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That is the kind of a man Pa is, and it ought not be a crime to play tricks $ Gosh, but I could have looked on and seen Pa bastinadoed, or whatever is the worst punishment, and never turned a hair, or shown human sympa thy, I had given the prince a new degree every day, until he walked on crutches and they had to wheel me in a wheel barrow. I took him out one day in a boat on the little lake in the palace grounds, to teach him water polo, and stood him up on the seat, and I rocked the boat, and he split a hole in the water, and tried to catch held of the boat, and I vowed away from him, and he had to swim half a mile before I let him catch on, and after I let him get in the boat, and he got so he could breathe and emptied the water out of his system and clothes, and I told him he was prepared to enter a water polo game when he got to the American college, he said all right, and then he tipped me out of the boat and never let me get in until we got near the shore, where a lot of swans took me for a new kind of duck and In the thick of winter busy men find their usual exercise curtailed, and must look about for some easy way in which to keep themselves in condition. Many walk to and from their places of business, but these generally live within three or four miles of their of flceg. If you aren't one of these, try a reg ular course of jumping.' One of your winter maxims shbuld bet "Thirty jumps before breakfast." If ybu stick to this all through the cold spell you will come out in the spring as fit as a proverbial violin. I^ike an ordinary heavy kitchen cbMr. Near it place a heary rug or an ordinary front door mat. Jump on the chair, then jump off again onto the mat. Keep this up for 30 times, and your exercise is accomplished. In the long jump, jump from the bare floor onto an old mattress, in bare feet or id socks. FS & He Instructs the Prince Gee, but I never have any luck, so you could notice it, not for any length of time. I suppose fathers are a necessity in this world, and I would be the last person in the world to advocate a law to do away with fathers entirely, but they are certainly wearing on a boy. If I should die and go to heaven, and I began to get acquainted with the other angels, and had begun to enjoy myself playing lawn tennis with the beautiful angels of the girl kind, or any other game that is fashionable there, or was playing spin the top or mumblety peg in the golden streets, and had loosened a nice block of gold pavement and was just putting it in my pistol pocket, Pa would show up In the most outlandish clothes and try to flirt with the angels, and say, "Hello, Mabel, your hair is not in style," or he would search me and take my gold brick out of my pocket to sell to some granger from the earth, or he would call me by name in the presence of the beautiful angels and tell me to "come on, Hennery, I am going down cellar to the other place, where I can back up against the fire and thaw out," and be would take me away and leave l&e angels that had got stuck on me crjing at my departure, and when we got to the other place he would" brush me away from the grate fire, and say, "Now you run out and ride on your sled and let your Pa get warm." they surrounded me and picked out my eyes with their bills, and swatted, me with their wings, and when we got ashore and I told him to run around a pony track to dry his clothes, he picked up a club and told me to start first, and he chased me around until we were both dry. This hazing is all right enough when you do the hazing, but I thought he was real mean to hit me on the pants, and make me run-and set the pace. He wanted to learn how to play foot ball, so I got a cricket ball, his cousins, the English princes had brought from England, and we let him be full back, and when he got the ball and tried to run for a touch down, seven servants, two Englisty princes, regular beef eaters, and I jumped on him and held him down until he bleated like a calf, and when we. let him up and threw water in his face to bring him to, he said he would tell the kaiser and the kaiser would send bat tleships to England and to the United States and demand an apology and indemnity. But he didn't scare us with his war talk, and we told the prince we would give him one more degree, and then let up on him for that day. So we blindfolded him with a handkerchief and got a lot of eggs from the barn, and fixed a nest in his hair, with a big swan's egg in the middle and four hen's eggs around it, and I made him hold up his right hand and swear that he would never