Downers Grove Reporter, 9 Jul 1896, p. 3

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Ir. Comings said we should live flour mime I! we would be true noble. men. The people that have to work nu- after year, away from nature. in our great factories. become really ino- tory Haves. Some of them are ulna Clonal! to get their little home: In the um when they can have their union and poultry and where they an in near to nature. Ir. J. A. Donaklson of St. Joseph nod a paper on the advaMagen of llv~ In: on a fruit (arm. The first great advantage was that the children have I better training. both physically and many, than those raised In large due: The trnlt farmers have little chance at losing their farms. for even If they lose a. crop now and than, there will be enough good years to even up mum Tbe «team, "Do emflment am- not: repay In results the money spent on than 1" was answered In the unm- A learntâ€"I lane used the Irani- efl compounds Ior n good many years. and n is a long um since I have used Paris green. I mix (he "an and ”sank: tognther when I slate the "as find I find no trouble in having it mix ”teeny In that my. I have used chit my on the plums, and on the hem- hrds I and mu two spraying: will do If you can alert! to lose a m“ not- 1103 of the fruit. Mes-or Taftâ€"You. I! the gum [m not yet ended mldemly to «top I! (In puncture and paw-vent the entrance of the spraying "an. Qâ€"Cn you run the cunnilo alter It In tron deposited In the tom o! In .3 In the fun? Mal. We can an (to. Ines-fourths to Ilnuomlu o! a flop hy "nu-lag. “I. year the plums and motes “a my Ill-"0‘3, and It could it a pal um I. lou- mm. For the war II. DOING-I'll. In: Roman mixture and Purl: gram. Bald" checklng the «null», no sprung will nmenl "on In! curl Iml some other [Ingm- vlls- um The use of "to copper sulphate u this Mme um do lunch to make a balmy tree. TM Im canola- mun-w! In. "Pal IM- rwmlln In Minna! by marlin?“ Purl. Tan "um“ u by an“ In! N emu In «rammed :n on way u no hm! enough that I. m: be mm span a '0'. It lie pull" or warm on, In: MI!» "wanna ml is"... “on!!! In "swayed. H the plans or warm an- sn gamma that no can “on! m low m. It: spray- hg “one will do. [or the curmflon will his: some at than before they an med nu! no. em rm to 4kmâ€" lr. Chan. 8. Winds of the uri- mm... Iona-«mo. (Pomn' link-w 3mm mom” TI. mun-u rum»; 0! the ukul- pn “mm-0mm «My in hold at It Jacob. Juno NH). The pumm- Iary mm. MM “Mint-day "min. in poorly “I'M. A pool may “ID" having not yet "nu-d. my not also be very destructive" to crops this year. The Ohio- homa experiment station announces that the trials made at the sta- tion and many other places in the territory. of method: at infecting the ‘ insects with a contagious disease were ‘ generally unsuccessful. This was also true in diiiel‘ent states. Under favor- able conditions this method in effectual, but We havo not yet been able to con- trol the conditions. llany trials have Ihown the practicability of destroyiul multitudes of the insects and keepinl them out of acids 0! corn, for instance. by surrounding the field in which they no or that it lo desired to protect, with I inirly deep turrov with sides of very llnoiy pulverized earth. Until the pairing season commences the in- sect: almost never use their win!!- They cannot crawl out of such n tur- tow and may be collected in holes in tho bottom of it and killed with boil- in; Water or kerosene emulsion. A matter or more immediate Importance in to reduce probabilities oi injury and make it more easy to procure methods of destruction by cure in tho selt'cllon 0! places for dim-rout crept. So [or u in [lmcllt'nble it in well to keep the "N" 3min anti mllil-t plui- clutlo to- lotlwr: to have the corn. wrghuin or KIM? corn llritia mi hr dint-oi and in u “Dinar! a body an pomlblc. it will ho helpllti to learn a itirlp nu! It ro-l Vida DUNN-mills wheat and oat: or millet and bent-ml any of tin-6c god "it com. if it in novwsary to have the Midi. clone tmt‘thrl’. it thin strip i: kept rm irom Iran, with urine Inc- I! Duit'orlud it will hv a (‘ka to tho Hunt» o! the (blurb bum: and will pin- 1 goo-l plot-n in tllirh to main tho 1"" Nu or other "trap-i “ While- tho " tbiltch bur.