a good fruit dish to serve at the beginning of a meal.—New Haven Register. Hints to Housekeepers. Laying tough meat in vinegar a few minutes will make it tender. Don’t have a hot oven for simple milk puddings or the milk will curdle. Don’t forget to have the oven, whether fire or gas, at proper heat before putting in meat or pastry. Don’t put cheese, muskmelons, onions, or other pungent articles in the refrigerator as the odor will taint the milk, butter and other foods. Ink stains may be removed by pouring melted mutton tallow over them before putting the garments in the wash. The tallow should be al- lowed to get cold before the garment is washed. Stains on willow or Wicker furni- ture may be readily washed off with hot water and soap, and when thor- oughly dried in the sun the cleansed parts if shellacked with white will look just like the rest of the chair, table or settee. This treatment is only for the pieces that have a natural finish. Fresh mint for cooking purposes may be had at any time by growing it in a glass jar of water. It will grow rapidly. It is much stronger and bushier if kept short. Don’t change the water. All that is neces- sary is to add a little fresh water every day or so and to see that the jar is kept well filled up. A nickel-plated chafing dish that has become rusiy and dull after months of disuse may eb made to look quite new. Cover it with a coat of mutton tallow, which should be allowed to remain on the dish for three or four days. After removing the tallow, give it a thorough rub- bing with powdered rottenstone, then wash off in a strong solution of am- monia and warm water, and lastly polish with dry whiting. To wash without boiling the clothes, have the tub partly flled with warm water, but not hot. Take each article and soap all soiled parts, using naphtha soap (this is essen- tial); roll up the articles as they are soaped and pack them in the tub, which should contain just enough of the warm water to cover them. Let lie over night or for two or .three hours. Then add more warm water; rinse in two clear waters, and then in blue water. Starch the pieces that need to be starched and hang out to dary. FIMRGE AND THIDE REVEW WEATHER IS UNFAVORABLE Commodities in Less Demand, With Prices Unsatisfactory and Collections Poor. - New York.—Bradstreet’s sums up the trade conditions as follows: “While there has been some ex- pansion in house jobbing trade in dry goods, millinery and kindred lines, and business in agricultural imple- ments, seeds and fertilizers has been large, the unsettlement caused by price reductions in the iron, steel and other metal markets, the weakness in securities and the nearer approach of tariff revision have all made for a degree of uncertainty not so plainly visible for a long time past. Weather conditions, too, have played a part in arresting retail trade, county roads are in bad shape, farmers’ deliveries are affected despite attractive prices for grain, and there has been, in fact, an apparent slowing down in the cur- rent of trade, which, however tem- porary it may be, has tended to make comparisons with a year ago at this time, largely favorable as they still are, less satisfactory than was ex- pected. some time ago. “As yet the reductions announced, or believed to be impending, in the metal markets have not made for a large business being booked. The coal and coke trades respond sympa- thetically to the unsettlement in metals, and there is also evidence that over-production of coarse cotton yarns will force a reduction in out- put. The finer grades of cotton goods are, however, in good shape, mills are behind on deliveries, the leading woolen goods interests are re- ported to have booked orders equal to last year’s entire output, and the wool market is strong, with foreign wools chiefly bought, because of the -gearcity of stocks of domestic grades. “Reports from the rubber shoe manufacturing industry are better and mills employing 10,000 hands resumed. “Shoe trade reports are that manu- facurers are busy on spring orders. Leather is quiet and some imperfect lots are easier. “Business failures in the United States for the week ending with Feb- ruary 25 were 244, against 282 last week, 311 in the like week of 1908, 194 in 1907, 180 in 1906 and 28 in 1905.” "MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat—No. 2 red.......oceaneenns Corn—No. 2 yellow, ear.. 71 72 _. No. 2 yellow, shelled. 