tell what happened in conferring this degree, and then I 7/. He Walked on Crutches and They Had to Wheel on him. Here, I was, actually a mem ber of the kaiser's family, with four square meals a day, and a feather bed to sleep on, and another one to cover me, preparing the kaiser's son for col lege, a tutor, as it were, on a toot every hour of the day, and the kaiser looking upon me as the foremost American citizen, except Roosevelt, and just as we were getting to know each other, Pa comes butting in and spoils the whole business. asked him how he liked his eggs cooked, boiled or scrambled, and then us boys, the English princes and I, took boards and smashed the eggs on his head and held to his nose a bottle of assofoedita, and when he smelled it, and the eggs dripped down his hair into his collar, he said, "Dem eggs vos rodden, already," and I thought he would drown in yolk of eggs, cause I never knew a swan's egg would hold so much yellow stuff, and then he pulled off the blindfold, and, O, my, wasn't he mad. He grabbed up the dozen eggs in the English prince's hat, and asked me how I liked •scrambled eggs best of all, and he pelted me with some that didn't need assofoedita to make them smell, and he threw some at the Eng lish princes, and then the worst possi ble thing happened, because the kaiser, who was out walking, like Napoleon, thinking he was thinking, saw us fighting, and the air was filled with eggs, and the kaiser came up on a run, with his uniform and military cloak on, and his son's eyes were so full of eggs that he couldn't see where he was throwing eggs, and three struck the kaiser in the neck and on the chest and then there was a war in the Balkans for sure. The kaiser yelled, "Rouse," whatever that is, and blew a whistle full of egg, and the bugle sounded and troops began to hustle out of the barracks and we were surrounded, and I thought the world was coming to an end. Exercise for the Sedentary Thirty Jumps Before Breakfast One of Two Recommended. Vaulting is another splendid and easy exercise. A regular vaulting horse is, of course, seldom available, but an ordinary strong rail fence will be found serviceable for the purpose. 'A Sponge'That Works. "Here is a clever notion A fog bell," said an old New England fisher man. On a bleak, gray afternoon they stood on the seashore—the old man and his city cousin, up for the holidays from Boston. A great bell hung from a scaffold, and under a metal cover hung a great spohg£. "This here machinery i.s. wound up regular,", the fisherman explained, "and this* here sponge is kept under cover so as the rain can't get at it. In dry weather, natch'rally, jt.be sponge is dry and light in foggy, though, it gets heavy with fog saturations, just heavy enough for, to press down the lever that starts the machinery .a'go ing. Then ding-dong, ding-dong*, sounds the bell In the fog, savin' many a figh- II a a I.AAi AAAAAAAJ HAI Just as the kaiser was ordering the trOops to have us-shot at daylight or something of that kind in the Ger man language, I looked up to heaven for ,ali inspiration, and saw something that lopped lfl*e a sawed off airship coming across the parade ground, and to change the subject, and to make conversation, I yelled, "Look, who's here," and then everybody looked at the airship. The kaiser said, "Vot iss," and as the- ship came nearer, and he saw the cowboy with a blue shirt and white Pa Glowered at the Kaiser as Though He Would Eat Him. hat, he thought it was the tri-color of France, and he begun to turn pale around the gills, and then he saw Pa at the steering wheel, and he asked what that was, and I said it looked to me like a bag of dynamite, and then the kaiser said to the troops, ''Choot, choot, like der devil," and then the war commenced. More than a hundred shots were fired at the gas bag, and it began to sink to the ground, from the escaping gas, and the cowboy threw out the drag rope and shouted, "Grab hold of that rope, you schultzenfest, you," and they grabbed the rope, and the airship was landed, the cowboy said to the soldiers, "It's a wonder you fellows, with the squirrel rifles, wouldn't be a little more careful where you shoot, for £u came near spoiling a good Stetson hat, putting bird shot into it." The gas all escaped from the bag and it was flat on the ground, and Pa got out of his steering seat, and went up to the kaiser and said, "What do you clod-hopping farmers mean by shooting at every airship you see? Pretty soon airship touring will be as dangerous as automobiling. Now, get a move on you and let those military masqueraders help get the bag