- Mil lluv on tho prulrir‘ Inn-In. I! data not lilo tin-m- in well l on tho mitiuml union. it do" no! law. oitbrr the mount»: clown or oil-lin. Pit-id- ol tin-Io boun- tlm mil unit: and tho rmu will do rum-ii 4 to that tho movement oi ttw buy, 1 Donia; "mount." «no. cull”, alt. ‘ Icy ulll doom} mu bollâ€"<0hlo- t W lintloo Bollolil. ‘ FARM AND GARDEN. III-o Urwlhu Ill-nu About canin- nwu of It. Coll and rum. {honor-â€" Ila-comm". wen-um and Florl' "ATTERS OF INTEREST 1'0 AGRICULTURIS’I'S. HE year 1895 was notable for the ex- tent. of the injuries caused by the chluch bugs in many parts of the United States. Oklahoma farmers suffered much. There Is no se- curity that. this great Insect pest Tfiat herâ€"farmers can make ha! (IF in; five months of the year, which It not true of any other mate, for no other state or country It so well blessed with timothy and clover mend- own and minion- of acres of prurio gross which produce the very best hay that In grown anywhere. The in crop of 1m has been more profitable any In In... low: I- now certain to have n splen- did hay crop this year, it we have nt- flclent dry weather to cure and suck or store ltâ€"and we will have It If the farmer: will an" themaelve: of all the days of sunshine during this and the next four month; Iowa is var- glcnlarlLlonunateJQay makins._l_n nut. sum. The teem” of horned rattle for mom. to the owner thereot on mos. is to may feeders o mooted qoeetloo. Having natured many steers tro- nooculu yearling! to fine lot-fleshed ‘ 4-year-old steers to? Chicago bales. we land more ntistactlan resulting "on ‘grass only all summer to make lesh. Ind then fatten the flesh. Gra- enough for too steers. then placing one on it: then the grass will gm' all mover. The me grass they homes. the more they vlll grow. Bare. bitten and does result in hare-honed elven. because like produces like. The acid In sum mas sets the teeth of steers on edge. Should they feed on hard com, very much of the grain is not mutated. and lost to the stem. Hog: glean that portion when present with the cattle. When the corn In the hush whitens. it is soft, and easily masticated; dlgey lion and assimilation follow of course. Steam in this case prefer doing their own grinding, without o toll on the grist. Also, would do their hashing in the com, I! allowed. and come home too fell for words, lie down in dry com- fort to regurgltnte. remastleote Vith; one eye open for safetythe other closed A for contemplation. until darkness de- mendg no they may sleep and get ht. Richard Baker. I Haunt «nun. N. N. lmn a! Paul“: bu Ihln In my n-uxwltng the plums" o! amp-a } l ‘ould rhoon a mu and: or (ran!- I I! know. rub :- mallet-Io amt M «I» mm. Too much hunt «and be u- ‘WOMM In lhl mullet: M Ito "and TM no“ I- am any at "n mom In Inl- amen tot nu! ‘ "in nm! "and he MN up tho!- ouMy b I down: of 20 to 14mm MmihrnnlonIMuul-m. u h mu." Io comma. In no“ I. u do“ any. A mp4- HM um um nu nu- mum mu your will I". u. pay too non-n- un; tin-"(m I" [ha “I” not has IN. (On (m ”on out way or out" («I IDA" II In“ Um nun (who lm awn. Tho! I" In mun-d minor in mum at mom! plnnlm Ibo hurt bola. In" unme- Imy. MIMI Hwy-rum. "new"; man mung much M the "no .0 mn- Iu um hm In mm and “I" IN [mu-n mama to an "em. Wu" MM follo- tumult” upon pum- mx. The m": M hem" In "no but ”no to plant, Who. In! an IM than"! should In "rm-ted chorus» I) and than min as m n u an". a ml and 0' "ma This w"! an! ":9 mm In puma runner Into the Mn soil. A- tool as the WM '9 «If! enough n “and be «Muted charm-nu nu! 0.9 untrue tell Id ; '0'. 