SAVES "'- TEETH An unequalled opportunity to purchaso a man amount of Treasury stock at 25c, par «he. ".00. Proceeds to he devoted exclusively to further sink the duh and other wise defehp “Alaproprï¬et. ,_ v‘Iï¬ï¬‚lvbahi: â€Miï¬ini and Busing. references. Write for a prospectus Ind full panic.- M on feet deemâ€"Pine Plant .0 Machinery. Not a Spa-hum. but I we.†cervaflve Investment. 801000!" "If BflGlAN-fRfMflMAfl MINING (0. an 0:. math. I: mm:- demy. n harden: the nun nd purm- a. mull-mum. AND "V â€FLEX"!!! IS BEVYER flan-w 0 «Km nth-v In. [Mu-HI“ "‘1. YUM". 72.6! I â€fun- I â€MIN-Id. -1. flndm lAu‘ew rn’Mr r: at" momma v 'EEL amen? no at! u “HE'S FAMILY MEDICINE “ma-uh M ch Du!- mimo- †In now â€'1 at Its hum, The! Man. I“ nu! ro-nï¬m â€"Mvim g «ml. "um"- um and «ind-um rim Ibkh the M ~ O‘RI on th- lxlv-nd nod Iwnns "an. Dov"! h Riemann» lnh- mm .0 mv m nu! nah Me n Jeanna m» «Pub. m m Um:- why to n» ' mum: mat mart wflPANV. V i 0. Ohev BUG». hem URI. .33» no". A ‘ MI uhé- new new Inn-em In In, On an oodkm (Ma my am can: m nun. Dunn on.» th- "H I». m an to anti "um. {M m o! «M but" porn-1‘- “I. Indy. Hindu-dc Inth d m and m in" «nu Inuit nhâ€"m M on mi“ and to no mu und- dnm hon on man-l u no" “In. an in: cl. 0 mun: mm Ihmxh Ihe 1m. 3 I‘m pom alum-b "natal vmue and and Import“... I "I‘M"? “NT FREE: I? 00.30 PAY .1.†- Cured Without Medicine "viii-5m»! rim r-ï¬d vnwiui Id I 0-. RHEUMMISM Lord of a Van Elan. . Lord Conyngham come: or no nut year, when he will have control at nearly 200.000 scrap. Miss Gray took her leave for Bids- bury. Alberta, the home of her sister and other relatives and friends on Jan. 10 last. and after a two months’ so- Journ in her western prairie home. she writes of it as follows: “i know I Ihall grow to love the prairies. We have a beautiful view of the mom). tain- nnd it seems wonderful to me to nee home after home {or miles, and it in becoming thickly settled all around ua. With the .exception 01' the last few days which have been cold and atorrny. we have had beautiful spring weather ever since i came. The days Ire benutilul. i call this the “land 0! . the sun," as it seems to be always shining; the night: are cold and (tasty. 0n arriving here, I waa l0 greatly surprised in every way. Dido- bury in quite a business little town. All the people I meet Ire no pleasant .and hospitable. They have {our churches in llldahuryâ€"the Baptist. Presbyterian. Evangelical and Men- nonite. The Evangelieals have just completed a handsome church. very lug and ilnnly tarnished. coating 82 0. They have a nice literary Iodety here, meets every mu week; They have flne mualcal talent here. Your friend. Annn C. Gray. mam-mum»! ï¬ll!" cm. fl!“ Anna any in Unnamed With Hot Water» Canada Home. . Anna C. Gray is a. young lady torm- orly of Michigan. She is now a real- lent at Western Canada. and the (ol- lowing, published in the Brown City (Mich) Banner are extracts from a triendshlp letter written about March 15 to one of her lady friends in that vicinity. In this letter is given some Idea ,0! the climate, social. educa- tl H and religious conditions of Al- be a, the beautiful land of sunshine and happy homes. Over one hundred thousand Americans have made West- ern Canada their home within the past live years, and in this year up- wards of 50,000 will take up homes there. IETTEI TIAI â€ll Iiiovnut. COLORALO. LOVE3 THE PflAlRlEfl. SIN GLE BINDER â€III-ll...- ' mama. “mu†The mu who carries his salary right home to his wife In «nanny I good email, but he uldom “km mm with his no clothes. From anm' Review: We hlve about 25 cows at the Ohio State 1.7!)