69 70 > ix GBF. crsevnsvres 64 60 Oats—No. £ white savseee. Di 55 0.8 white...........cs 2 53 Flour—Winter patent..... 595 6 00 Fancy straight winters Hay—No. 1 Timothy....... 1350 14 75 Clover No. 1.......... 1125 11 0) Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton 2050 30 00 Brown middlings........ 2607 .28 00 Bran, bulk......... 2400 24 00 Straw—W heat 800 850 Obta...ossesineeens 500 R] 5) Dairy, Products Butter—~Elgin creamery 34 35 Ohio creamery...... 24 28 Fancy country roll 19 x Cheese—Ohio, new.. 4 15 New York, new.... oe 18 1 Poultry, Etc. Hens—per 1b.......... Sssessansenes $ 11 15 Chickens—aressed......... 18 20 Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh. 31 85 Frults and Vegetables. Potatoes—Fanty white per bu.... Vi:] <0 Cabbage—per ton ......cc eee .~ee 330) 330) Onions—per barrel...........e..s» 140 150 BALTIMORE. Flour—Winter Patent.... 5 90 Wheat—No. 2 red...... Corn—Mixed..... .2coeensnenene casae 70 71 EE Boeesssaresiioat sosrernsinravise 34 86 Butter—Ohio creamery...ccc.... . 32 3 PHILADELPHIA. Flour—Winter Paten 6 00 Wheat—No. 2 red.. 12 Corn—No. 2 mixed. Jats—No. 2 white.. Butter—Creamery............. .. Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts...... ve 2 30 NEW YORK. Flour—Patents........... Wheat—No. 2red..... Corn—No. 2... Oats—No. 2 white. . Butter--Creame: . Eggs—State and Pennsylvania.... ct LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. CATTLE Extra, 1450 to 1600 pounds.......... 640 @ } 60 Prime, 1800 to 1400 pounds. 615@ 6 35 Good, 1200 to 1300 pounds . 59) @ 6 10 Tidy, 1050 to 1150 pounds.. 56) @ 58 Fair, 200 to 1100 pounds... . 49 @ 550 Common, 700 to 900 pounds. ........ 42@ 47 LD REE Ea SE 850 @ 5 5G Cows...... Sreuvssassas tess ane nnsy 00000160) @55 00 HOGS Prime, heavy... ......c...vreicenerney 68) @ 68 Prime, medium weight.............. 675 8 Best DOAVY YOrKers.......oveeeiunn. 665 @ 67 Light Yorkers..... 633 @86 45 : 615@ 62> 55) @ 6 30 450 @ 500 SHEEP Prime Welhers... ....c...v. eo ccnesres 57 @58) Good mixed. ..... Ji. ras 540 2 5 65 Fair mixed ewes and wethers. 450 @ 5% Culls and commoan....... 25) @ 400 Spring lambs....... 5:0 @ 700 eal calves......... . 70) @ 950 Heavy to thin calves................ 400 @ 60 The Prodigal’s Return. Martha -had been naughty so naughty that tz.e punishment had been severe. Martha thought it too severe, and decided that she would run away from a home where people were un- just, unreasonable and cruel. She stay- ed away two hours; then the pangs of homesickness overcame her and she went back. To her great sur prise, there was no demonstration over her return; every one had been | so busy that her absence was unno- ticed. Martha felt that some thing must be said, so in order to attract attenticn to ther return, she remarked attenticn to her return, she remarked: “1 see you have the same old cat-” —The Delineator The largest barometer in the world has recently been made in Florence. The tube is more than 40 feet high and 8 inches in diameter. ‘The Danish The Century. | The March Century is to be a “White House number,” having, in addition to Calvin Dill Wilson's story of “Our Presidents Out of Doors” and William H. Crook’s reminiscences of “Rutherford B. Hayes in the White ITouse,” three sketches of President- elect Taft. James A. LeRoy has written of “Taft as Administrator,” picturing his “traits and methods as revealed by his work in the Philip- pines; and there will be an anony- mous study of “The Personality of the New President.” Under title of “Turning Points in Mr. Taft's Ca- reer” will be published, for the first time, two letters, in one of which Mr. Taft sets forth reasons for .de- clining to be considered for the pres- idency of Yale, and in the other dis- cusses his appointment on the Phil- ippines Commission. : $33.00 Personally Conducted Ex- cursions. Colonists’ one-way tickets, Chicago to the Pacific coast, via the Chicago, Union Pacific and Northwestern Line, are on sale daily during March and April atthe rate of $33.00. Corre- spondingly low rates from all points. Double berth in tourist sleeping car only $7.00, through without change to San Francisco, Los Angeles and Portland. No extra charge on our personally conducted tours. Write for itinerary and full particulars