People's Pilot, Volume 3, Number 33, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 February 1894 — $5,800 from Ten Acres. [ARTICLE]
$5,800 from Ten Acres.
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A. M. Lamb, a market gardener in Pennsylvania, cleared $5,800 on five acres of cabbage and five acres of onions. The reason of this, he says, was because Salzer's seeds are so extremely early and wondrously productive. Lightning Cabbage and King of the' Earliest Onions he had in the market three weeks ahead of . any other homegrown sorts, and'consequently received fancy prices. Salzer sends 35 packages earliest vegetable. seed, sufficient for a family, for SI, postpaid. , If you will cut this out and send it with 6c postage to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., you will receive their mammoth catalogue and a trial package of “Get There, Eli,” the sixteen-day radish. - [k]
The child that is spoiled by harshness is never mentioned as a “spoiled child;” but this does not prevent him from being one. —Puck. There is more Catarrh in this section of tho country than all other diseases put together, and until the last tew years was sup posed to bo incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced itincurable. Science has proven catarrh to bo a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional euro on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 1(3 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address, F. J. Chexey & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills, 25 cents. Jinks—“l don’t think it looks well for a ministerto weardiamonds.” Filkins—“Why not? Aren’t there sermons in stones?”— Kate Field’s W ashington.