? varsity that recline more or less, six month: in the year, on cement floors. Thus hr. rheumatism b“ not an vaned In our herd. within my knowl- edge. I have no evidence, from exper- Iance or otherwise, um corroborate- Protesuor Clrlyle'a view thtt cow- mndlng an cement floors become hummerâ€"C. s. Plumb, Ohio State Unitedâ€. nre just coming out of the ground; there are n few beetles only and but little pint to treat. Get An old fruit can. punch ï¬ne holes in one end and I! n broom-handle to the other no as to hold the can vertically over the young plants. and tapping it lightly with a light stick. sift n mixture or one pound of parls green and ten pounds of 3 low grade of flour directly on the surface, where it I! needed and where It will adhere to the leaves. This is not spraying. but it will km of! the old beetlen that ï¬rst Appear, or at least many of them, More they lay their can. Spraying and boating. When the petals fall from the apple. § the mill"; math is on hand to lay her eggs; the miyx la then wide open. and the young caterpillars will seek. the calyx for their first meal; latcri this calyx will close up tightly and' it poison can tap Introduced before! this closing it will he better retained. I says i'mi. i‘. M. Webster. The whole ; object oi a lifetime with these moths . is to deposit their eggs. and will «10' this‘ largely at least, as soon as the? bloom rails. Then is the "M to spray. ; and not alter the other work in over ,’ and the egg: laid and hatched and? the young worms making their way! into the young apples. and the calyx ; of those not aflected no closed over an to prevent the tree admission of the spray. The young canker wot-nu ( are minute and very hungry, easiiyl killed by polaona about thin time but let them alone until they are oneltait I to two-thirda grown and they seem , to thrivo on poisons. The potaterI I! the Mirth: can be undo u u- mm! good crapper. Hr. Lyman my hu- lo look out for his laurel. will his mum, Ind possibly (be remu- llon o! my tummy cub. Hr. Potter's own. my be enhanm.â€"~0llnr Gibbs, before Wham-in llofllrulluflus. um an old only summary tom- , an loot uwly manhunt. nu E Martin commenced mm; baton M b Md any be" and bu homo homo-t I on the noun: and out lldn. Stud!“ , lhlflrnn (m um In “other man i u! to 188:. This Iunan In the «on ter 0! t mum 0! tom (non. (wot only Gunther" And two Illboml.‘ Do do†um Iho "mu touch. The}: Ill began boating about um am. “no and um mm»: bean bonny u an ; aides. I’ll! No. a has three Martha-i In the mom ol n row. all not In 1891. ' 1'an Martha commenced mm; In 1900; mm I. n \VMIney on can udo. , lmxmu um Ill-Jop- on the other. L hunt on the apple (toe- "pod-fly on I the Hanna. In M. plus No. 1 about g 100 [at luv-y Iron tho out." Im'o two; Martha not In "83 one at thou: land: In an open Alpaca Mum the I ton: {ounm hot out In an old; Wealthy that ha been boas-In; nun; 1893; anolhor. twenty loot mutt-mt. 5 i l 3 ties that may be benentted by the use to: pollen. not their own. Mr. Hazel- There has been a rather extensive planting of the Martha Crab through out the northwest, and, since the trees have got into bearing ago. an almost equally general complaint that while it blossoms freely it is a. shy bearer. l was told a few days ago of one case where s Minnesota man had been in- duced to plant a. large orchard of the Martha. and was now considering the project to cut them all down or top work them entirely to other sorts. He told me that they would come out. full of bloom and then have little or no fruit. Mr. D. C. Hozelton 0t Nichols. . Aititin C0,, Mlnn.. north of St. Paul. came before the Minnesota Horticul< turai Society at its December annual meeting with a statement of his ex- perience with the Martha that seems to demonstrate that all this vsrlety