and the frame to the nearest railroad sta tion," and Pa glowered at the kaiser as though he would eat him. Gee, but the kaiser was hot under the. collar so that the heat almost fried the eggs that stuck to it. "Arrest these dynamiters, that have attempted to assassinate the emperor,1 said he, and the soldiers surrounded Pa and the cowboy and put bayonets against their pants, and were march ing them off to prison, when I rushed up to Pa and said, "Don't be afraid, I will rescue you, I, your little Hennery," and Pa stopped to get a look at me, while a bayonet went through his pants leg, and he moved on saying, "Hennery, why do you keep such com pany, when I left you in a nice hotel, while I visited Turkey. You make your Pa weary." Then I followed along and told him the pretty man in the cloak with the egg sandwich, on his chest, was the emperor of Germany, and he had got his foot in it by landing on the Im perial parade grounds, which was a crime that would cost his life. "Me, top," said the, cowboy. Then the kaiser asked me who the wicked old man was ,and I said, "I cannot tell a lie. He was my father, spare him for my sake," and the kaiser, as he flecked ^ome dry egg yolk off his collar said, "Is dot so. We wi^l ,kill hiw, for, my sake,r you bet your life,", anfl th? prince said, "Will dot skin you, you young crazy Ameri can hazer, and I don't ever go to American college, dom site," The prison Closed on Pa and the cowboy, andi we all started for the palace, when the little prince I had been so kind to, in giving him college degrees, said to a servant, "Take this chump to the kennel and give htm some dog biscuit, and let him sleep in a dog house, already." And there is where I threw up my job preparing a prince for college. (Copyright, 1909, by W. G. Chapman.) (Copyright in Great Britain.) Affectation. Affectation is that spirit which prompts you to say to your guest: "Do you care for cream in your coffee?" when ybu know right well that it's milk you are passing, and mighty thin milk at that.—Detroit Free Press. erman from wreck on this rock-bound coast.'* Live Oyster in Bottle. Capt. Willard Thompson, vice-presi dent of the Baltimore, Chesapeake. & Atlantic Railway Company and' the' Maryland, Delaware & .Virginia Rail Way Company has a freak in the way of an oyster and a whisky bottle. A paedium-sized oyster has grown into the mouth of the bottle, which is part ly filled with water and mud. It was brought from the Patuxent .river byi Capt. James Gouriey of the steamer Westmoreland, about three' weeks ago. The oyster seems to be aliVe, and Capt. Thomson believes it sucks' tile wafer from th^ inside of the bottle.—Baltimore Sun. V--r» Of "Learning. Reading maketir -a ^full man, confer ence a ready man, and- writing an ex act man and, therefore, if a man write little, he had niged of a great memory if he confer" little, he Tutd need have- a present wit and' if he j*$ad- little, bebad need 'have much cqnfning togeemtokno wthathe doth not—Francis Bacon. S I ir BY BITE 01 DOGS ATTACK Of CANINES^OMPLETE LY REVERSED DISPOSITION OF ST. LOUIS TAILOR. OMCE HAPPY AND FULL OF FUN Now He Is Morose andt Melancholy, and Never Sings o^! Whittles Any More—Wife Sues Own er of Animals. •. St. Louis.—That the bites inflicted on him by/four .flogs completely re Versed her husband's disposition and temperament,is the contention of Mrs. Augusta Gloeckner. Before -he was .bitten by, the''dogs, Karl Gloeckner, ac cording to his wife, was' a "lustige mafaii/' or happy fellow, and was good company at home, a good workman and family provider arid had many friends who delighted' to associate with him. IE But how different now. One evening last July, Gloeckner, who. is a tailor, was returning blithely froifn his work to his tidme, taking a short cut up an alley'when, without wajj-nfug, four, dogs ran out pf a yard and attacked him. lie fought them off as well as he could, tbut before help reached him he wa& bitten on both legs, the flesh be ing^ torn horribly. He was.carried into a bank and a doctor summoned who hastily cauter ized the wounds and hurried him to the city hospitaL For weeks Gloeck ner lay very ill,' and returned home with the wounds bn his legs not quite healed. ilis wife regarded him with aston ishment. He was an utterly changed man. He shrank away from her and would not answer her when she spoke to him. "It nearly broke my heart when I saw him he was such a wreck." said Mrs. Gloeckner. "Before he was at tacked by the dogs he was such a merry fellow, always laughing and siiiging around the house. There was no one so joyful all the time as he. "After he came home he Went around the house with dov.