Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, March 02, 1905, Image 6

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    His Theory.
"If I were a.rumor , " silrl : the poor
butf honest young man , "I would prob
ably be able to win the heiress in a
walk. "
" \Vliy do 3'ou say that ? " queried the
dense' friend.
. . "Because , ' explained the other , "a
rumor soon gains currency , you
know. "
Undoubtedly.
"Man , " remarked the typewriter
hoarder , who reads the scientific pages
of patent medicine almanacs , "is said
to bo ! i ( ) per cent water. "
"That. " rejoined the bachelor with the
absent hair , "is probably why ho finds
it so much easier to go down hill thtin
up. "
COULDN'T LIFT TEN POUNDS ,
Poan'n Kidney Pills Brought Strength
ami Health to the SulFerer , Mukinjr
Him Keel Twenty-five Ycara rounder.
'f
J. B. Corton ,
farmer and lum
berman , of Dep-
pc , N. ( ' . . says :
"I suffered for
years with my
back. It was so
bad that 1 could
not walk any dis-
xtance nor even
ride in an easy
buggy. I do not
believe I could
- - -
uavc raisu'ii nn
, i. i ! . conxox. pounds of weight
from the ground , the pain was so se
vere. This was my condition when I
began using Doau's Kidney Pills. They
quickly relieved me , si ml now I sun
never troubled as I was. My back is
strong and I can walk or ride a long
distance and feel just , as strong as I
did twenty-live years ago. 1 think so
much of Doaifs Kidney Pills that I
have given a supply of the remedy to
some of my neighbors , and they have
also found good results. If you can
sift anything from this rambling note
that will be of any service to you. or
to any one suffering from kidney trou
ble you are at liberty to do so. "
A TRIAL FREE Address Foster-
Milburn Co. , Buffalo , N. Y. For sale
fiy all dealers. Price 50 ets.
Positively Brutal.
Mrs. McDuff This paper snys that
mice are attracted by music ; but 1 don't
beliovo it.
McDuff Why not ?
Mrs. McDuff Because I never see any
mice around when I play the piano. >
McDuff Well , that's no excuse for
doubting the paper's statement with re
gard to mice and music.
Salzer'a Home Builder Corn.
So named because 50 acres produced so
heavily , that its proceeds built a lovely
home. See Salzer's catalog. Yielded in
-Ind. 157 bu. , Ohio 100 bu. , Tenn. 198 bu. ,
* nd in Mich. 220 bu. per acre. You can ,
boat this record in 1905.
WHAT DO YOU THIXK OF THESB YIELDS ?
220 bu. Beardless Barley per acre. -
310 bu. Salzer's New National Oats per A.
80 bu. Salzer Speltz and Macaroni Wheat.
3,000 bu. Pedigree Potatoes per acre. an
14 tons of rich Billion Dollar Grass Hay. for
60,000 Ibs. Victoria Rape for sheep per A. he
160,000 Ibs. Teosinte , the fodder wonder.
54,000 Ibs. Saher's Superior Fodder Corn
rich , juicy fodder , per A. pin
Now such yields you can have in 1905 ,
if youwill plant my seeds.
JUST SEND THIS NOTICE AND IOC too
in stamps to John A. Salzer Seed Co. , La His
Crosse. Wis. , and receive their great cata
log and lots of farmseed samples. [ C. N. UJ "iut
doe
His Dyspepsia Better.
* Butts I got a wire from Sniggs to
day saying his dyspepsia was much TH
better.
Cutts You don't mean to say he
telegraphed the news. What did he
wsay ?
Butts He said there was a strong to
rally in the wheat pit. Cincinnati
Commercial Tribune.
j A CLEAR COMPLEXION.
A Simple Home Treatment for Eluck- rifi
hcnds , Red , Rouen and Oily Skin and its :
me
Hum or a.