requires to convert it into as good cron- per is to he neighbored closely hyl other varieties to poileniss it. and it conï¬rms what many of us suspected (or many years, and perhaps some have known that we have other vsrle- . ion is a msn 0! excellent standing in the Minnesota society snd sny stste- ment at iscts he mskso on his own knowledge csn he relied upon. His statement ss to tho Ilsrths is u tol- lows: Three Mmhss set in spring at l883 siwsys blossomed full, but did not but snything to spook of till 1900; then they bore shout seven bushels esch; this is in his plot No. i. in the some plst is s Msrths sot in 189: thst hss borne s isir crop ior four years; this tree hss hsd [or s polienlzer an old early Strawberry cub twenty (est east that hosts «31- - cry your; th Martins slwsys best hosriest on t 0 side out to other baring trees. in thst your, 1900. he hsd sis swsrms of bees thst worked 1 =§Uï¬ï¬ï¬‚flcflueengnnmm Ii Cum on Cement Floors. Polllnauon of the Martha. ml LIVESTOCK The formation of a large tree from I minute need In one of the most In- teresting 1nd wonderful ocrnrrencu Ill nature It is lmportnnt that the fruit culturist shank! no understand the grown as to know that will a» unltonmmd orrmrdltontho soft Com Gives Good Reunite. From The Fnrmers’ aninvr: ..nring the must your there has been mar-h dit- terenoe oi opinion among stockmen concerning the feeding value of soil corn unused hy the enrly September front of â€02. Early last October t, Professors Kennedy and Holden of ' the lows Agricultural College issued ' a report. showing the chomiral nnaly~ Esis of soft corn sud discussing the * feeding value at the same. They claim- ! ed that on a dry matter haste it was equal to mature corn for feeding pm. i mes. 0n art-aunt of the large amount of moisture present more ‘ would have to he led to get good re suits. At that time the Animal in- ; dustry department commenced n pm- ticni feeding experiment to test the same. Sixteen steers of unltom hreedA ’ in; and guilty were divided Into two lots of eight earh. One was fed on mature rorn grown in 1900, end the ‘ other on the soft corn 0! 1902. These ‘ steers were fed six months and nor Rated on April 15th in Chicago. Each lot was sold separately, hot the buyers . could not see any difference. thus they both brought the same price. the top of a dull, slow market. The ; results of the slaughter test showed 5 the soft corn lot to kill out ‘03 per i l I} 85.25 per hundred. within 15 cents of ' l l 3 cent dressed meat. The nature can lot so per cent dressed meat. The gains made by the iota were practical- ly the same and the number of pounds of corn required to produce one pound or gain was utmost the some. being slightly in 'favor of the meters corn. Valuelng the msture corn st 65 cents per babe! and the soft corn at 30.- cents per bushel, there was s diller~ ence of almost 3 cents per pound in the cost of producing one pound of gain in favor of the cattle fed on soft corn. Full detatls of this experiment will be issued in bulletin term at an early dataâ€"W. .1. Kennedy, town Ag- ricultural College. Numbers me than be nude from I I0 1,000. The (allowing II an OIIID- pIe: 0m [:0ch In bottom of Int! ear. ... I Two noIchm In lap of left ear. ... G Ono notch In bonnm of right eat. 10 0M notch In and a! flat at ..... .200 A notch In bottom 0! mm a: cannula IO; ('0 nolchm «at! 20. A notch In lop or tight our own!