-ncast head, He Shrinks Away from His Wife at Her Apprcach. and with never a smile or a word for anyone. He could not eat. much, and he slept little, when he had such a fine appetite for the good things I cooked for him, slept all night like a baby and was up singing and ready for his wbrk early every morning. "But now he is morose and melan choly. .He gits by himself and broods all the time he is at home, and I am told that he, does his work silently, and never sings or whistles any more or speaks to .his friends in the shop. His whole nature is utterly changed. "He doesn't complain or seem afraid of the future. Of course, "he is still sick and suffering from his terrible ex perience with the dogs. But it is the change in his disposition that is the strange part of it all. It seems as though the poison from the fangs of the. savage dogs had worked some strange spell on him. I am not an educated woman and cannot under stand these things, but I do know that when those dogs attacked Karl they robbed me of my good, kind, merry husband and gave me back a sad, mo rose, silent and uncompanionable man." Mrs. Gloeckner has brought suit for $10,000 in the circuit court against John P. Collins, an undertaker, back of whose premises her husband was bitten, and who, she says, is the own er of the dogs. Shows Nerve Severs Finger. Mount Carmel, Pa.—To demonstrate to his wife that man can endure with out flinching as much suffering as woman, Joseph Rakus of the Ex change, a suburb, cut off the little finger of his right hand. Rakus, who is 45, has been married many years, and the pair have several children. The argument over suffering began after man and wife had quaffed of something stronger than tea. Seizing- an ax, he went to the yard, andf with one swipe cut off his little finger at the first joini:. Re-entering the house he waved the bloody finger ini the air as proof of his nerve. Mrs. Rakus-told him to go but and cut his head off, but the husband de clined. I r. V-' Poor Country for "Hamfats." James K. Hackett^ the actor, is al ways ready to assbrt that there are many untoward possibilities in his pro fusion. "Really, the public dbesn't appreciate the vicissitudes of an .ac tor's life," he said, recently. "Now, there was Wisham Brown, who went tpUring in South'Africa. I met "Wish am's cdtisin recent '^Vell^ how* is Wish? said T. 'Wish?' said the cousin. 'Why marC itfishain's dead!' 'Dead?' I cried. 'How did he die?' 'Petted td death with eggs1 at Capetown,' the cov Sin-answered. 'But- eggs don't kill-/ sa!(H. Hel smiled- fctibly, and' TBBT wired, 'Ostrich eggs do.'" AOORESSES MiSBimi TURN ABOUT FAIR PLAY. But Somehow Mrs. Newlywed Couldn't See the Point. A young friend of mine, a jolly, con vivial sort of a chap, got married re cently, and at the end of the first week, upon receiving his salary of $20, he went home, gave his wife $18, and kept two for himself. Of course, she thought that was love ly, but to her astonishment at the eiid of the second week he handed her only two dollars, keeping $20 for him self. "Now, see here, John," she said, in dignantly, "how do you suppose I am going to manage on two dollars a week?" "I don't know, I am sure, my dear," he answered, sweetly. "I had a terrible time of it last week, my self." Gee, but wasn't he the mean old thing!—Seattle Argus. Lots Easter. Bobby rushed out to meet his father the other nigbt as he was returning from work and said, breathlessly: "Oh, papa, I won't have to study nearly so hard at school any more." Now, Bobby had been doing far from well and his father was pleased to hear of the new interest, hoping for better things. "How's that, my son?" said he. "Oh, I got put back a class."—The Housekeeper. (important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it bears the Signature of, In Use For Over 30 Vears. J-i-L I Oh* ofjthe the Louisville, Ky. Color More The Kind You Have Always Bought. She Earned it. Mabel liked candy. However, she was not allowed nearly as much as slie would like. One day her father told her that she could1 have three pieces if she would kiss a visitor who was coming to dinner. As soon as the front door was opened she rushed up and implanted the kiss with much gusto, and then turned to her father. "Now, papa, give me the candy for kissing her." Thousands of country people know that in time of sudden mishap or accident Hamlins Wizard Oil is the best substi tute for the family doctor. That is why it'is so often found upon the shelf. How Could He Tell? Hirum—Was yer house damaged by that there cyclone? Ike—Dunno. I