If you are afflicted with pimples , it :
blackheads , red , rough or oily skin , sta
or disfiguring humors , you will find
this simple home treatment most 13
agreeable , speedily effective and eco am
nomical. Gently smear the face with ing
the great emollient skin cure , Cuti- of
c ura Ointment , but do not rub. Wash con [
off the ointment in five minutes with
Cuticura Soap and hot water , and lugT
bathe freely. Repeat this morning
and evening and you will s/jon be re ord
warded with a skin soft , white and ver
clear. Cuticura Soap , the best toilet
and complexion soap in the world , as
sisted by Cuticura Ointment , will pre
serve. purify and beautify the com
plexion and keep the skin in a healthy
condition , preventing blackheads
, pim
ples. eruptions or the return of ecze
ma and other skiii troubles. Used
as a shampoo it cleanses the scalp of
crusts and scales , removing dandruff
and promoting the growth of the
hair. For red , rough hands , itching
palms and painful finger ends , Cuti
cura Soap and
Ointment achieve mar
velous results , often in a single night.
The Feminine View.
"IIow loug , " asked the inquisitive
youth , "should a man know a girl before
proposing ? "
"Well , " replied the wise maid , "that
depends on his income. "
Ask Your Denier for '
Allen's Foot Ease ,
A p-Mvder. It rests the feet. Cures Chil
blains. Corns , Hmiions , Swollen. Sore , Cal
lous. Aching. Sweating Feet : uid Ingrowing the
.Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease
makes new or the
tight shoes easy. At all Druggists and Shoe
Mores. 2. > cents. Accept no substitute. Siui-
plr mailed FKKE. Address Allen S. Olni- of
Ved. Le Hoy , N. Y.
dar
ByViy of Suggestion. ros
Husband What's the .matter with the con
biscuits this morning ?
pre
Wife Oh , the yeast is at fault. It gyi
failed to rise.
Husband What's the matter with the cer
nlarin clock ? by
syi
A GUARANTEED CURE FOR PILES. wa
Itchfnir. Blind , Bleeding or Protruding Piles.
Yourdrueirfsc will refund money If PAZO OINT rea
MENT fails to cure you In e to 14 days. 50c. asc
A London mother offered to sell her
baby for a quart of beer. This fact came the
out at a subsequent inquest into the ing
child' * death. bel
THE NE\V IRELAND.
By Gilbert Parker.
Within the lant decade in Ireland politics 1mvt
shown an inclination to be practical , religion has
become more tolerant , the question of education
is at last being seriously and anxiously grappled
with , and a new sense of the independence of all
sections , creeds , interests and parties in Ireland
is by way of being evolved.
It was the deep conviction that the Irish
character only needed the right appeal in order to
put forth a great recuperative vitality mat some
years ago Sir Horace Flunkott launched his movement ot
organized self-help entitled the Irish Agricultural Organi
zation Society.
That society has grown until it now embraces over
8,000 branches and nearly half a million persons ; its co
operative creameries , damp * , poultry societies , agricul
tural banks , and home industries societies have spread all
over the island ; with the admirable assistance and stim
ulus of the Gaelic League it has touched the secret chord
of Irish nationality , strengthened the backbone and in
creased the prosperity of the Irish peasant ; it is incul
cating thrift , responsibility , and business-like habits ; it
is founding libraries , reviving the rural art * and handi
crafts , and bringing back lo the countryside something of
old Irish joyousness.
All this is an effort to expand the sentiment of nation
ality outside the domain of party controversies , a conscious
attempt of the Irish to develop a civilization of thc'ir own.
By focusing the energies of the people on the Immedintely
practicable it dissipates the enervating idea that reform
car come only from without. It places , literally as well as
figuratively , the recreation of Ireland in Irish hands
Overriding < sectional , religious , and political divisions , it
makes for unity in the solution of problems in which al !
Irishmen will , in time , realize that they have a commoi.
interest.
WHO HAS BEI7ER TIME MAN OR WOMAN ?
By Angela Morgan.
Women have a better time in life than men
do. Under no circumstances would I choose to
be a man. If 1 had a chance to come to earth
again in another incarnation , and were given the
choice , I should without hesitation elect to be
a woman. Women know how to get the finest
flavor from life. They know how simply because
Jiey are born to it not because they acquire the
knowledge through effort. To extract the real
ssence rrom living one must be endowed with these quali-
les : Imagination , intuition , sensibility and th : ' capacity
o love. Women possess all these requisites to a greater
egree than men. For this reason women can lay hold
n the subtler enjoyments of life. And as the subtlest en-
oyments are the best and most lasting , it is the women
'ho have a monopoly of real happiness in life.