21mm". in Milan Superman! Guam. lull“ publisher: min the copy- right on work- ".uy pm". [or 0|.th you". In.“ which the wort become- public property. The antenna", however. bu but “and n deem that In" the expiration of (In copyfllhl Ibo Iona lull rum to th- Into. cultural college spoke on the value of botany to a horticulturist. it is of great importance to the man engaged in horticulture that man should know how plants teed and breathe. It had given him pain to go past some orchards and see manure piled up around the tree. the farmer having an idea that he was monurin; his trees. Now trees teed by their extended roots and through the medium or root hairs. These root hairs live only a low days each and are formed during the growth in; season. When they die on a root they never grow again. These are tho mouth: for taking in liquid food, and it will be seen that the manure should be placed around the tree at some dis- tance from it. Now we hear about the bacteria, and they are great factors in the business of the horticulturlet. Botany tells of these bacteria, for they ‘ are plants. and plants tbnt the fruit grower should know about. Straw berries have been cultivated ior only about 200 years. Below that the peoâ€" ple had to depend on the wild straw- berry, which grows around the whole temperate zone or the world. except a small section of Siberia. The Euro- peans have lor many years cultivated a high growing strawberry called the Hautboy. The cultivation oi straw- berries in this country began as early as 1812. At first the progress was slow. but a large strawberry was brought from Chili, s strawberry that grows wild iron: that country north to Ore- gon. One of the tlrst men to under- take their development and clonal!!! was a Mr. Keen, beginning on early as 1832. The strawberry at our day is for ahead of that or 1832. It is said that varieties run out, but it a variety can be kept under the some condi- tions it will not run out. The trouble is we can't keep up the conditions, and so varietivs do run out. Mr. A. M. Kellogg thinks that Varieties run out because they are allowed to overproâ€" duco. ’l‘ho transpiration of plants in on important (actor, for all plants are great pumping machines, that throw oil' water rapidly in dry hot weather and slowly in cold moist weather. A single head 0! cut-haze will throw of! 25'. pints 0! water every 2! hours. An orn- oi such plants will throw all [06 1 ions o! water per day. struck, hut no beeches. Yet t e ; portions of the tartan} trees Ina German forest ere 10, per cent 0 beech", 11 0! on“, 18 of pine. and of an. Beeches would seem to be prac- tically "immune” from lightning stroke and therefore a compantlvely me tree to take shelter beneath. Trees standing in wet ground are mere liable to the stroke than if they grow in dry soil. Trees rich in fatty matter and resin during summer are less likely to he struck than trees poor in oils. Wood pines, though rich in ht during winter, are poorer in oil. during mm- Iner. Living wood II n worn. cen- duetor than dead wood. hence tree: with deed limbs are more likely to he drunk than sound truerâ€"Exchange. onl- an n Alt-m! unto-he. In manual and Erde Dr. Cm lune: 31w: autistic; of the dmruetlon at trees by lightning In Germany from 1879 to 1390, by which it appenn that 5‘ «kn, 20 or 21 fin, 3 or 4 pine: wen Mn Punt Chancteers.~â€"Of (to three elements of mm foo-i nitrogen. photohoflc add and potent, It In the In“ two which the ban plan! see-s to and It most «Mean to collect In an. dent quantities, no (in! mumm- of these two damn, In such form And to mixed with the toil um the roots can rendlly take them In. is most "let, to Increase the yield and Improve tho quality st this crop. The plants m tery suscspuhkfio injury from an over- supply or water. partlcuhrly u a. root. and a tell-drained coil in elat- tinl to even a fair growthâ€"Ex. .55 d I per cent to 3.51 percent I! this were new] for needing firm the “mum at veal seed mm mil hem-e - very objection-“h mm. am. Duvet-4 large manner at ample: of limbs um Imported “to um many have been examined by the dept-nun: o! ngflumm. They are mhbly an than n no“ buriey. you. the veal needs round In these "up!” varied In quality Inn “In (Now m.