•vr't *mc -. $»* THE MeHBNBY HuHKDSALIS, MeHKNRT, IIX. Rich Fabrics Are ^ Favored in Paris "After all the vicissitudes -of the war Parts to still queen of tha world of fashion," says a prominent fashloD authority, "in that she cannot be dethroned. The French express themselves artistically in the art of dress •van when handicapped by a lack of materials and shortage of workers. After a year in Paris this widely known authority in the sartorial world, makes the above comment on the activities of the world's fashion center. She returned a short time •CO after having been closely in touch with all the great houses of Parts durll| her stay. Some of the olrtet bouses such as Worth and Doncet she has visited at intervals for the past 36 years. In speaking of the trends at present fashions this authority suggests that the advice so often heard in Paris should be followed by every If one should ask tha great couturiers of Paris what colors are fashionable colors, the reply Is. Tha color The Straight-Line Gown Is a Gorgeous Embroidery of Black, Green and Orange on Cloth of Gold Above Flounces ft Blaofc Velvet. • • that suits you best, madame4 Browns are very popular, but if you do not brown becomingly. Ignore it-- the color that is most becoming to? you.' The great variety of colors now offered," continued the recent Paris visitor, "by the best authorities literally invite every woman to choose Mr herself her own particular color. 8traight Line Prevails.' fThe straight-line silhouette prevails In the leading houses. Although •very house shows a few crinolines, they have not gained a great favor at this time. Rather the tendency is showing itself in an increased fullness In afternoon and evening gowns. The fall skirt of a soft fabric, velvet or chiffon, is a favorite with houses famous for youthful effects. Brocades and the effective use of lace and silver and gold tissue lend a richness to a season of velvets. The circular effect Is used so skillfully that skirts fall very straight. hardly showing the circular effect, but a fullness that dings dose to tha figure." It 'la observed thattf one waars a belt at all it Is worn very low; to fact the belt has lost its former function of marking the Waistline and la now a girdle, very nSrrow or vary wide, worn low on tha hips, so law one often sits upon It. Coats are long or short, as the occasion demands. The coat may be very short for the street or three-quarters length or longer. Long Coata Over Taa FraeMI^/' The well-dressed woman Is £fvThg attention to the long coat worn above a dress slim and straight to the knees of gold or stiver cloth with a deep flounce of the fabric of the coat. On the street she Is conservatively dressed. When she slips off her coat she Is fittingly gowned for tea or bridge. Another combination the authority dascribed as a long coat of black velvet worn over a long straight gown of crepe, the blue of the virgin's robe, with a 12-lnch hem of black velvet. The blue crepe was applied with black velvet cut-out motifs of flowers and leaves. This was applied with the buttonhole stitch. The Chinese Influence Is not as great In fashions as the Egyptian. It is pointed -out that the Egyptian influence Is carried out in lines of drapery snd In colors rather than in the printed fabrics. Purple In the petunia shades often is combined with blue, warm purple sha^eb often enrich black, and virgin bltie is combined with purple and silver. "The best dressed women In Paris," insists the suthorlty, "belong to the American colony; the visitors, tourists and distinguished of the world add to the gay picture. While a. valt part of the city of Paris Is busy with providing lovely creations for the world the loyal French woman of the old regime would consider it unpatrlotlp to be well dressed while her country lg in distress. The little mldlnette who used to be the picture of style in her simple dress and well-shod feet today Is sr shabby little person with unkempt hair, cotton hose, ill-clad feet, in the simplest sort of dress. Those who know the old Paris and the Paris since the war see a change of spirit. In a leading millinery house models of hats are showu, the customer chooses a hat. Then her bead is measured apd the hat made. . To Lead World of Fashion. "The lack of money to buy a stock of materials and the shortage of help in the workrooms have made this method of business necessary. The thrifty Frenchman cannot afford to have materials made up nniewa he I'M a market Ha Is doing business an small capital. "Among the older houses. Worth and Doucet, the pride of traditions of the house spurs these designers to a great effort to lead the world of fash- Ion. The sons of Worth have a pride of succession as great as that of the aristocracy of blood. \ Lanvln is noted for that touch of femininity that characterizes her gowns. Jenny Is the house of youth, Callot tends toward ipagniflcent fabrics and gorgeous effects. Molyneux Is one of the new houses gaining prestige since the war. Boue Soeuts clings to that exquisite handwork made famous by that house." Styles In gloves seldom vary