It is In her capacity to love that woman experiences
her greatest joj\s. Woman gets a vast deal more out of
lOV ( than man. Show me the man to whom love means
tie-tenth what it does to a woman ! When a man loves ,
the external scenery of life does not change visibly to him.
Lift does not become a thing bewitched and gilded. His
day and hours and moments not
ays are permeated by love as
n influence. i Love , to a man , means an exhilarating chase
ar possession , A woman pleases him , captivates him and
e wants her for his own. In possession he finds a certain
leasure a certain pride and satisfaction but as for hap-
iness , the sort of happiness a woman extracts from love
whj , he doesn't know the A 15 C of it ! Once in a while ,
erhaps , a sense of it grazes his consciousness but he is
30 busy to give it more than a curious thought or two.
is mind is too crowded with practical things to admit the
intangible. " But when a woman loves , she lives. She
oes ; not live until she does love. Love to her is all-nbsorb-
HE ! LATEST SENSATIONAL
SPECTACLE IN PARIS.
The appetite of the Parisian public
for dangerous spectacles never seems
3 pall. The latest "attraction" is the
togyi
yroscope at the Casino de Paris , in
rhich a bicyclist travels round the
wh"J side of a moving track or wheel.
The gyroscope is constructed scien-
ifically , and is , while moving round
s axle , executing a circular rnove-
lent round a strong pillar supporting
; a weight at the back insures the
lability of the apparatus.
The diameter of the wheel is about
feet ; it is built like a bicycle wheel ,
nd bears on one side a metallic fac-
ig joined to the axle by eight girders
iron ; on the facing is fixed a track
imposed of small wooden bars , giv-
ig more "grip" to the tires.
The bicycle is somewhat similar to
rdinary machines ; the handles are
ertical. the front fork straighten , and
THE GYROSCOPE.
u whole a few pounds heavier than
2 ordinary bicycle.
Yale , world champion for this ki/.d
exercise , and well known for his
ring feats , is performing on the gy-
scope. Entering it on his bicycle he
tnmences by riding rapidly , thus im-
essiug a reverse movement to the
roscope ; when this has attained a
rtain speed Yale blocks his wheels
a powerful effort of the legs : the
roscope therefore pulls him back-
irds to a certain height. When
idling the point where the force
censioiial Is nil , the cyclist starts
ain at a high pace , thus increasing
speed of the apparatus and raisi
him ou the other side to a certain
exercise , repeated several times ,
ing , all-transforming , all-embracing. Love to a woman
means the opportunity to express herself to give the best
of herself to the object of her affections. It menus , too ,
the opportunit3' for sacrifice and it is right here that
woman revqls in the full expression of her love. Suffering
and sacrifice are to her but different names for happiness.
It is in mother love , perhaps , that woman reaches the
pinnacle of blessedness. And of such selfless bliss as this
man knows nothing.
What if men do have greater freedom than women ?
That very freedom proves itself oftener : i curse than a
blessing. What if women's lives are bound by convention
ality ? Up to the present writing , the wisdom of such re
striction has not been disproved. No , I would not be a
man if I could. Despite her restrictions , her sacrifices and
her sufferings I think a woman gets the greatest happiness
out of life.
PNEUMONIA MAKES BIG STRIDES.
By Dr. muiam E. Qulne. ot Chicago.
Pneumonia is the most prevalent of all infec
tious diseases. Since the year 1SGO its destruc-
tiveness in Chicago has increased 350 per cent ,
while that of consumption has diminished 40 per
cent.
Since the year 1000 , of all the deaths occurring
in Chicago one-eighth have been the direct result
of pneumonia , 'this being one-third more than was
caused bv consumption and 44 ner cent more
than was caused by all other infectious diseases combined.