~m In I. pull um. I- not I. am“- val Ital no. In hold II I» coll no urn «My u nun clout. It It in. not no «In». for food u m“ In- “ I ton in 'M. and. lam, I! n m I. alt-chm uh. II III! M an can]. mu. chm mum In only by and. but by "nun. u the unit-hm m It In m M the and Dbl“ lo Inn! on In have, and the ymn pm" will not it killed by mum"; will no Inger man plum, u may and. um. It “In happen in m h m we no Ital It don not mu «kt- ly that a -- 0! while clam will an" up In! no- mw blouse-a. no: clover no hidden under one gnu wine the lunar was MN I“ only cu movedâ€"ll. ‘ Lou o! Onll lrou IM‘II‘.-<BOIIII vim-mal- have been curled on Io uremia the aim of lonlulu on lu- development 0! mm. It In denou- “ruled that who. (he ulna o! the plan bond- to Ibo «tom 0! ball". the pup-In of "Influ- lam the nul- Ind In umlly Manned Ind that (be loo la mun-null} wry amt. A m1 and. ln (Many In on mlu Hut M W In Ink- halo" Innu- lu. Wha- tlpo lbs dry vol.“ at I“ an of aluullu no In nu gram and at Illa Haul In ”J mu TM «an: o! I» lulvldul nnlu on It. “and!“ and Maul um mm u I. «no. «Quantum-nub“- m unla- lo culling Ibo loan vlll In mull. u lie [all In Ala-M1 one-rd Ibo mural lald I. m ll II It. “all. ‘ If you will follow this up thoroughly you may kill them out in a year. and are very sure to ln lwovye-rs. You will have to loop that purl o! the lleld separate [mm the real. and keep right after those [hi-(lea. l (lug mine out twice a vm-k with a spade. In the tall 0! lho year (he weed. come up thick. and for [ear I might min some I pill. the plow la and plotted ll. up null: and killed than the In: your. Kerouac wlll till then. and all in 1 wet time all! till then. urine \vlll lull the-.â€" W. N. (Bah. mung Cam- I‘m-u... I! I had a patch of Canada mama. I would turn It Into a posture and all my stool: on that lot at least twice t week and would cut oil at or below the suflaco that I dldu’t salt. I! I could not mm It. Into pasture, I would have a sharp plow. and plow ll. and drag lt thoroughly alter ll. was plowed wlth a line-tooth drag. Then the first thistle you we come up, put your plow In there and plow I! up. Don't let them get up. they nre carry- lng vllallty back to the root and you are losing all that you have zulued. tor sever-i year- nast than her crate sums and the present prospect is that it will be still more valuable this you. This year’s drouth has mined the hay crop in France, England. Spain, And in some other European countries. M. Helm, the French premier, has or- dered the professors ot agriculture throughout France to suspend their ' lecture. and proceed to the rural dis- tricts to persuade the iarmers to sow vewhes. corn and other (adders-«to thus provide for the entire loss oi the hay crop to the greatest possible ex- tentâ€"and to make use at oil cake. straw, bran and corn. England, Spain and other European countries still doubtless resort to similar expedients. All such expedients. and the widely ex- tended. drouth in Europe, Australia. Argentine and other tar south coun- tries will undoubtedly greatly increase the demand [or American hay and grain: therefore, the good policy of saving oil the lows hay and giving all the crops the best possible culture. We are on the wet side at the esrth this year but eleswhere the drouth is ‘ more general and destructive than it has been for many years. â€"lowa State 1 Register. ‘ 12,": GROVE meters. a well as the main thread of Incident, in the story of "no firm Johm' and 'Up the Gulch' are Ila-01m- jy true Ind