for women of refined taste. Somehow, according to the Anglo-Saxon standard, there is someflrtngfplebeian about a fancy glove. But some of the gauntlets this season have open work cuffs and are elaborated with fancy stitches. Straight-Around Collars Marabout is having quite a vogue and Is shown In straight-around collars and In boas of different lengths, according to a fashion writer in the New York Times. Some are long and wide, to be worn as practical shoulder scarfs, and these are In black and many beautiful shades. With the tallleur It Is distinctly swagger to wear a knitted or woven muffler of wool or silk. It may be had In smooth weaves or angora, mauve, gray, brown, black, white and in fancy stripes, recalling the genuine Roman scarf. Time was when no gentlewoman ever used anything but a white linen handkerchief. It must be white, sheer and very fine to be the correct thing; the hem must be wide. That must liave been very long ago, for colored moucholrs and those with gray borders are now an accepted story. These, to Insure the colors being fast, were never Inexpensive, but they are now to be had In the department stores, all-linen handkerchiefs by the yard. A border Is woven around each square the slse of a lady's handkerchief. All one has to do Is cut them apart on a marked line and roll an Infinitesimal hem on two sides, the other two being selvedge-finish. They are a novelty and they are cheap. Several o^her new Ideas are very attractive. Vanity cases, powder boxes to carry In one's purse, rouge tubes, eyelash cultivators and a thousand and one trifles that cater to the feminine desire to be beautiful and well-dressed, are a profitable feature In the large stores and specialty shops. A vanity case may cost a ridiculously large sum, but there are some that are pretty and practical and may be had at a modest price. Exotic fashions Include such minor luxuries as perfume, which are important to express fully the "feeling," once a woman takes a style for her own. So the large shops have augmented their section of foreign novelties with showy displays of very expensive and subtle odors In bottles of many shapes. There Is mysterious blend of sandalwood from the East, put up and labeled at Paris, to be sure, but conveying a suggestion of Egypt. ffiUIPfflSSNER Workman Climbs Forty Feet am) f Then Falls Back Whta i Pegs Give Way. • < SAVED HOURS LATER Canterbury, England.--A remarkable adventure befell Frederick Tuff, a workman on the Chilham Castle estate, near here. He fell into a disused Ice well, from which he tried la vain to escape by means of s ladder of pegs, and remained a prisoner for 26 hours. Tuff had heard fellow workers talk of the well and on his way home from work he decided suddenly to Investigate It. He pushed open a door, walked along a passage and in the darkness stepped over the sill and fell to the bottom, a distance of 20 feet, amid a shower of bricks, bruised, but not much hurt. * Climbs Up With Pegs. Shouting failed to attract help, and he tried to make his own way to safety. "I found some bits of board on the well bottom," he said, "and shaped six pegs. Then I dug holes with my knife In the cement between the wall bxtcks and pushed the pegs into them. Each Hols Took About Half an Hour to Make. Each hole took about half an hour to make. "When I got half way up I found I had not got enough pegs. I came down again and tied string to the lower pegs, and then as I went up pulled them out behU^i me to use higher up. "I had got almost to the top when the peg I was standing on gave way and let me down. After that I gave up. At the time I could hear a cricket match being played In the field outside snd children playing round about. Rescued by Brother-in-Lsw. "I could make nobody hear." (It sc^ms that Tuff's shouts were heard, but nobody could discover where th£y came from.) "I cleared the toads that were In the well down a drain to have the place to myself and tried to get to sleep. It was very cold and uncomfortable, but I slept fairly well. I heard twelve and four o'clock strike, and then nothing until the church bells woke me. "Just before two p. m. I heard my brother-in-law shouting, and I answered. He then found me and fetched a ladder and got me out. I walked two miles bome to Shottenden and had a jolly good dinner." T Woman Who Crochets Finds Place for Things The woman who can do just ordlaary crocheting has in her possession a means for any number of delightful and useful decorative touches for her home furnishings. A narrow filet Insertion set just above the hem will make of the plain linen buck towel something quite distinctive. Medallion Inserts lend themselves to all manner of usage, from the center of a table cover to corners and small Inserts with the Initial that adds beauty to the place and also serves as s marker. These little initialed affairs can be crocheted In a very short time, and are a new and clever way to mark bad linens and other accessories in home furnishings. A pretty sewing case la made of dark blue moire ribbon, tight Inches wide, and bound with blue and sliver [brocade