Liability to it increases steadily from the age of puberty
to death. The male sex contracts the malady twice as
often as the female , not because of greater inherent sus
ceptibility , but because of habits of greater exposure.
The disease is twice as fatal among negroes as It Is
among whites , and the most prolific of all auxiliary causes
is the use of alcoholic beverages. Habitual intemperance
not only increases t'ho rate of prevalence of pneumonia ,
but it increases the mortality of the disease as well.
Tliis is shown by the fact that in the charitable hosi
pitals , such as our Cook County Hospital , about one pneui
monia patient out of three or four dies , whereas In private
practice only one patient out of eight or ten dies. The
malady is most prevalent in the months of January , Feb
ruary and March , and liability to it is enormously increased
by the prevalence of the grip.
Pneumonia is caused by a germ. The germ is dls-
charged in the expectoration of a pneumonia patient. If
the expectoration 'be allowed to fall upon the floor or upon
the carpet it soon dries and crumbles into dust , and this
dust containing the pneumonia germs may be wafted
through the atmosphere of the house , and thus spread the
infection. The pneumonia germs are widely distributed
and are often found entangled in the mucus of the nose and
throat of healthy persons.
Badly ventilated houses or apartments in which cases
of pneumonia have occurred are extremely liable to develop
other cases in endless succession unless the premises are
thoroughly fumigated and ventilated. In relation to the
prevention of pneumonia , the most imperative of all re- '
quirements is that the. expectoration of the patient IK
promptly destroyed , and in this connection it is not to
be forgotten that after a patient has recovered from pneu
monia the germs may persist in his expectoration for many
months.
One of the most destructive fallacies that governs ordi- K
narily sensible people is that which leads them to exclude j (
night air from their bedrooms , on the assumption that night
air is peculiarly noxious ; but since it i.s not possible to get t
any other kind of air at night but night air , it would seem n
that the supply then should be just as free as during any u
other part of the twenty-four hours. Judicious habits of r
dressing , and regularity as to eating and sleeping , and the I' '
avoidance of alcoholic excesses , will confer the maximum | '
degree of protection against the disease.
HOME OF A POVERTY STRICKEN FAMILY IN IRELAND , li
-
li
the
1 ofr
-
t -
" '
n
The cut depicts one of the miserable
cave dwellings of the poor Irishii [
in the County Gahvay district of Conneuiara. This is a poor agricultural ' '
district , and the inhabitants are destitute of most of the conveniences of life. sj' '
Their half underground hovels are squalid and unhealthy. Added to all this p
Is the famine which prevails in much of Ireland on account of the potato :
crop failure the past season. In many parts of the island the people are rc * '
entirely destitute of means of subsistence , and the most harrowing and pitiful ture .
letters come to America asking help. Last season Avas unusually hot and wet | was Ij
in Ireland , and there was an almost total failure of crops of all kinds. (
brings him each time nearer the top.
Yale is then able to loop the wheel
seven or eight times in succession.
Montreal Star.
EAR A REMARKABLE ORGAN.
Specially Fitted by Nature for the
Needs ot Man and Animals.
The organ of hearing is one of the
most marvelous pieces of mechanism
in the body. In animals the external
car acts as a trumpet lo collect the
sound waves. In man it is little more
than an ornament. Rut the internal
ear is alike in both. So wonderful is
its construction that we can distin
guish sounds ; varying from40 to 4.000
vibrations per second. This feat is
performed ' by a portion of the ear call
ed ' the organ of C'orti. What a won
derful ( organ that is may be under
stood from the fact that it consists of
r , ( K)0 ) pieces of apparatus , each piece
beinir ' made up of two rods , one inner
hair ' cell and four outer hair cells
that < is. : { . " ,000 separate parts. In some
mysterious ' manner the rods , with oth
er ' things , are tuned to different notes
and , when they vibrate , they cause the
hairs to 'transmit an impulse to the
nerve of hearing. To be musical ,
therefore i , is to have a good organ of
Corti.
Fishes have no ears , or , rather , the
canals are closed ; but they hear
- - :
through the bones of the head. The bill
New Zealanders can almost hear the lil0
grass grow. j iin
Why is it that scratching a piece of '
glass with metal causes such an un- 111" .