practically manipulated." "I have been deriving no mm monument from the good critics who have been kind enough to pass judg- ment upon my Intent collection of that mriol, called 'A lionninin Wanna! The very Itorien In that volume which they have branded with the stamp of improbnbiiity urn mtle more than piece! of reporting miner mun inn;- inotlvn ovations. The principal char- This night lend to the Impression thfl In. Pattie consider. her news- nper m literary mm: a "me hefler mu g daily grind. but the lruth In that the (the: no such yeah-MI: vie. of her routine Ink. Quito to the county, her whole heart It In 'hlt- ever the loan, whats it he a I me- an] pith-thrown. a writer of stories or s W woum; "When 1 Med my 'mn'n co!- un‘ I Mined that It should not he made the vehicle at wonu'l tol- flaormhlu,hmthmuthmld com um winner of no! mum: sens Ind linens-l m I could com- mand,” added In. Pattie. "The re- sult ha been mama: to me. for It has demonstrated the met um dew-t- mu of thin kind In ordinarily con- ducted In not what woman want or appreciate. but that mum editor- thlnl women like. TM: donut-um m uttered um: all the cub-m M which In mule I: ankle. and that in not I mm. Ills. ELM PIATflR "If I could go he! "in my funny I. the mm comm at one of those gm! chafing: I: "u! woods. ml- " I knew to Intlnately In my cMMm-l. and we could there rah-e emu from the no" to «ally ntls'y our daily needs and min 1 coma-math existence. I '0‘” new" who “other line. I would nu do my won, play with Ily children and mm my 0': though: (or new on are." "ly nu m. u an“ 11mm. can“. um I m! any 3mm. Mull no say lawn ton-nun. TM m. n m lad. man I. pm at m b that man. It In that to.” «m. II“ yum the In". m and Mn Ind mu“ lawn-Matt “Tho ”In... a! loch m lot now. Mater nu M mm. a In. an no plum mm m «- n-puu to allay than Win in. mung Mk: II no. that uncla- no nun-n11. But it in In her work (or the women of Omaha. Nehru“. haul the west, that- Mrs. Peattie has the strongest iniemt. The particular phuo at that work which is Juat not engaging her oner- liel is the organization ot a circulating librlry. in connection with the wow- an's club of which lbs is prominent. “We am trying to make It poulbio for every woman In Nebruhn to have ac- cen. without cost, to the wide variety ‘0! hool- At the mound at our armo- intion," uid Mn. l'mtiin. “The pulp [tic intonet in this movement would ‘Iurprluo any person who In not in ciow ‘touch with it. A [In (inya' mountain- lion ol the letter- which come to no tron vomrn It" over the III“! would heap hint am.- of the ordlulry totin- huitotl which limiting-rum: nun-ll, hoop on thrir «into. A- I never allow one at than lotion to [a manna-rod. I an that t mm mule my "plie- tu- modioiely or bin-onus urnmpmt with tho lulu at two or Ihrm any-r mm» ponds-ca. it would in A "relation. i (1.07. to moot mk- li thry might nut than letters. Mi at tho pathos o: the “unto tor more Mountain. in: n ham-o viii" than - tun-homo hitch- ; co and to! A Milli «location hluhcr‘ thou the tout of that deathly Iota-h. I hitch“ no» he liih' um Ihieh any a not". cm: 0'0" haw" I all", within! rtotil. what the in and of what she has ac- complished would be more than nulli- cient to satisfy many a woman of far greater ambition. As an editorial writer upon the unit or the Omnha World-Herald. she has made her name known and respected in the newspnper 0mm 01’ the entire country among men with masculine prejudice: against women in editorial positions. She has long conducted a daily “womnn'a col- umn." which is not a pink to: or a new- inz circle reduced to type. and she is the author oi’ the" stories which no recognized as among the best that the west II giving to the world through the medium of the lending eastern mnga- zines. III“ hooks for Nebuukl "01thâ€" Docllru I'll-t 8M Levon I!" Wm “I Thu In: flout- Au In" to It. WOMAN OF THE WEST. MRS. ELIA