- 80; [to notch“ 60; mm notcha Do. A hotel: In end of let: u: aqua)- 100. he proposes to notch the earl of the i and no one thought she (- unlmal- to be marked. making lbe'uhly MW. lmprrulou and marl“ Ilno on lho‘ In um. mlu-mlty M7. Cu than 0! paper to corrmpoud, Thor. for n hm or lkulnl'n KI-Im-y wllh um dunno-la shoot In Mud, Hu- 5 Ital hope. Imt happl when dolnx (ho work, ho can ho IIII’O ' not lull to mlrk the ulna-l- oudly as shown ' Mn. (urron lulu-d In an 1 ll lulu nun: book. For numbed" ‘ ol Hm n-mml)‘. and I: m polled um. no that the mutual-[emu]. Him In": than be reliable and pom-mot. the‘ "I am mum: my own work plus lndlctlod by the Immunity!“ rm u m-II n» owl‘l’ I anal. llluunllon lo pmomod. . Khlnvy l'm- wrmlnly nun-d Tho "plan-Un- II n follow-z . dunlh“ A notch In mum at let! on equal. I. two non-bu «out! 2. ‘ A non-h ln (on o! Ian on equal- 3; two lunches. 6: mm notches. 9. Th. Tim 0! loan Mmmn Nrul Manly mm." le building at Hu- pynmhlm uted upon ccrtlncntes or registry and thus pass from ownor to owner, as u constant means 0! Identiï¬cation. As in this system the mark]. In “so of error. cannot be rubbed out, one In required to secure accuracy. Tho op. enter requlres I ruhbor stamp thaw. . In: the 0:an unnotched. With these he can ntunp ï¬rst A series of Impres- uiuus of the head und earn upon tho page: of a record book and also upon I uhmt o! mpcr. notchlnx and number- . In: (no lmpmulon In the book Just In Thoma: Mcb‘arlane. secretary of the American Aberdeen-Angus Breedere' association. has the following to say regarding the marking of polled ani- mals: Cattle uniform in color and without horns need permanent end ready means at identiï¬cation. The use of ear tags, marked haltera. tat- tooing, branding oi! body or hoot. etc, have not proved permanent nor on tlrely satisfactory. Notchlng the ears of a young animal marks it for life.- The hair grows over the marking, but marks remain and can be readily dis- tinguished. The objection to this method are not serious when com: pared to the advantages resulting lrom certain identiï¬cation of the Im- imal. Such ear marks can be dupli A hate In and at to“ our mud- 400. A hole In end at right ear equi- 500. A hole In Mum: of Ion qr equal- A-notcl In end 0! right at caul- Tom ‘IHJHITION. in" IIâ€. I on! will u" II‘ Marking Foiled Cattle. DOWN EBB GROVE REPORTER. 211 edge that will lnélp your can‘â€" try her today â€" it costs nothing. ' H E R R l G K BEFBIBEIITOIS â€mm mm. 5‘ le- yes. “no sprung. Enuml. or 0911 Gill mum. Auk your dollar to! then or vrlu for cob-lone an m. Itâ€! IMHO!“ on. “Am. 10". :33? 3% Tn mvo 1M hmlnc and alum n: 90'" of Putting 101.1“ And-09%|? "tum In 1 I III-r. tr I pm with book of lmtmoum Chad-Mb Inn. Thin II n!» I "M ample. but. A large poet-u. onough to ' non- vlm anyone of m mun. Woman I" over the country an pulsing Puma lot win It bu done in loot ma:- non of Maul. Illa. mm 3| Inflammation munch-m. ‘ wonderful) IIQ sushi W dash for m chm nail can"): u a numb and to name has! $14.34â€.th mun-yum†‘ I “193W mum ,m Mrs. Plnkhom, whose address In Lyn ynn. Mass" will answer cheer- fully and without cost 1“ letters nddresaed to her by nick women. Perl-art she has) lint the Immu- odgt- t at will help your emu»- try her to-dnyâ€" it costs nothing. Whom a medicine has been snoo muful In more than a million cases, Is It justice to yourself tn .withtmt tr In: It. “I do not b:- {eve It. won help me?†Surely you cannot wish to to. main weak and sick. "I mmneed taking Lydia "I. Plnklmm's Vegetable Compound in Jinn-.1901. “hen I had when the ï¬rst half bottle. I fell . vast improve- ment. and have now taken ten bottlu with the result that I feel like a In"? woman. When I «unwed mkin the \‘egrtnhle Compound I fell. ll worn out and was fast. Ip mochln «vnmplr-u: m-rmns colltpm. weigho only 9.9 pounds. Now I weigh 100% pounds: Ind an) improving every day. l gladly testif to the beneï¬t. ra- ccived.â€â€"- Mm. .C. 