THE VALENTINE DEMOCRAT' ' I. M BIOE , Publisher. NEBRASKA The time to boast is when you don't need to. A bad memory is the War's night mare. It's an easy matter to bear the aches of another's corns. As a rule , men , donkeys and facts we stubborn things. Wars and rumors of wars are all the lame to the Chicago packers. The only effective prison bars are those wo forge with our habits. Never waste your time arguing re ligion with a man whose wife takes in washing. A man must put his best foot upward ta well as forward if he would reach the top of the ladder. Japan's war god certainly looks fierce enough to eat up a pretty good- sized piece of the map. Although to-morrow may never tome , the morning after the night be fore invariably arrives. A New York infant is addicted to taps that last twenty-four hours. Who wouldn't have a baby like that ? Somebody will Invent a new color one of these days , and then the yellow Journals will be printed in it with treat eclat. At a church fair lottery in Kansas in editor drew a gun. He will now go over his books and send out new no tices to delinquents. Aguinaldo Is to be a commissioner to the St Louis exposition. A few fears ago he alone might have been worth the price of admission. If that successful trackless train tould be induced to emigrate from France to this country , we might have fewer collisions ; for how could two trains meet on a trackless track ? Denmark ridicules the idea. Give ap Greenland ? Never ! Greenland's Icy mountains shall forever be a part of the imperial domain of grand old Denmark ! Now will Canada be good ? It is said that Wagner's widow re ceives $10,000 a month in royalties on her husband's works , in spite of the composer's bad business methods. Genius does not always , like virtue , "get it in the neck. " It is figured out by some one that the average traveling man , preacher or teacher , talks 12,000 words a day. Has anybody computed the speed of the lawsinith "knocker" who wags his chin all day in saying nothing ? A Brooklyn woman whose first name la Ann has attained the age of 107 years. Those people who have recent ly been making such persistent inquir ies concerning the age of Ann are doubtless regarded by her as being rather impertinent. In the days of the prophets religious worship was a matter of the most .oleinn and impressive form. But since then the times have changed and men have changed with them. In ancient days people were called to prayer by the sounding of the shofar ; now their attention is attracted by brass bands and theatrical devices. In Borne quarters. Indeed , religion seems to have become more of a diversion , m the hands of some of its propagators , than a very serious spiritual affair in volving the eternal welfare of Immor tal souls. Civilization has broken in China. The fall-orbed day of modern enlighten ment In the celestial empire Is at hand. A real modern circus , sawdust ring , ac robats , clowns ; popcorn and pink lem onade , has been welcomed to the pal ace grounds in Pekin , and the Dow ager , entranced by its charms , attend ed both the afternoon and evening per formances. The rest is easy. Rail roads , electric cars , the corset and the Parisian gown will follow. Here's to the auto and the circus tent true har bingers of the light that has broken In benighted China at last Too many persons who pose as mor alists have no sense of proportion. They are inclined to judge all the rich by the worst specimens of the wealthy , just as they might judge all the per sons engaged In business pursuits erIn In a profession by an unworthy type. There are unrefined and Ticious per sons in our wealthy classes ; there are stupid and rattle-brained men and women in society , but there is no bet ter reason why the whole body of wealthy persons should be judged by the worst specimens than that any oth er element in society should be rated according to the demerits of its mean est types. The rich hare their weak nesses , no doubt , but there is good rea- POII to believe that our sensational mor- nlLsts exaggerate them , being blind to the virtues of Croesus , but with a hharp eye for all his faults. Superintendent White , of the gov- ernmeut hospital at Washington , who Las nuidc a dose study of insanity. Its muse , and the statistics ccBcerning mental di ases. has destroyed some umait beliefs about insanity. For In- btance : It bas been taken for graat- ed that farm life is conducive to in sanity. Isolation arid lack of interests and amusements , It has been said , cause men , and especially voinen , to go Insane. Mr. White shows by sta tistics that insanity prevails more largely in Industrial communities than in agricultural districts. There are three times as many insane persons per capita In Massachusetts as ha Texas. And the reason : Insanity prevails where life is strenuous because of the strain and worry. People