W. PEATTIE DEFEN- DER OF THE 32X. RS. Ella W. Peat- !Ie, the Mend 0! every woman in Nebraska, presh dent oi the Omaha Woman's Club. au- thor of many bril- llant short stories and practical news- paper Writer. In a dynamo of energy and the half 0! SPIRO DOUYB. him um, letters of congratulnflol and one" of nduneement. That the db- eue which to commonly mm- in cabinet of mania; greatness, My termed "big head," no not hinted this launch winner I. tautlflod M by the manual that be Inc may do‘cllnod any clan. Bow m: for n Am- lan arm this with mule he! ’1qu red annulled with III! II. cm in wall panel-Ins h and“ finch loo-v - um. Alanna" are loud at laud“; um: athletic hm. M! It mu m! n are In IcMml II m- m then rlnnd with the Green. aura Man, the young In“ um m the Here). rrre rm- Mien. to lav-(Ion. «11. the Oly-ple revlnl. I: hula; In." thrust m M. on "a Run or the pet a! Barium. never and rlmm d. A“ Green In heaping I”. waning o! the ’0 he '89 dead, tav- lng "The Into" 0! Mvn Drool" a mntm am. no“): one, It lay in. that dog Iot need and. "null-g. in him made :- Immune will I "m In bomb. hr Ila “He'll. day. but u no war kept. n, no “an In no In" at (all... 0- n, on m of Ina-«In vmmy. "a In tori.“ m I” um" um De Mi mu:- m m nod to in hp” in Ms van. 0- 00 ml" u! "no “I 0! Jun. 1370. to m in- vflllnfl II "on mu. mm In "to. new.“ of In no... It 0."- nm. Irflll‘ thaw fully, Willy. Cam" I. II. maul mou- In Mal named cut an" Incite- and mun-ad (hunt the main part of the afternoon. m M walled but I. on Imu- h '- m V" min to Ian IN". \ won-a mum-u, an an In“ â€" no“. ‘ ‘ 6‘..- W1 and lino-weal". ‘ Now "I" I‘ll m. bloc III-l um: [Helen do" on um man'- hr In and "only "In an. an In nilhn'n Imam. um, up”, III- vor-ully W. "Ma-In. In il- pun- wflu no In Na pow-r 0! sh!" pm I. «Mn. .0 null“ [din-fly I. (to hot. Tenn IN that 0! III unnhhmunwumm mint Intmfi't and {m Ifll. no. "0m: [IN-non“ can can- pmu. an" we only out an. M can. rm. MI in, on at (Mt not an at (he not. Im II that tum your «at. mm. I. the» do. of NO), um month. of I» and “(Mac n- "Non. "Inn-a. mum. and mi- lu M bur-M an!» I. III (ma rowa- Ilm and hop. “TM MM", 0! SJ- Ill Dru-d." die: In a usual; way. The tour of the wan-u on tho rocky than .1».- (break the an... Incl vhllo “I. vhoh unv- on Ito morhld II In In! mlmlulc. Mrs. Woods in a daughter of the dean of Westminster and is married to the Rev. H. G. Woods, president of Trinity college. Oxford. Her other writing: of note have been n novel. "Esther Van- homricb." which has (or in central tig- ure "Dean swm: "The Vugnbondn" and I volume of poems. Tho present poem I‘IOVII the conflict between good Ind evil in the human soul; the leans ll laid on a lonely, rock-bound Island where dwells a man who {or you-- hu tortured hla helpless wife and children. One child a maniac. one drowned. one a cripple and another leading a life of shame to escape pnrental tyranny pren- ago a horror which Mrs. Wood: ham 'I'IO Author.“ «I “A VIII-z- W In a New Ink. A, remarkable dramatic poem, "Wild Justice," has come out in End-ad. Ill author being Mrs. Margem 1.. Woods. who some seven years no was qulm prominently below the nubile on ac~ count or the somber power of her first novel, “A Village Tragedy." Since then she has written little but what no he. done has been at fine quality. ‘ A heat number 0! firm contained as bright m. «by In mm. um wu accountant) by an excelhnt ports-nu. of hut-Ill. which was Inn-led "In. Wink J. 11m. wife or the Ametlcnn cum-hour cham- pion." She does not ride a bicycle. nn‘d her husband In known to the newt paper fraternity of the Unlmd sum as “Bob" Puma. l' DICKENS ”All LIVED. MAOARE'I' L. WOODS. I [18. WOODS. first Novenaâ€"“Tit; fl; m nun-hon m "Pnoplo choc no. W hut." mad 3 I... 80mm Athletic chi. "In! namely dine-It to m any they could. A Mad d It... nmlmntdamnlflunda Wm, doll. Mac. an Inn (211 street. It aka-alum I an. to hub". of var!" run In It hit.