(
pleasant sound ? Because it is what is , .
, K
called the fundamental tone of the until
ear , which is very high. What the of
fundamental tone exactly is would was
take too much space to explain. liut Oln
if 3-011 blow across the mouth of a lro
bottle , a hollow globe , etc. , 3-011 get ind
its fundamental tone.
The ear is a deceptive organ , and it ment
Is often a matter of guess work to tell for -
whence a sound comes. Indeed , if you ff.al from
place the open hands in front of 3'our ijji
oars and curve them backward , sounds ato
produced in front will
appear to
come H-pIi
from behind. London Tit-Bits hau
had
In a Quandary.
Johnny 1 wish 1113folks would
agree upon one thing and not keep me
all the time in a wony. Tommy
What have they been doing now ? at
Johnny Mother won't let me stajid on
my head , and dad is all the time fuss- tion
ing because I wear my shoes out so lect '
.
fast. riage
Agreed on Both Points. ( led
HewittYou're a liar. days'
.Tewett You're a liar. in * f
Both We seem to be in pretty bad fifteen j
day
company. New York Sun.
The Senate on Saturday decided not to
admit as testimony in the Swayne im
peachment trial the statement made by
Judge Swayne before a House commit
tee and then adjourned the court. A
request of the House for a conference on
the statehood bill was received and a
sharp debate ensued over an effort to
have the conference committee appointed
immediately. The opponents of joint
statehood succeeded m securing u post-
ponement until Monday. Senator Penu
rose , from the committee on postollice
and post roads , reported the postofHce
appropriation bill , and then the special
order of the day , eulogies upon the char
acter of the late Senator M. S. Quay of
Pennsylvania , was taken up. The House
received notice that the Senate had with-
drawn its wheat drawback amendment to
the agricultural appropriation bill , and
immediately voted to reject all the Sen
ate amendments and send the measure
lo conference. The Senate amendments
to the diplomatic and consular bill were
also disagreed to and a conference re
quested. Similar action was taken on
the District of Columbia appropriation
bill. Several private bills were passed
and the House then went into committee
of the whole lo consider the pension ap
propriation bill , which was finally passed
without amendment.
The Senate on Monday debated at
lenjrth the question of whether the Sen
ate conferees on the statehood bill should
be appointed in the usual manner , or
whether they should be selected so as to
re-present sentiment of the Senate as rep
resented in the bill as passed. The argu
ment ' was interrupted by the convening
of ! the Senate as a court in the Swayne
impeachment trial , when the House man
agers rested their case and the defense
opened. , Bills were passed authorizing
the i construction of a railway bridge
across i the White river iu Indiana and
authorizing the award of bronze medals
for ' bravery in saving f.ves in railroad
wrecks. The House pa.ssed the naval
appropriation j bill , after voting to retain
the provision for two new battleships ,
reducing J the appropriation for contingent
e.\penses of the marine corps from ? U. . -
000 ( to $ Sr > ,000. striking out the amend
ment i giving authority to build the collier
authorized at the last session elsewhere
than ' on the Pacific coast , and accepting
an amendment appropriating $175,000 to
| equip the Mare Island navy yard for
building the collier. During the debate
Mr. Baker of New York caused a storm
of j protest by introducing a resolution
censuring the President for sending a
message of condolence on account of the
assassination of Grand Duke Sergius in
Moscow. Mr. Payne of New York an
nounced the death of his colleague. Mr.
Otis , and offered the usual resolution ?
of respect and sympathy.