have but little leisure. They are concerned about the means of subsistence. Life under such conditions is next to tragedy. These things are true as to the colored race as well as the white. The ratio is the same and for tie same reason. The negroes of the South take life easy. They are content to live from hand to mouth , taking no thought for the morrow. There are plenty of hol idays. Relaxation comes ol'ten. The negroes of the North go a different pace. Competition affects them. A colder cli mate demands more clothes and more hustling for food. Conditions bring worry into their lives. The conclu sion is plain. The simpler the life the less liability to insanity. Look at the Indians , says Dr. White. So long as these aborigines live a life free from fret and worry there is uo insanity. It is only when artificial living and a desire for dollars Is Introduced that In sanity follows. "Care killed a cat , " observes Shakespeare. This is a leap year , but the addi tion of another day to the month of February is by no means Its most im portant peculiarity. For during this year , according to immemorial tradi tion , it is good form for women If they choose to propose matrimony to men Instead of waiting for men , to .pro pose it to them. Most people of eithei sex would say without a moment's hesitation that this leap year tradi tion had never been a leap year cus tom and that it was either a joke or an absurdity without a thing in rea sou or in human nature to support it But that is going too far , for there Line no folklore of any description , wheth er song , riddfle or proverb , that is not , in the last analysis , founded on some immutable principle of human nature , and so it is with women popping the question iu leap year. The principle of human nature on which this leap year tradition is founded is the para doxical one that , while the verbal and external proposition of marriage pro ceeds from the man , every perfectly normal and happy matrimonial match has its initiative in the heart of the woman. There are many kinds of courtship and marriage , but no mar riage is ever a happy one unless tha we man courts the man , albeit without ! his knowing It There Is a profound and important reason why this must be so. It is woman's nature , not only In affairs of the heart , but in every thing else , to be unable to change her spontaneous tastes and preferences. Her likes and dislikes display a re markable fixity. She does not make them and she cannot unmake them. Whether it be in the realm of cookery , art , music , dress , amusement , friend ship or love , this principle controls her. She can be dragooned away temporarily rily from her natural b nt , but she la then a crushed woiran , and sooner or later she will revert to her original im pulse. One may say It is exactly tiw same with a man , but It Is not A man's preferences are largely a matter of ratiocination. They are modified by argument by expediency , by con siderations of Interest , by his concep tions of duty , by his Ideas of prudence. This makes his heart , 1m matter of love , a sort of chessboard ou which all these feelings contend for the mas tery. He is capable of loving a wo man for a great variety of reasons be sides the Involuntary admiration call ed falling in love. It Is on account of this essential difference between men and women that the woman's prefer ence is the thing mainly to be consid ered if marriage is to be stable and happy. 'The man can learn to love a woman who Is lovely and who loves him , but a woman can learn nothing of the kind. If she is mated to the man of her choice she will be con stant , but In any other sort of marriage she will be inconstant Happy is the man , therefore , whose wife by mere instinct pitched upon him as her ideal and woe to the man whose wife waa swerved from her instinctive choice by the advice of parents , the love of mon ey or any other influence to wed him. This is the reason that it is folly for a man to set out to win a woman's heart at least , by devotion. The only wise thing he can do in this line is to stand around , accidentally and un consciously , as it were , and let her dt the rest Ruskin as a Gardner. Fond as Ruskin was of flowers , es peclally wild ones , he had his owi ideas as to what a .garden ought to be , and in his practical gardening was quite a landscapist He liked making paths and contriving pretty nooks. When he first come to Brantwood h * would hare his coppice cut MO merIt It spindled up to great tall steps slender and sinous , promising no tim ber , and past the age for all commei clal use or time honored wout Neigh bors shook their beads , bnt they du not know the pictures of Botticelli and Ruskin had made his coppice into an early Italian altar piece. Then ht had his espalier of apples and a littl gooseberry patch and a few , vandari fruit trees and some strawberrie mixed