- hole. I have km. N- M n m of yarn. ya during the "(In W of our minutes I law In"? . him without the M m h the hwlofhnmt. lthololu‘ kahuna a mat-Mud Inna.- other. Wmerarmrfl In {in game thing. m l mum Ilfl M It be uh! that be M van m notmtntiemldnounmll hmn'e- or feel commune uh. “I pay us In his httmm. HI. mic and m the mm mm ram lb ma In mum to mu. h. I! 1:” one: Mm! It undue n ' lea : an at all: was on II M: m .1 mm no In late mind loll."-â€" an Titles-M1. :9. $3355 5?? 2 E 5; igz ? s ' C it: it: at I; :Efgilg 3 § i I r 1 I E? mud n- phy. yum-u. DIN- nn-un Il- cuuubl. but V“. m: gamut-cu u to! m Atlantis-human“ Maul ch unallo- and lb mu Ital val I.- W m Pun-nu] It luau-Ind win mac-«mm ml. H- mm Mr Into no pun chen- IpmMnW'flI Db nun! nu- (“Willow compo-M. H0 the. all.“ 00 Id! um am no, ctr-nun In.“ OI on the ma. run-oi u- nut-hi h'lllfi. 11c Me a mu (Do an at '- mammary. M an. a. 15mm? (bum It to mun. Or, winch n 3 mm nth-anal. It on “I ha" I "no Hon 0! M than "at. nm- hum III-M! h b mm! to hln’ But not. It mil an "ream“. for M. u all m lo the lad by “mum that! on 6' grave no howling. 3 ,. Harem, m “In at.“ announc- equally lime. u «Inca-n to form a and Id. of via can. rise to (In don m h M The vholenle drug region new to bring together the oath of the «fill. It dool brln‘ togethcr the man of houses the country over. Every con- cern nut dlntllln holptul nont- from plants or compresses long uncerta- tlom Into uny table" or grind; quin- lno or refine: crudltles or propane standard drugs by IW'II Ill-ocean must have In office In an: man. You ‘ smell the garden- 0! Ash at the dost. m gum: tron: Boudnn It the next VII. dew. and buy dried plant. from Anu- tnlln arrou tho may. The mm on the fourth floor will Iupply loo hunk o! nan-om um. and hll neluhbor om hall a ton ot rough draw. The (W quantum of thin utnnu mum IN tram-tun. nonsense", tron the am atom uptown, ell-rho, dru‘ annulle- ttm-rn and vholmlcn. and nor-on- of klndrtd occupant. The atrium l» tho Irma ore-ulna!) Itny- In, who find: and null octet unst- Inch d Um “no. The older hem an m un- Iu igl- tut [IN-IO. to Ml ODIN. any may Donut- hcr lucrlptlou tlutt convey nothing to the lay out Noontlne. tad- . Ht 0! unwound on. nono- In tho um. not In it! hurt“ out to luncheon. M m mom". too. ulna n lln at tu- Mod the nrn' «mu. m on "on Ildf'fllli. and apt-In tn Ion amnum a th m Than I: mm a now tall mum It: all the mica mutt-ll I.“ lint; ton cloud. unu out. and the m all-mt 0M “and. All who but the old at abut all-tub. “I. tholmottuhobulluulmu Gold um. and It: nou- nut autumn-u m n «up w“: till! OI um... "I Then!- one dlnuevot In the: .» A, on! when the product; at the ‘. ,- glohe ere brought met, me .. Yuri letter In the Pluebur: Dune It In the whole-eh amt (It-met Gold etl'eet le It. "tel-1.00!!! m In nnrrnw end busy and IIIDIM It lende tron Fulton street into n net- work 01‘ dingy ureete that are never crowded. new new end then wuh wu- one. The network of narrow. one!“ end eeemlnly decayed streets In out of the buoleet in town. It ll here that the wholeule drug trnde center; Sne- eloue drug-shop- nptown seem to our tun enough medicines to hlll and cure the whole town. but there In my one at them that upon unueunl demand for the commoneet drug would not have to drnwuponthewholeenledletrlet. You find In that downtown network at. ehnhby streets almost everything In the motel-In medlcn In crude (em or pmpared. The region I. redolent of epicery and rocking wlth oplulll end unafoetldn. It has nmplee ln but”. pllln by the barrel end the cheap drugs by the ten. There ere ceelu o! lleutde no precloue that, they meet he dent out at retail by the drop to save vute. There lo the notable cold of the old chemlele. end there ere euentlel one atL-buloun» prloesrper ounce. airbag" $5; $961

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