'I‘vmus, 42.1 West. Mb St... Richmond. Va. ~um prion If Original about mm my!" "mama mu k "'31. I tried many remedial 1)th nah}; (aye. any pumtivg relicfl. Tho Tim 0! "on... 31mm- Hunt unvlly midway holvn-v-n [the butkunu at Hu- pynmldn, 5.000 1; LC" and our nun any, "For some years I sulered with barium. severe hearing-down pains. levy-twp). and falljng of the womb. 'Mrs. Tammi lady of Richmond, 1.,l gm: sufferer with woman’ s troubles. tells how she was cured. sum u gram; mun dun "w "M! u Inklnx both nldn M an nrgumnl. When You Buy March by MAI" Incl pl ":0 In! Ida MD QB. than on! sunny: h“; Iu'm'nmu Sprint MIL. I» in. “it II: who has no vlnkm M (oh-"my um nnwr gm mm hold 0! "mmâ€"- Carlyle. I» u hum-I Inf «mum uni mm .3qu V ' A Tlght Squeeze. Brazils, Ark, May luluâ€"To be gamut-bed from the w-ry brink ut the lgruve is a somewhat thrilling (‘x- Iperlenm and one whiz-h Mrs. M. O. I Garrett. of this place has Just passed g through. Mn. (um-u nun-d In all III but" 0! Nu) n-mml)‘. Ind ll romvlflrly In um. mlu-mlly M7. Gum! non! for n hm or lkulnl'n KI-lm-y mm. It VII I Ital hope. hm hlpmly It dld not [AIL Thu dtx‘lnru hm] [Iva-n up all Imu- Ind no one thought aha muld pm- llhly Mw. ï¬lm mm so low that [or [he wont or part 0! the limo who was m-rlorlly unrunm-Ioul at what wax going on about lwr, uud lwr heart-brown but lmml mul frluml» wrro hourly M- pm'lllu: her death. For the last twelve months two doctom were in constant attendance. but she rould only grow Worse and worse, till she could not walk. and dld not have any power m move at, all. Mm. Garrett suffered WM: 3 Conn bro-Spinal [mm-Hun. and had boen treated by un- has: physicians. but without Ibo slightest. improvement. Ian luv-elk!" l'w'n mm In (in-numb. It. was now the younger journal's turn to reproduce. and it unkindly added, “Comment is needless." “For Saleâ€"An ass; very strong and quiet. Apply at [his mum». But. the sumo issue of this joking journal containing the following min-r- tisement: Younger Journal Had Somewhat the Belt of the Exchange. OUIPS OF RIVAL EDITORS. â€mm m. 9‘ In Ieo. WM!- lynlee. Enamel. or 0m an. Hump. A»! ymmmna RIF“. for mm It! m -w up: mum'- llm [rum now and pgx‘anE [g a! Inflammation cleansing W THE RUSS!“ REIEDY 00. FREE TO WOMEN! “ HOW l‘l’ CAN BE CURED " lump mu. warn. ASTHMA Mr I'm F111"; '.:klml'g?l~ â€4-3:an forms: "9'. m It. um .u of Mane. mil“. u. Iofltl M312 m nmnm'im: on ’17 In "PM Mr "1-. lune m um wnavnhln. on «mum lulu! 9., 1" gym. Mm; Bufoégujif any‘otwu A 93.900 INSflRPflRATE YUUR BUSINESS. "I. DALI Show.) nmmmmm mam". In. Law. My": Mann-I lam-t. Wrnn. mm" nu yaw cm. In I. [.I'll. Van. m YSES mmmmnuu UK In. It." A'.‘ I. “l1 man. I mnmn nu I‘ll." no ml 0'. n1 :8 CIIVI [M "l- IBIS!) Ill: II ".3. any». 0. I... Loan. m I. cum-n 01.. "canon. Insomnia. A Min-vow“! on .wlcnl harm-MM“ '7' “TI : I '0 cu ’ m xazmhns £1533†Fm. (‘amrrh iuflnmes the mumus mombrm and causes the blond plasma l0 «cape Ihmugh the mumus mrmbmne in Ibo {arm 01 mumus. This disrharuc nl mumusisthc same as Ibo lo.“ 0! blood. It produccn Hemline“ Only the weak need a toiic. People are never weak cxvept Irom sume good muse. One of (he olmum tau-ms of weakness and‘ lb: om- nhenesl overlooked is cats-"h. "I have a large praclira and have a chance to ptcm'ribc your l'eruna. I hope you may live long [0 do good to the nick and “flaring." â€That l’eruna is nut only a vigorous, as well as an alien \ivc ionic. but also :1 ( ure oi catarrh is beyond controversy. R 1'9 ulmanly established by its use by the thousands who have been hem-ï¬led by il. I cannot too highly express my apprmialion "‘ its ex- cellence."