with flowers. In one come , there were beehives In the old-fashion ed pent house trailed over with creey era , " Here and there were little hum mocks , each with its especial interssl of fern or flower. The poet Is born , bnt the liar is com pelled to acquire his art. INTERESTING TO AMERICANS. Western Canada Will Hoon Become the Supply Depot for Wheat for Great Britain. During the past year about 50,000 Americans went from the United States to Canada. Most of t ese set tled upon farm lands , and the writer is informed by agents of the Canadian Government that the greatest success has followed the efforts of nearly all. To their friends on this side of the boundary line the fullest assurance la given of the prosperity that is in store for them. There will always be a splendid market for all the grain , cat- tie and other produce that can be raised in Western Canada , and with the advantages offered of a free home stead of 160 acres of land , and other lands which may be bought cheaply , an excellent climate , splendid school system , educational advantages of the best , what more is required ? The hus bandman gets more return for his money than in any other country in the world. On tiie occasion of Sir Wilfred I-aimer's visit to the Corn Exchange , London , England , Colonel Montgomery , V. D. , made several important state ments. "The function ( he said ) which you have just been assisting in con nection with a kindred association has doubtless shown you the importance of the provision trade of Liverpool in its relationship with the Dominion and the enormous possibilities of the future development of that trade. Well , the grain trade of Liverpool has interests with Canada no less important than those of the provision trade. When it is borne in mind that 80 per cent of the breadstuffs of this great country has to be brought from abroad , you will readily appreciate with what great satisfaction we view the large and steadily increasing supplies of grain which are annually available for ex port from Canada , and I challenge con tradiction when I say that of the wheats we import from Russia. India , the Pacific and the length and breadth of the United States , none gives more general satisfaction , none is more gen erally appreciated , than that raised in the Province of Manitoba. We can not get enough of it. and it is no ex aggeration to say that there are be fore us dozens of millers who hunger for it. This is not the time to enter into statistical questions , but we look forward with confidence to the time at which , with the present rule of progress , the Dominion of Canada will have a sufficient surplus of wheat to render this country independent of other sources of supply. I think I may , with justifiable pride , remind you that this is the chief grain market of the British Empire , and through its excellent geographical position , as well as through the enterprise of its millers , It is now the second milling center in the world. " Send to any authorized Canadian Government Agent for copy of Atlas and information as to railway rate , etc. For 30c nnd This N tice The John A. Snlxer Seed Co. , La Crosse , Wis. . will send free 1 pkg. May 1st Carrot lOc. 1 pkg. Earliest Green Eating Onions.lOc. 1 pkg. Peep of Day Tomato 20c. 1 pkR. Snlzer's Flash Light Radish..lOc. 1 pkg. Salzer's Long Quick , Quick Radish lOc. 1 pkg. Salzer's Queen of All Radish. lOc. Above six rare novelties , the choicest nnd finest of their kind , have a retail value of 70c , but they are mailed to you free , together with Snlzer's big cata logue , well worth $100.00 to every wide- nwnke gardener , nil upon receipt of but 30c in postage and this notice. ( C. N. U. ) Thare iz nothing tbab God more , aod that makes us all feel aetter , than tdanklullness. ARTHUR'S DYSPEPSIA TABLETS are a eclentiflc cure for the moit obstinate cases of djepepsla , biliousness sour stomach , heart burn. etc. They have been tinted for 15 years , by thousands of people and have never failed tr > cure Trj a 60c box now. Sold only by ARTHUR DYSPEPSIA TABLET CO. . ancord , Mich. Large Sample lOc' I guess that the miserys ov life are iboul equally divided ; one person i : hilly for the waot ov a shirt , and mother pines for a box at the oper , md both ov them think life iz q lardship. It iz bard work to pitty anothei without feeling superior to him. Chis takes all the poetry out ov the jsmoshun. The bulk of mankind can ba livjded into 3 lumps : the la/.y , the ndolent , and the - lazy. Indispensable ; For aflecbao from bead to foot ISt Jacobs Oil ! fcas curative qualities to reach tha PAINS and ACHES i \ > E of tha human family. an4 to re- Here end cura them promptly. Prio * 35 * and 5Oc. ' ' | GOOD ShoftQtoties Here is Secretary Hay's apothegm , written when he was still able to see the comic aspect of diplomacy : "There nre three species of creatures who , when they seem coming are going , When they seem going they come ; diplomats , women , and crabs. " It is related that Pinnow , the faith ful servant and personal valet of the late Prince Bismarck , who recently died , once trod on his master's < gouty foot. Instead of swearing at him or even declaring he was a clumsy fool , Bismarck , noticing that Pinnow him self was frightened , said : "Consider yourself honored. No other person , my dear Pinnow , not even the Kaiser hlni- self , would have been suffered to tread on my corns ! * ' The other evening , the "snuggery" in the Lambs' Club in New York was crowded with actors. Whenever a member on me in he was given a cheer and a round of applause. Nat Good win. who had just closed his tour in "A Midsummer Night's Dream , " which proved a losing venture on the road. arrived. lie was given a particularly enthusiastic Avelcome. "Thank you , gentlemen , " said Mr. Goodwin ; "that's more noise than I have heard since I have played Shakspeare. " Newspaperdom relates a story of a new reporter on a sensational New York dailj' . who one day called up his chief by telephone for instructions as to what he should do. It was in the days when the yellow-journalism craze was at its height , and the battle for "news" was iierce. The city editor asked the reporter to hold the wire n minute till he saw if he had anything to be looked after in that section of the city. Then these instructions came over the wire : "Summers , a promi nent , wealthy , young fellow named Stuart was up iu the West Side police court for drunkenness this morning. He pleaded to have his name kept out of the newspapers for fear that his mother would hear of it. She has heart trouble , and he says the shock would kill ber. Go over to her house at - West 72cl street , and tell her about it. See if you can't kill her. We need news. " Click. He hung up the receiver. But fortunately the lady was in Syracuse. Actors and actresses do not always allow for the fact that "property" weather does not invariably agree with the thermometer. Beerbohm Tree tells that once , when he was playing before a New York audience , the scene represented intense cold. Mr. Tree's lines called for remarks upon the frig idity of the atmosphere , and as he de livered them he drew a handkerchief from his pocket and wiped from his face the perspiration that had been induced by the heavy fur overcoat he was wearing. Kathryn Kiddef made an equally ridiculous error once. She bad the part of a worker in a laundry , and was busily engaged in ironing when a stray cat walked onto the stage. Miss Kidder , to give a touch 5f domesticity to the scene , picked up the cat. petted her , and put her down in the nearest place at hand. Sudden ly there was a ripple of laughter in the uidience. and Miss Kidder instinctive ly looked for the cat. She saw her ? urled up sleeping where she had put iier among the irons on the supposed- y red-hot range. FISH OF ALASKA. rwenty Species Are Discovered by Gov- erunent Scieiitlstu. The party of scientists who went to Alaska and the Arctic under orders ! rom President lloosevelt to investi gate tlie condition of the S'almou and ) ther fish , returned to Washington , laving covered (3,000 ( miles of Avater , liscovered twenty new species of fish md located sites for five or six new ish hatcheries , without which , it is said , the supply of salmon is going to > e exhausted in a few years. The voyage was made in the United States fish commisioner's steamer Al- ) atross , which sailed from Seattle on Fune IS. The government officer in sharge was Dr. D. W. Everman and n board were a number of professors rom the Leland Stanford University > California and other institutions of earning. They were called together > y an order issued direct by the Pres- dent to Fish Commisiouer Bowers , .s the result of an appeal made by the j almon canners of the Pacific coast. Cne latter asserted that the salmon vere disappearing , and they produced Igures to snbstantiate their assertions. After leaving Seattle the Albatross ras compelled to return , a case of mallpox developing on board. This Lelayed the vessel two weeks. After : mnigation another start was made. This time all went well and noOiing ras heard of the party until they re- nrned to Seattle Sept. 26. In the two months the party was ab- ent all of the important waters of daska were visited and dredged. All f the canneries and salteries in the Vtrlct were also visited , and the ves- el went off sihore to the Shumagin and Ladiak islands and other lands about Jering Strait. While the ship was dredging , shore arties were at work searching the ikes and fresh-water streams , and in tiis way a new kind of grayling nnd rainbow trout were found. The rayling is much larger than anything f the kind ever seen before , and for ameness it exceeds all known gray- ngs. The fish was