The Senate Tuesday parsed Hie rnili-
ary academy appropriation bill and be
gun consideration of
the Indian appro
priation bill. The bill for the govern
ment of the isthmian canal zone also
ame up , and an agreement was reached
to meet an hour earlier Wednesday in
order to advance it. In response to a
question. Mr. Elkiiis. chairman of tin-
c-ommittee on interstate
commerce. ex
pressed the opinion that it would be im
possible to secure railroad rate legisla
tion during the present session of ( Vm-
Krcss. Ex-Sonator Higgins finished hN
preliminary statement in opening the de
fense for Judge Swayne. and one wir- be le
ues < was examined. The House passed
in
rhe Philippine tariff bill
practically as it
-ame from committee and with little dis St. tioti
cussion. The river and harbor appropri-
ition bill was taken up. but it was soon
laid aside , and several measures passed ,
the most important of which authorize--
the Secretary ofVar to return to several
States Union and Confederate battU
flags.
been
and
The Senate on Wednesday lines
he bill providing a civil government for & of
Panama canal zone. The question with
the government's ownership of thi havf
Panama railroad and its relation to the bus
general question of government owner- Hun
-iiip of railroads generally was debated
freely. A number of witnesses were ex- dellt
unined in the Swayne impeachment case
Washington's farewell addr\ ( wu ? read.
A-fter a brief but spirited debate the porti
House sent back to conference the ann.v who
-
appropriation bill. j-ears
All Senate amend Held
iiionts again were disagreed to with th * card
single exception of one appropriating seng
yj.'i.OOO for continuing the cable from the prou
Vaides to Seward. Alaska. There was c\fii' \
renewed discussion ovnr th * > Miles fea
of the bill. The rtst of the session
devotfd to fli jcus > * ing the river aiic *
h.irbor bill , which was not completed.
* _ *
* "
TinSenate on Thursday passed the
providing a form of irovermncat for
Panama canal x.oue aftt-r
amendment antlmri/.inir th
rather . than the condemnation of the re
maining 1 stock of the Panama Railroad
Company. Ar 1 o'clock the Swayne im
peachment trial was resumed , continuing
adjournment , with an intermission
two ; hours. Tiie taking of testimony
* completed at ! > : 'JO p. m. , and Mr
Olmstead began the argument for th
prosecution. : The IIoti > e passed the rivet It
harbor appropriation Mil. carrying an enza
appropriation of J17.l4.r ! ; > 7. An am nd- A
to strike out the provision providing and 1 on
the transfer of a government dredge first
, Boston to Lake Michigan was de bottles
feated. lM to 112. The military academy
was sent t' conference after the Sen
amendments to appoint Senator Jo-
! Ilawl.-y .mil ( Jen. Peter J. ( K-tpr-
- brigadier generals on the retired list
been agreed ID.
Jn the National Capital.
Walter L. C'ohen. a negrowill b re-
appointed as register of the land officf
New Orleans.
Senator Qnarles introduced a resolu
requiring the census bureau to col
national statistics relative to mar
and divorce.
The Comptroller of the Treasury has
decided that the law granting fifteeu
' leave of absence with pay to clerks
first and second class postoftices means
days , including intervening Sun-
i and holidays.
Oysters Excel as n l 'oocl.
Recent experiments show the great
digestibility of the oyster. When the
crushed and placed in cold
oyster wis
xratcr ; about half of the solid matter
was dissolved. When the oyster was
placed ; uncnislicd in the same medium
one-fourth of its solid matter was dis
solved. It is believed that if the oyster
be chewed more than half of it is dis
. Cold water ap-
solved in the mouth.
pwirs to be the best thing to clrm * :
ppwi
with oysters.
What are the solids of the oyster ?
They are the proteids corresponding
to the lean of meat or tue white ot
, matters and gly-
fll egg , fat , starchy
cogen. This last means the substance
which the liver manufactures for fu
ture use. It is very like sugar , and
when wanted for use is changed into
sugar. It is the substance which makes
the oyster sweet in the mouth.
But there are other valuable con
stituents of the oyster what are
called the trlycero-phosphoric com
pounds. Medical men prescribe these
for : improving the nervous system , so
that a diet of oysters is unquestion
ably good for the nerves. They also
contain common salt , a little copper
and several phosphates. And taking
tin whole contents of the oyster shell ,
one finds almost everything necessary
.
for the food of the body. Chicago
Chronicle.
VERY FEW. IF ANY ,
CIGARS SOLD AT 5
CENTS , COST AS
MUCH TO MANUFACT
URE , OR COST THE
DEALER AS MUCH AS
IF THE DEALER TRIES TO
SELL YOU SOME OTHER
ASK YOURSELF WHY ?