ribbon abobt one Inch wide. Spools are strung on narrow navy blue satin ribbon, attached to the case with small double bow on the right side. Strap for fastening case is made ribbon bouad wtftb the aavy blue and silver ribbon on both edges. Pockets and flags, also of moire ribbon, are bound with the narrow blue and silver brocade ribbon. The case is fully equipped for s week-end trip. A Soap Jelly. Places of soap should be saved and not left to waste. Put them In a Jar, and where there are several pieces shred them and put them into a saucepan, allowing a teacup of goap to a quart of water. Add a dessert spoonful of borax and boll till dissolved. Keep the Jelly tor washing flannels and light things. The soap Jelly la easily dissolved In hot water and In a lather made In this way the woolen goods can be washed. Period Types of Jewefry the Mode. Cut steel work on plaques of onyx in the Second Empire fashion is scheduled for another good season hi ear and neck pendants, bracelets along the same line using cut steel motifs jotead togeths*. Girl iMakes Three Futile Attempts to Take Her Life Atlanta, Ga.--After three attempts to eftd her life, all of which failed, Maggie Bedford, fourteen years old, Is in jail for examination. \ The girl tried to kill herself by jumping from a window In her home, by cutting herself with a knife, and by hanging herself Doctors bellev* she Is insane. Train Ended the Quarrel. Washington, Ind.--Two automobiles collided on the railroad tracks near Washington. While the drivers were arguing about wbose was the fault, a train speeded down the track and knocked the two cars to splinters. Womsn Fined $5 for Kissing a Horse. London.--Accused of kissing a horse on the street, s woman was fined $5 In London, England. The woman pleaded that she did no wrong, but she was intoxicated, and the fine was permitted to stand. Falls Six Inches apd BreakeL**. Olean, N. Y.--Falling about six Inches while hanging to a swinging ring In a park here, Dr. H. L, Whipple of Cuba, N. T., suffered two fracture* of the right leg. Cat Mothers Two Baby Rata. fcokomo, Ind.--Cats and rats, usually deadly enemies, are members of the same "family" In the store of John Fee. Fee's pet cat mothers two little rats with her litter of kittens. 8he Is a good ratter, having killed many. Five Years for Theft of Pie. Minneapolis, Minn.--John Gross was sentenced to tbe Minnesota penitentiary recently for an Indeterminate terra not to exceed five years, recently, because he stole a pie ,#jid ga appl" turnover worth SO cents, .' tacsessfctMsfatttdlm Autoist Who tided Boy Shoots Himself 8t. Louis, Mo.--Four days after his motorcar ran over and killed a little boy, Edward J. Wagoner, of St Louis, shot and killed himself. A few hours later a coroner's jury held him blameless for the accident. Wagoner had been unable ta sleep sines tbe accident, his wife said. ADOPTS EIGHT CHILDREN, fORGETS TWO OF HIS OWN Divorced Wife Says Chicagoan Was Great on Promises and in Arrears on Alimony. ; Chicago.--Charles Q. Strauss of 1238 North La Salle street, acclaimed a hero when he appeared before Judge Edmund K. Jareckl to adopt eight children and cited by tbe judge himself as an exemplar of humanitarian virtues, was described differently by Mrs. Motile Strauss, his divorced wife. When he applied for adoption papers, Mr. Strauss did not mention Mrs. Strauss, who conducts a boardlng-housa at 2234 Jsckson boulevard. They hsve been divorced four years. "He should be adopting children,** said Mrs. Strauss. "He's got two of Ills own thst I've been supporting-- Carl, fourteen, and Margaret, twelve. The court Instructed him to pay me $50 a month alimony and he's In arrears almost a year." Mrs. Strauss has had her attorney, Richard C. Betts of 79 West Monroe itreet, file action against her husband. She appeared before Judge Harry M. Fisher and signed s complaint concerning the non-payment of alimony. "He was always great on promises," she said. "He painted beautiful pictures of a home, an automobile and servants, but all he has ever done so !ar Is to owe me money." Women Convicts Vie for Beauty Honors 4n Prison Saa Francisco.--Rivalry among the beauties stopping for a period of from ten years to life at San Quentln penitentiary Is causing more or less concern to the prison authorities. The prison regulations allow women prisoners to receive such cosmetics as are considered necessary by modern women. - Tfie modern women on the "outside" haven't anything on the modern women prisoners in the care of Warden James A. Johnston. All ot the necessities for beauty required on the outside are all necessary for those on the ;"inside," according to the orders checked over dally by the warden. The arrival of Clara- Philips, the "hammer slayer," and a rivalry as to whether , she or Mrs. Louise Peete would be declared the most beautiful murderess in the prison, gave fresh Impetus to the demand for beauty preparations. The fifty-two women prisoners ara Keenly Interested in all the latest processes for preserving youth and beauty, but their supply .of these "necessities" is more or less curtailed by prison regulations. Infant's Cries Saves Its Life During Severe Storm Zanesville, O.