discovered by Dr. Planer of the fish commission. The a "rainbow trout was found by Dr. Ever man. [ This fish inhabits the icy waters at the foot of glaciers , and In the more swiftly running1 streams of the ulterior 1 of the country. They are said to possess more gameness than any known trout. They grow to be about eighteen inches in length , and are as fierce as tigers. A sort of cod and a queer kind of a bass , a new redfish , several new kinds of fish which look like the blue- flsh and weakfish of the Atlantic , but -which are not related to them , were also found. The cod proved to be an excellent food fish , as are nearly all of the twenty varieties. The sites selected by the expedition as suitable for hatcheries are at Yes Bay. Klawok. netta. Afognak , Karluk , Bristol Bay and Woodruff. The scien tists also intend to recommend the es tablishment of a cod hatchery , the others all being for salmon. "SQUATTERS" IN MAINE V/OODS. L > atid Owners Wniit to Keep the For ests for IftiiiibsriMc : Purpci es. Away up on the northeastern border of Maine , along the St. John and Aroostok rivers , are hundreds of little clearings in the forests. , where "squat ters" from New Brunswick have come in. cleared a few acres f.f land not be longing to them , built log houses , rauHl small crops and lame families and set tled down in the serene and happy ex istence known only to the Acadians , who are the direct de > cemlantts of the refugees from the Land of EvangeJine. The men who own the lands have tric < l in all sorts of ways to get rid of these uninvited colonists , and on numerous occasions have invoked the- law to drive them away. Then followel ovicttioiis 1)3 * the s'core. ' with scenes as path/ittic and distress as bitter as any ever wit nessed in Ireland , but the remedy has always been ineffective , for mon > "squatters" came in to occupy tlhe lands , and not all the law nor the sheriffs in Maine are potent to ke-'p the mild-mannered but persistent Aca dians off the domains of the rich timber land owners. The little farms increased from scores to huiulreds , and the timber land owners appealed to the slnto to do something list their entire holdings be one day absorbed by "squatters , " and so last winter the legislature passed an act appropriating enough money to buy 50,000 acres of lands , to be present ed to the settlers , thus making ; ? cotl their title to what they had come and taken without leave. The state also has "squatters" to contend with , for maniy of them have settlcx ! on vim school lands , and lately it has been de cided instead of evicting them , to sll to thc-m the lands they are occupying at a nominal price. New York Tribune. Helps to Detectives. Each of us carries with us , every day of our lives , a number of unconsidered - sidered things of which , if necessary , detectives could easily identify us. Take clothes first of all. A man , as .1 rule , gets all his clothes from the same tailor ; but , whether he does or not , and however carefully he endeavors to cut off every tag and mark , that tailor would have no difficulty in ident ifying the garments he has made. Thread , stitching , buttons , lining all tell their own tale. More particularly so do what tailors call "specials. " These are simply special pockets fountain pen and pencil pockets , eyeglass * glass pockets , watch pockets lined with wash leather , cigar , ticket , flask and inner waistcoat pocket. A watch has frequently brought a criminal to jus- ; Bee. The man who has ever gone to i good dentist has left behind him a lifelong record which would enable that practitioner to identify him with ibsolute certainty. Such a dentist makes note of every tooth he stops , ind more particularly of different liincls in these days. Plain gold or , plain amalgam is comparatively rare- y used. Gold and platinum in various proportions and many other metals are v jmploj'ed , so that , unless a criminal ias all his teeth pulled out , he can nest certainly be identified. Even a ilate is as sure a clue as a coat. A Dent in the Road. John B. Stanchfield , of Elmira ; peaking of literary men , tells a story Sl > f a shock he had in a case in which ie was recently associated. Several witnesses had sworn that there was a lole in a certain road. Then to the iurprise of counsel , the principle witit less , a fanner , on whom they mainly lepended to establish their case , swore hat there was no hole hi the road. le Lfter Mr. Stanchfield and his associ- 1 1 iu ites had recovered from their aston- shment they sought to draw the witless - tlioi less into some explanation of the re- fat narkable testimony. What they B iventually got was this : "There wasn't any hole in that road. t ] , Jere's my hat. If I jam my hanq nto the top of it without pushing it hrough it does not make a hole. It nakes a dent That's what was in ei hat road just a dent" of ofn Whn * He