~â€"Cl W. But Dr. R. Robbins, Muskogee. l. .., writes: â€Forum: is llw best medicine 1 know of for coughs and to strengthen a weak stomm'h ‘ and to give appelile. Iii-side prescribing it {or catarrh, l ham ordered it for weak and debilitated people, and have nut had a patient but said it helped him. ll ism: ex- cellent medicine and it his so many macs. Formosan Clock. Dame. cove. ".4 her using your Parana myself I0! 1 short period, and my Iamily luring used and are now using the some wit ‘ 3004 results. and upon the information‘ 0! others who have been benelitcd by it as a cure [or catarrh and an invigon- Ming tunic. icon cheerfully recommend it to all persons requiring so effective a remedy. "»â€"Dr. J. F. Eusar. Dr. I. F. Ensor, Postmaster of Columbin. S. C., late Superintendent and Physician in charge of State Insane Aéylum at Columbia. 5‘ C.. writes: l'eruna naps the cauuh and prevents DOCTOR ENSOR WHICH ? WI“. «nuâ€"run bade-h 1 smaytmw "My! For D emu In dump! we or“ Inn". nmp'o wing) of ma one mum- Tho I) aid. the Ointment and the p. VIE â€MIA-WWI o... 730 Am!- Ava“ Wm. Tu. [momma Cue fly Skin Dim on Earth. Slop- ltciin Instantly. ï¬PLIIDID‘V lmwoved Iced-u of “I M I. aqua-m?“ â€34.31-an me: "rm. m ixï¬m ‘- 1 oc- u- m run "on bum-Immuamoutm ammun‘anï¬ 3’: Mad Dawn. ulnar-nu uni Cantu clay. I Ruin, fur Mnndfl! n puma who of 0‘.“ I [or pm; 1m with pure-MI off-run. N are" IIM ("Liam my â€In?!“ LIA ll rt Mny. - law! of w“ "M 01- ch 1 x9412. ‘ I’ll. m the .3... u: mu rams E um N?! no flat 0 v V AMrmhhl‘qEL {in ' LAND FOR 8M1. 60 VW "51! ml gm , -Allfl.-fl . ., ?ouumv 1 Ilmn'rum 1m, cTJ-u K. n... Inn- for “In a M (um 01 it! In... 7 min Mint-y: N mm“ (mm Vmwn. II.- I'l- Iv- nun i "Swim-r Mlltlixn; H lr‘mom "W; 2mm In", on-hn and \ In-y-M: mm {m mall mm mm van-r I'll!" m1 enmiwy Mama-fl. than»! huh 3mm!» Gnu-om Fla. um: he um mum:- m I" M4- or Z Callfmnll “ clue {or yam-11m («flirt . Mn'mwmumw .. _ m “cat: â€IA" tAIO. 0“ m m not! hang. M Mn and ammo-n. manly: «mm-nylhoumâ€"mm. M Chan-hm "rm "1' unto-In up.“ lfl'afl Ill-(rim Mal Inf ‘0'! M “I?! M to SI MGM M [main-1M mutt, u p .anL “a?“ h i" f" I '1' WV"! mum" Iii» I of I) In 0, pl t. the â€math! (' wann- (awn-m Amh. '- cm mm, rm mu covalent chm M M an '1, rum. cu. 13-min" m M n- u! uh! m h (ha mid. "rich-01 um'ma." "It!“ ï¬a- Mo. 1'.- l-mnl fails. â€I... h “-10! ll-... If.†Iwmw'. . . nun-3.7“â€. Mflllfl LAID! OF I“ AME! rm. wfï¬'snu CANADA W. N. U. CHICAGO. N0. an; m "a! nlwmnu "'Q'I‘I’ «MU-W I â€M II" «I IAM< m but! "It a :M mun- - who at m ImM-ni unr- M Ito-a ! In Iul Inc-I nplflkflkm wmr. '01 u Arum, N. 0. CASSELHAI UNVEIYHENT 00. Whoa Amour-9 Mum-mom mm, amnion mo M ,A Mr! H w "mm Sun-n In M II mu. Ihtuml‘n um:- rnluldl luv the m I- ynr- in. .1-3 0.; mun. Ills-nil k n and In W In. In I do Kan ’IIV arm Tun-1D hot? n .3 II' t n- II ID-‘l than um.» nu (m comma"! Do". I. fl yuu do not tlmix-u prompt null salir faclory (mulls [mm the; um: of Pawns. min: a! onâ€: In In. quunan, “will“ I lull umcment 0! )our mm and la- will be pleued to give )uu Ilia \uluublu Idvm sq a: V Addn. Dr. HIrIman. l‘rrsiclcnt of 11:. lllrlm-nï¬unilaï¬um. Columbus, Ohio. Fund", In“ we.†in- In-m In a human-1m Inna-0v 5:.†Mum bop. II-ltnn-l ah Mun-M unlu- and.†In: nan-yum Alumna huh-o Constant whim-k, and blowing the not. will ï¬nally prntlm r murcmo weakmzsa [mm lho low of mucous. It gin-s slmnxnh hyuwm'cniugulha blood fluids and [nun-Ming their draining away in mucunx (“\rhargrs. nmhnrdJMm em. he run: IWI at“ , _ ponao. unca. mo. the dischargr, of mucous. Thiq is why l'cmna in (“â€111 a tonic. Peruun does not give sun-mull by slimulan'ng the nervous syslem n lmlc. ’lt Rims strength by preserving lb. mucous nu-mlvmnrs againul h-aknge. “6 MR, "HINDI. _ IANQAI clt'. I.- sun. sour" “and†3m: ‘INSTIWI'IOI ; â€M", gigs 'Iï¬li'vlrli.. k Elihu-9107 m hm '9!