--Mrs. Robert Farmer's Infant son saved Its life by crying during s severe storm. The mother went to the cradle and lifted the baby out to quiet it. An Instant later lightning struck the chimney of the home, which fell through the roof and wrecked the cradle. Stove Bank a Failure. ' Kalamazoo, Mich.--The stove does not make a good bank, the head of a family here Is willing to tell the world. He put $613 In the parior stove. A member of the family, knowing nothing of the "deposit," lighted a fire. The money was burned. Ration Profitable Returns From Laying Hens Are Largely Due to Good Feed." . ffT»P»r*4 bjr tha Un.tod StitM DtfutMM Of Affrtcnltara.) Good egg production and profitable returns from laying hens are largely the result of properly balanced rations composed of wholesome feeds. Experiments In poultry feeding for egg production carried on by the United States Department of Agriculture show that It takes about 6.7 pounds of feed to produce a dozen eggs with ,general-purpose pullets while the eggllaylng strains, such as Leghorns, require about 4.8 pounds of feed. Old hens require a much larger amount of feed in producing a dozen eggs. Results From Simple Mixture. Simple mixtures composed of homegrown grains and their by-products, supplemented with meat or fish scrap or milk, give the most profitable results. A good scratch mixture Is one made of two parts cracked corn and one part oats, while a mash of three parts cornmeal and one part meat scrap will be found very satisfactory. A fair amount of green feed with these rations should give good results with the flock, since the mash and scratch mixtures suggested combine the animal-protein feed, bulk, and fat required by a good balanced poultry ration. Tbe rations may be varied to Illelude'feeds thst are easily obtained and that are comparatively inexpensive. Corn, wheat, oats and barley are the principal grains fed to poultry. Kafir corn and buckwheat are used also, but are not so generally available and cost more. Corn and wheat are the two best grains and are about equal In value as poultry feeds, although wheat can be fed alone better than corn, which Is Inclined to be fattening. Oats and barley, on account of their hulls and higher fiber content, are not so good as wheat or corn. Rye ts not well relished by fowls and is seldom fed. Wheat screenings or slightly damaged grains may sometimes be bought to advantage, their value depending entirely upon their quality and condition, but as a rule It is good policy to stick to sound grains In good condition. Mash Made of Ground Grains. A mash made of ground grains, mill products, and meat scrap may use cornmeal, wheat bran, wheat middlings, or corn chop, corn-and-cob meal, or ground oats, depending upon the feeds available and the relative cost of each. It Is worth remembering, however, that Just as good results can be obtained with a simple mash containing three or four ground grains and meat scrap as from a. highly cootplicated mash containing ten or twelva products. WINS FIRST PRIZE AT STATE FAIR Mtttfcie Youth Takes Baby Beef Championship. When the leaders of the live stock industry promoted the baby beef club work amohg boys and girls, they illd Hot expect that within only a few years these juniors would be able to surpass the experfenced veterans In the show arena. But this, however, happened at the recent Indiana stare fair when the winner In the baby beef contest showed in the open classes and defeated the breeders themselves for the grand championship of the show. The boy who had this proud distinction was William Robert Wilson, the son of the well-known Aberdeen-Angus breeder. W, W. Wilson of Muncie, Indiana. After winning at his county fi\jr, the young man took his baby beef. Whirlwind Hurls Oats Into Farmer's Barn Parish, N. Y.--A whirlwind played a peculiar prank on the George Weaver farm here. A load of oats wss standing near the barn when the storm broke. The wind carried the oats into the barn and piled them on the floor. Wh*u the whirlwind spent its force, Mr. Weaver went into the barn and pitched the oats Into a loft tied htm up for s week and began to feed him some ground oats snd com and oil meal with his ensilage and carried him water. "I won grand champion on him at our county fair and then I took him to our state fair, where I won first in tha calf club and grand champion of tha club. Then he won first in the open Angus class and was made champion Angus steer and later grand champion over all breeds. I am going to show him at the International Live Stock Exposition in the Calf club contest" Professor W. J. Kennedy, Sioux City, Iowa, who Judged the steers at Indianapolis, Is reported to have stated that the animals shown there were among the best he had seen this year. I Exhaust of Automobile *Is Sure Death to Lice Most every farmer has a car of some kind; and most every farmer has chickens, and therefore Is troubled with vermin In the chicken house at some time. Well, here Is the connection. It