hain't found it yit. —Cleveland Leader. A pessimist needs.Garfield.Tea, the Herb laxative which regulates the liver, corrects constipation and bnngs good health and good spirits. jit Is doubtful whether he should be sent to jail for bigamy, or be compelled to. live with both of them. 1 ONI/r ONE "BROMO "BROMOQUIKINE." S BROMO QU1NINB. Look fol W. GKOVTS. Used the World That Is LAXATIVE the signature of ovfcr to Cur* a Cold In On* Daj. 25c. Women would have no use for mir' rors that would enable them to see themselves as others see. them. We PA* xO-llcta. FOR COW HIDES arid high jprlee for fiirs. Sell traps'cheap. Nj Wi HIde & Fur Co., Minneapolis, Minn. .. .The assistance we get is seldom sat isfactory. The best way is not to need It .' tlM» AUen's Foot-Kase The professional tramp never punc tures Ms ttfe. Whloh br^nd 4p I useT Wbj, CMkd» £f»p. 1 !a man's idea of values depends ob whether he wants to truy 'I ybH Wen -Informed of is to learn as to the /relative standing and reliability of the leading manufactur ers of medicinal agents, as tlief toiost emineiit physicians aee the most careful as to the uniform quality and perfect-purity of remedies prescribed by them,,and.It is well, known to physicians and the Well-informed generally that the California Fig Syrup Co*, by reason of its correct rmet,hodsand its product,has attained to the high standing in scientific and commercial circles which is accorded to successful and reliable houses only, and, therefore, that the name of the Company has become a guarantee of the excellence of its remedy. re ooods brighter and latter colors than am other dye. One lOe packaoo eolen all flboro. tW dye In coM water bettor thou any other to. Yeoeaadn em without taring apart WrttolortroohooMet' Mow to Die. loach and Ma Cetera. MOMttOE ORUQ OO., Qmhmy, tfftnmtu Footrest for Invalid. In making a gift for an elderly per son or invalid the comfort of a foot stool or footrest should not be over looked. A carpet remnant is excellent far this purpose, or the sound parts of a wornout rug or carpet may be utilized. "Brown's Bronchial Troches" give relief in Bronchial and Lung Troubles. A sim ple remedy. 25 cents a box. Samples sent tree by John I. Brown & Son, Boston, Mass. Nine men out of a possible ten wear a sad look after they have been mar ried a year. PILES CURED IN TO 14 -DAY8. S to 14 days or money refunded. No. No man will become a drunkard if he knows how to make a home run. 1 Gee Whiz Syrup has butter-scotch flavor. Many are called, but few get up. MILTON DAIRY CO* ST. PAUL, MINN. Are heavy cream buyers. Get their prices. The end of one's ambition becomes merely the means to a greater effort. WE BUY CREAM—WRITE FOR PRICH Miller & Holmes St. Paul, Minn. To keep friends, treat them kindly to kill them, treat them often. We buy cream. Write desk No. 3 for prices. CRESCENT CREAMERY CO., ST. Man's virtue rests on temperament a, woman's splidly on soul. ,, Sw'lHide wP ^c'1' Gallon N. W. & Ftir Co., Minneapolis, perfect equipment and-the-ethical chfttacter-of. TRUTH AND QUALITY ,! appeal to .the Well-informed in. every walk of life and are essential to permanent sue}* cess and creditable standing, therefore we wish to call the attention of all who wouljl enjoy good health, with its blessings, to the fact that it involves the question of rightT living with all the term implies. With proper knowledge of what is best each hour of recreation, of enjoyment, of contemplation and of effort may be made to contribute to that end and the use of medicines dispensed with generally to great advantage, but as in many instances & simple, Wholesome remedy may be invaluable if taken at the proper time, the California Fig Syrup Co. feels that it is alike important to, present truthfully the subject and to supply the one perfect laxative remedy whlph h^s won. the appoval of physicians and the world-wide acceptance of the Well-1nformed^because of the excellence oi the combination, known to all, and the original method of manufac ture, which is known to the California Fig Syrup Co. only. This valuable remedy has .been long and favorably known under the name of—* Syrup of Figs—and has attained to world-wide acceptance As the most excellent of family laxatives,aqd as its pufe laxative principles, obtained from Senna, are well known to physicians and the Well-informed of the world to be the best of natural laxatives, we have adopted the mote elaborate name of—Syrup of Bigs and Elixir of Senna—as more fully descriptive of the remedy, but doubtless it will always be called for by the shorter name of Syrup of Figs—and to get its beneficial effects always note, when purchasing, the full name of the Company California Fig Syrup Co.