to S. A, Hutchison, Manager Tourist Depart- ment, 212 Clark street, Chicago, Ill Ice Caverns in Greenland. It is well known that during the warm season water from the melting of glacier ice runs down through the crevasses to the lower end of the gla- cier, where, making a way for itself, it forms a river underneath the ice. In the Arctic regions this phenome- non sometimes assumes extraordin- ary importance. Says this paper: expedition of Mylius- Ericksen to the northeast coast of Greenland, discovered.and explored there immense caverns formed in this way. They were more than a mile and a quarter long and 65 feet high. When the cold season returns, the rivers that form these caves cease to flow, but the caverns remain in their majesty, ready to receive the new streams that will start when the ice begins to melt again.—Literary uI- gest. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Pilea in 6 to 14 days or money ded. 50c. | Their Own Fault. Two women who sued a Newark street railway company for damages sustained by falling off a street car lost their case because they wore un- usually high heels on their shoes. One of the plaintiffs declined to put her shoes in evidence when requested to do so. It was asserted that the heels, which were of ‘‘stiltlike proportions,” were responsible for the injury of the plaintiffs and not any carelessness on the part of the company’s employes. Singers and Speakers use Brown's Bronchial Troches for Hoarseness and Throat Troubles. They giveinstant relief. In boxes 25 cents. Samples mailed free. John I. Brown & Son, Boston, Mass. Germany is freely imitating Amer- ican patterns in the manufacture of farm implements ‘and machinery, though American harvesters still pre- dominate. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. The two leading pottery states— New Jersey and Ohio—produced in 1907 more than 68 per cent of the pottery of the entire country. Kemps Balsam Will stop any cough that can be stopped by any medicine and cure coughs that cannot be cured by any other medicine. It is always the best cough cure. You cannot afford to take chances on any other kind. e ole KEMP'S BALSAM cures coughs, colds, bronchitis, grip, asthma and consump- tion in first stages. It does not contain alco- hol, opium, morphine, or any other narcotic, poison- ous or harmful drug. d Wear ed and they keep you dry while ro Yre wearing them *300 EVERYWHERE CATALOG FREE A.JTOWER CO. BOSTON. USA. ~ TOWER CANADIAN 0. umiTep, TorRONTO, CAN. PRINTING PLANT FOR SALE. Newspaper and Job Plant, Swissvale Borough, 8,000 population. Brick building, cylinder and 3 platen presses, gas engine, Simplex typesetter, cutter, stapler, stereotypirg outfit, lots of type, stones, etc. Cheap at $7,000. Price $5,500; $3,000 cash required. Address W. J. CUPPLES, Swissvale, Pa. come a real estate nt, and earn from $1000 to $10,000 a year. We furnish you the information and the property. No town is too small for you | to operate in. SOUTH CHESAPEAKE BEACH LAND | CO., Ine, 520-521 Munsey Bldg., Washington, D. C. : PUTNAM VERY RICH MAN 1s, camed Sa est | i | Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dre, can dye any garment without ripping apart. Write We know of no other medicine which has been so sme cessful in relieving the suffering of women, or secured sm many genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound. In almost every community you will find women whee have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound. Almost every woman you meet fas either been benefited by it, or knows some one who has. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files cm taining over one million one hundred thousand letters fmm women seeking health, in which many openly state ue their own signatures that they have regained their healthy taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has sawed many women from surgical operations. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is made ex clusively from roots and herb The reason hy it is so suc ingredients which act directl s, and is perfectly harmless. cessful is because it contams y upon the female orgamim, restoring it to healthy and normal activity. Thousands of unsolicited and genuine testimonials sui as the following prove the efficiency of this simple remedig. Minneapolis, Minn.: —%I wa sa great sufferer from femal troubles which caused a weakness and broken down ¢ of the system. I read so much of what Lydia E, Pinkham Vegetable Compound had done for other suffering women, Iii sure it would help me, and I must say it did help fully. Within three months I was a perfectly wel me WOINAE. «I want this letter made public to show the benefits to Be derived from Lydia’ E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compousd-™— Mrs.JohnG.Moldan, 2115 Seco nd St. North, Minneapolis, Mmm. Women who are suffering from those distressing is peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of these fis or doubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetatiie Compound to restore their health. Food Regulated by Law. Although the majority of royal per- sondges are noted for their lavish dinner tables, there is at least one reigning monarch whose meals are of the simplest. = This monarch is the Emperor of China. His whole life is lived in obedience to the most strin- gent etiquette and his food is all reg- ulated for him by statute. W.L.DOUGLAS $300 SHOES $350" The Reason I Make and Sell More Men's $3.00 & $8.50 Shoes Than Any Other Manufacturer is because I give the wearer the benefit of the most complete organization of trained experts and skilled shoemakers in the country. The selection of the leathers for each part of the shoe, and every detail of the making every department, is look the best shoemakers in the shoe industry. If I could show wa how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold their shape, fit better, and wear longer thar any so make. My Method of Tanning the Soles makes them More Flexible and Longer Wearing than any others. Shoes for Every Member of the Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses and Children. - For sale by shoe dealers everywhere. CAUTION | None genuine without W. L. Douglas : name and price stamped on bottom. Fast Color Eyelets Used Exclusively. Catalog mailed free. W. L. DOUGLAS, 167 Spark St., Brockton, Mass. TOILET ANTISEPTIC —— NOTHING LIKE IT FOR THE TEETH Paxtine excels any dentifrice in cleansing, whitening and removing tartar from the teeth, besides destroying all germs of decay and disease which ordinary tooth preparations cannot do. THE MOUTH Paxtine used asa mouth- wash disinfects the mouth and throat, purifies the breath, and kills the germs which collect in the mouth, causing sore throat, bad teeth, bad breath, grippe, and much sickness. THE EYES when inflamed, tired, ache and bum, may be instantly relieved and :' sgthened by Paxtine. c AT ARRH Paxtine will destroy the germs that cause catarrh, heal the in- flammation and stop the discharge. It is a sure remedy for uterine catarrh. Paxtine is a harmless yet powerful germicide, disinfectant and deodorizer. 2 Used in bathing it destroys odors and Fema leaves the body antiseptically clean. REESE FOR SALE AT DRUG STORES,50c. : OR POSTPAID BY MAIL. } LARGE SAMPLE FREE! kei’ THE PAXTON TOILET CO., BOSTON, MASS. ESTABLISHED 18: 9 mre THIS IS HOT A SINS UGERE[ 50 One 10c. Dp. for free booklet—How to OproneTRISTS “705 Lenn ve Lok. ELE vye, Bleaca and Mix Co e colors all fibers. They dye in CUTICURA LONIORT FOR LITTLE FAT FOLKS Most grateful and comforting ide a warm bath with Cuticura Seg and gentle anointings with Gsi- cura. This pure, sweet, econmm- ical treatment brings immedstts relief and refreshing sleep to skas- tortured and disfigured little cxess and rest to tired, fretted moter. For eczemas, rashes, itches, irritations and chafings, Cuties Soap and Cuticura Ointment zx worth their weight in gold. Sold throughout the world. : Londen "0%, Sq.: Paris, Charterh 5, Rue de {a Paix. Seton aR. TY ney; Indis, B. EK Bwiil 60 c=. Per Salzer’s catalog, page 122. JES i Largest growers of seed potatoes amd vegetables in the worid. Big catalog : send 1@c. in stamps and receive catalog asdH 1000 kernels each of onions, carrots, eefeny,h fd radishes, 00 lettuce, i 100 parsley, 100 tomatoes, I eloms, IN BB charming flower greeds, in all 10,006 kernels, Be easily worth 1.00 of any man’s money. GF, i send 2@c. and we add one package of Enrfiesil: Bl Peep O'Day Sweet Corn. I SALZER SEED C9O., Box A.C., La Crosse, WE ETERS Ce J PP. N. U 10 199). marek Thompson's Eye Walk SS DYES 3 n cold water better thun any other dye Te lors. MONROE DRUG CO., Quiney. LilSodis