Needed. n Ascnm Doctor , I heard you tell IK Jr. Layze to take a ride in his auto- oobile for an hour each day. Dr. Shrude Yes. Ascum Do yon really think the rid- ng win do him any good ? Dr. Shrude Certainly not ; but the to toCi hree or four hours of work repairing Ci he thing that he's bound to have will lo fr him. Philadelphia Press. E Norway Women May Not Vote. By a tmanimous vote the parliament f Norway has rejected a proposal t onfer the fcanehtee on women. Bank Note Paper Is Strong : . So strong is the Bank of England . ote paper that a single sheet wflJ lift I weight of WQ pounds. j _ N CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. the Kind You Have Always Booghf Bears the Signature of IN A WET Tiff. THE MSH aa a i < jn has a history. This i& told in an interesting booklet which is yours for the asking. A. eJ. TOWER CO. BOSTON , MAS3- Makers f T WET WBAfHER CLOTHING 1 OUR GOODS ARB ON SALE ? EVERYWHEUB. BEST Ever Grown. ' Xone better and none so Jlovr in price , Icpcrpkt. and up , postpaid. Finest illustrated catalogue ever printed sent FREE. Engrav ings of every variety. A great lot of extra pk"s. of seeds , new , presented free with every order. Some sorts onions only 55c &c per Ib. Other seed equally low. -0 years a seed grower and dealer and n'l customers satisfied. No old * seeds. New , fresh and reliable every " year.Vrit for blFREK catalogue. B.H.SHUiW.Rickford.lH. ) CHANCE FOR THEM Artist ' 'Women are crowding into * the picfsssiuns , but they will never interfere with us. They will never be artists. Friend "Why not ? " Artist "They haven't the faintest glimmer of art sense. Luok at their fashions. " TIIE MOTHER OF COURSE First Judge ( baby show ) "Who is the mother of that sq-ially brat" Second .Indue "Mrs. Uppisn , I think , I heard her speak of him as 'cunning , * 'cute , ' and 'sweet. " Buy -in the Black Hills Hidden Treix iiiv Hold Mininfr & Milling South Dukota. It olleilrijc its Treasury htcw-lr , a limit * * lunuuiit. for --alp. investors Inokinir for a safe place to put their mmifi , would do vr < M to investigate thN I cs n fiir- tiish UiCKcnuinuS T < 01 li-an x-ook R. O'SULLIVAN , Cli * s .11 MI i ii Slocks , 11 Broiilway , Nv Tori * TIME FOE FORHEARAXCE Daughter "Maw , I want you to stop bossing paw until after I jret married. " Mother "Why , I should like to know' ? " Dauhgter "Just as quick as J get i little bit intimate with a younpr nan , they begin to ask if I take ifter you " Any fXTson mnj' earn goad tnromi In imc at tunm. writing for us ; experience ttnnecea- nry ; bend stamp for particulars. American Art , lei 801 , Brooklyn , > . Y. Most people hav 2 ears , a live one tnd a dead one. The live one they : eep for the failings ov the world , .be dead one for the virtews. Mrs.Wlnslow's SOOTHING SYRUP for rPii teethingsoftenn the minis , reduces inlla- latlon , allayspain cure * colic. Piice25c bottle Don't get in the habit of iindinjr ault. Be fair , be kind. A fair aind always treated fairly. Cold weather did not much delay rork on worlds fair building will e ready on time. In bis report on the progress of rork on the world's fair structure , irector oJ work , Taylor shows that Hisiactory headway was made dur- ] g January , notwithstanding the aid weather of the latter oarfe of ae month. A lull grown whale weighs one undred tons. Few whales exceed tventy feet in length. Billion I > ollnr Grass. When we introduced this remarkable ass three years ago. little did we dream would be the most talked of grass in merica , the biggest , quick , hay pro- icer on earth , hut this has come to pass- Agr. Editors wrote about it , , Agr. Col- ge 1'rofebbors lectured about it , Agr. istitute Orators talked about it , while the farm home by the quiet fireside , in e corner grocery , in the village post- 'ice , at the creamery * at the depot , in ct wherever farmers gathered , Salzer's illion Dollar Grass , that -wonderful ass , good for 5 to 14 tons per acre , id lots of pasture besides , is always a erne worthy of the farmer's voice. Then comes Bromus Inermis , than lik-h there is no better grass or better Tinanent hay producer on earth. Grows fierever soil is found. Then the farm- talks about Salzer's Teosintc , which ill produce 100 stocks from one kernel seed , 11 feet high , in 100 days , rich nutrition and greedily eaten by cattle. igs. etc. , nnd is good for 80 tons of een food per acre. Victoria Kape. which can be grown nt > c a ton , and Speltz at 20c a feushel , ith great food for cattle , also come in r their share in the discussion. JST SEND THIS NOTICE AND lOc IN STAMPS the John A. Salzer Seed Co. , L * osse , Wis. , nnd receive their big cata- ? ue and lots of farm seed samples ee. ( a N. U. ) 'EGGS' ' BLOOD PURIFIER URES catarrh of the stomach. ! . CUBES WHEhE ALL ELSE FA'LS. ! B e * Coogr Byrup. Tute Oood. U ia lima. So d by drureUta ONSOMPTION : N. U. 8'3-IO