WflY SET SOAKED
/ WHEN
' /
PC * ) OILED' '
{ CLOTHING
I ei.ACKMTtU.OW
WLUttPYOUPOT
IN THE
HARDEST STORK ?
LOOK FOR ABOVE TRADE MARX. BEWARE Of IMlTATIONi
CATALOGUES FREE
SHOWING FULL LINE OF GARMENTS AND HATS.
A. J. TOWER CO. , BOSTON , MASS. . U.S.A.
TOWEH CANADIAN CO . LTD. . TORONTO. CANADA.
MIXED FIRMING
Wheat Raising
Ranching
Three Great Pursuits have ajrain
shown wonderful results on the
FREE HOMESTEAD LANDS
OF WESTERN CANADA
Magnificent climate farmers plowing In their chlrt-
TBs in tli middle fifjfoveiaber. "All are bound lo
more than planned with the final result * of the pas
ssaHon'n harrettn " . .EitnvctCoal , U'ood.Vat ir. Har
abundance. nchools , churches , market * convenient.
Apply fo-information toSt int-nd-nt .
pa - - of Imm.g a-
, O town , Canada , or to li. T. Holme * . 315 Jackson -
. 3t.PuaM ] < nn. . Bnd J. II. McLnclilan. Box 118.
ViitertownSo.Dakot , Authorized OoTernmentAcauta
Please uny where jou saw thli adrortiBoment.
SOUTHERN CONDITIONS AND
POSSIBILITIES.
In no part of tue United States has t IIP re
such wonderful Commercial. Industrial
Agricultural development as nlon the
of tlie Illinois Central and the Yazoo
Mississippi Valley Railroads in the States
Tennessee. Mississippi mid I < ouislin.i.
within the past ten years. Cities and towns
doubled their population. Splendid
business ! blocks have been erected. Farm
have more than doubled in value.
Hundreds of industries have been estab
lished and as n result there is an unprece
dented demand for
DAY LABORERS , SKILLED WORKMEN AND
ESPECIALLY FARM TENANTS.
Parties with small capital , seeking an op
portunity to purchase a farm home ; farmers
would prefer to rent for a couple of
before purchasing , and day laborers In
! or factories should address a postal
to Mr. J. F. Merry. Asst. General Pas
senger Agent. Dunufjue. Iowa , who will
promptly mall printed matter ooncernins
territory 1 above described , and give spe-
' r p1lf = m nil inquiries.
YOU
DOIS/T
TAKE ; ,
BALSAM
Cures Colds , Couehs , Sore Throat , Cronp , Influ
, Whooping Cough , Bronchitis and Asthmfu
certain cure for Consumption in first stages
a snre relief in advanced .
stages. Vae nt oSce !
will * ee the excellent effect after
takln" tha
dose. Sold by deA'ers everywhere , farirt
* J B
23
centa and 60 cenu
10,000 Plants f or I8c.
Jfore panlens and farms aro planted to
Salzer's Seeds than anjother in j
America. There Is reason f or thl . '
, w e own dver 6,000 acres for the pro-
> auction of our warranted Becd * .
Jin order to induce you to trr them , we
* make you the following uupre-
I cedented offer :
FOP 18 Cants ,
\ IflOO Karlj. 3nllaa ami
1:000 Flue J IcrTur lpm ,
f ' 20OO Illanthlnr Crlerr.
2800 Kith .VuttjUUuc * ,
H 1 OO Splendid Onion * ,
/ 100O Rare Lnitoo Ksdlihet ,
1000 GlorioatlItrlllUot Flower * . . . '
Abore scren packages contain suffi
cient s e > l to crow 10.000 plants , fur-
nlahln bn hel of brilliant
flower * ami lots and lot of cholc *
vegetable * , together with nurgreat
catalog , telling all about flowers ,
loops. Small Fnut. t , etc. , all for
ICc In stamps und thl > notice.
Big-10-page catalog alone , tc.
JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO.
ICXD. La Crosse , Wls.