— plainly printed on the front pf every package, whether you simply call for—Syrup of Figs—or by the full name—Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna—as—Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna—is the one laxative remedy manufactured by th6 California Fig Syrup Co. and the same heretofore 'known by the name—Syrup of Figs—which has given satisfaction to millions. The genuine is for sale by all leading druggists throughout the United States, in original packages of one size only, the regular price of which is fifty cents per bottle. Every bottle is sold under the general guarantee of the Company, filed with the Secretary of Agriculture, at Washington, D. C., that the remedy is not adulterated or misbranded within the meaning of the Food and Drugs Act, June 30th, 1906. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. San Francisco, Cal. S. A. London, England. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Minn. L, Travel expands the mind, but con tracts the pocketbook. Take me home to pancakes, says Canada Sap, Revenge is sweet to the sour. DODDS 'Do You Love Tour Child? Th«a protect it from the dan gers of croup to which every' child is subject. Keep DR.D.JAYNE'S EXPECTORANT in your home sllthe time, then you're ready for the sudden attacks of croup ajjd colds. Neglect may cost yoa the^ ,hfe of your child. It's safest to be on your guard. Dr. D. Jayne's Expectorant is the best remedy known for croup it gives (quickest ok relief. SoldteeijfUhen in three size bottla $1.00. 50c. 25c PATENTS^ aeU. o.d.C: A. N. K.—Q (1909^-13) 227&> I TEE* A t» j: INCORPORATED New York, N. Y. SICK HEADACHE akteKs fiTOt Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Dis tress from Dyspepsia, In digestion and Too Hearty Eating. ITTLE IVER PILLS. A perfect rem edy for Dizziness, Nail* sea,. Drowsiness Bad Taste in the Month, Coal ed Tongue, Pain In the Side, TORPID LIVER. Hiey regulate the Bowels.: Purely Vegetable. SMALIPILL. SMALL HOSE. SMALL PRICE. CARTERS Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. 320 Acres •VMS" IN WESTERN CANADA Willi. MAKE YOU RICH Fifty bushels per acre have been grown. General average greater than in any other part ol the continent Under new regulations it is passible to secure a homestead of 160-acres free, and additional 160 acres at $3 per acre "The development of the country has made marvelouf 1 strides, litis.a.revelation,a rec* ord of conquest by settlement that ia remark able."—Extract from correspondence of* National Editor, xuho-visited Cwfd* in AtigustiasU The grain crop of 1908 will: net many farmers $20.00to $25.00 per acre. Grain raising miaed farming and dairying are thp principal industries. Climate is excel lent social conditions the best railway ad vantages unequalled schools, churches and market^ close at hand. Land may also be purchased from railway andland companiea. For "Last Best West".pamphlets, maps and information as to how to secure lowest rail* way rates, apply, to .Superintendent Immi gration, Ottawa, Canada, or the authorised Canadian Government Agent! CBAS. PILLIItO, CliSori Blk., Porkt, If. Dtkj J. N. MAC LACHLAH. Bn IW\ I i».Grand Vaiertswa, S. Dakota E.T. HOLMES. 31S iackssa Street, St. PasU Niaa. "I have auffeted with piles for thirty six years. Oneyear agolast'April I gan taking Cascarets for constipation. In the course of a week I noticed the pike began to disappear and at the end of six weeks they aid not trouble me at alL Cascarets have done wonders lor me. I am entirely cored end feel like a new nan." George Krydcr, Napoleon, O. Pleasant, .Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Po Good. Never Sicken.Weaken or Qripe. Hte.2Sc,S0c. Never sold in bulk. The gen uine tablet stamped CCC. Guaranteed to core or yoor money back. This Trade-mark Bnniiiates 'AB Uncertainty in the purchase of £aihtan mat&ials. is absolute guarantee of pur ity and quality. For .your own protection, see that It is on the side of every keg of white lead you buy.' HTwatiratinT fiOots. lib, I Per Salzert catalogpage x«. I Lareest growers. of onion. Md veietaMefl seeds in the world. Big eafiti* 6ee?W.| Isend leo-in stamps and receive catalog aqdH I raoo kernels each of onions, /carrots, celery, I radishes, 1500 each lettuce, hiUbaga, tur-B Imps, 100 parpley, xoo tomatoes^xoo meloas.1 J1300 charming dower seeds, fn all io^dooh laernels, MSily'itorth ai.00 fcny anfrf'sl lmoney., Or.«end aOq and ws wilKadd qoe| 1 plf. of BarllWrMpO'Day Swset Coife. I jsAiia seed ee.^ is»». toil