is new and reliable. Just attach a rubber hose to the exhaust pipe of your motor and put the other end in the chicken house--with the chickens all out, of course. Close the house as tightly as you can, let the motor run about ten minutes, and bingo! Bugs, ilea, mites and other vermin are gone. It ts the cheapest lice killer known. William Wilson and His Steer, Baron W. Champion Scheme for Getting Rid of Wild Onion or Garlic Late fall plowing, followed by an Intertilled crop the following year, will get rid of wild onion, or garlic. Corn In check-rows Is a good crop to plant! To get rid of the onions In pasture, If the plants nre too numerous, dig each plant and destroy It Sheep eat tha tops of the onion, aqd grazing for a few years often kills It out. Coal-tar creosote oil applied to each plant at the rate of about four thlmblefuls Is effective In killing both the plant and the ungermlnated bulbs. Found Use for Bobbed Hair. New York.--Declaring that she bobbed her hair because her husband pulled her about the house with his hands gripping it when it was long, Mrs. Dora Anlsfield had her husband arrested for cruelty. He was sent to Jail. Squirrel Chase Fatal to Child. • Calumet. Mich.--When he chased a squirrel to the top of a power line pot^ arid^^asped a high-tension line, nine-year-old Michael Sunnlch was electrocuted. Companions fled when the body of tha boy dropped Crop the pola. 0* . Parrot's Call Scares Away Robbers. Wichita Falls, Tex.--"Hello, Laundry," were the words that a parrot called out as robbers were at work cracking a safe In the offices of a laundry. It alarmed the thieves and saved more than $1,000 for the company. Feudist Sprays Acid, iflllersburg. O.--As s climax to a fllRpute over a line fence, A. B. Mc- Mlllen, a farmer, sprayed acid on Fred Aufranee, mayor of the town. The mayor la blinded rnd burned about the face. McMUlen is in Jail. Steal Steaks From Steer. Hagerstown, Md.--Entering a pasture field on the S. It. Cohlll farm, near this city, vandals killed a steer, cut steaks from Its hind quarters, and fled. Bloodhounds have be^B Wit, i wall in storage as do sound appla* tbe trail of the initehers." ,, ;; Baron W. to Indianapolis to compete for the stste championship. There he met stiff competition In the show of 62 calves, 24 of which were Shorthorns, 22 Aberdeen-Angus and 16 Herefords. This promising stockman was asked to tell the story of his success for the benefit of the thousands of farmer boys and girls who are* enrolled In club work all over the country. Tha following account Is given in his own words: "The calf thaty I showed In Indianapolis is a pure bred Angus. His sire is Belmont E. Baron ana his dam Is Leona Dean. I named him Baron W. I bought him of my father in March. He weighed on March 1, 920 pounds. "When I bought him he was running fln the lot with other cattle, feeding on ensilage, clover hay and straw. I Insects Attack Apples While Held in Storage With more attention being paid to |he grading of apples, anything which fonfrlbutes to the deterioration of' the fruit after packing or In storage will be of considerable Interest to fruit growers. Observations made at Geneva and elsewhere show that lata summer Insects sometimes escape the notice of the packer and are put In storage, where later they may develop and do much damage to the fruit. The larvae, or worm form of leafrollers, bud moth and case-bearers have been found feeding on apples piled In the orchard, while codllngmoth larvae, the lesser apple worm, San Jose scale and apple maggots are known to have continued their feeding and development In supposedly sound flrult which had been placed In storage. Fortunately the codling tnoth and apple maggot confine their efforts to a single Infested fruit, but the apple worm and San Jose scale may pass (Tom apple to apple. If the fruit can be placed In cold Storage and held at Just above freezing point until ready for use, little If any Injury will result from insects inadvertently carried over with the apples. Although the larvae may not be killed, the low temperature will effectively check tbeir growth. However, Infested apples never keep quite so Ordinary Grain Binder Will Handle Soy Beans Tbe essential thing when harvesting soy beans for grain is to do the work Just when the pods are nearly ripe, for even a few days' delay*will cause many of the dead-ripe pods to shatter. The Iowa experiment station Rays that small acreages of soy beans may be economically handled with an ordinary grain binder, for then the sheaves can be shocked like other grain'and left until they are fit to hull. The beans may be colored up some from the rains, but they will be kept sound and sweet snd will be fit for feed or for seed. Energetic Fowls Found to Be Best Egg Layers "The fowl that lays during the winter is the one that lays best during the summer months," says Annabel ie Campbell,*poultry specialist in the office of extension work with women, Minnesota university. "The fowl that lays best under adverse conditions is the one that also, after s short rest, produces during the winter, rests for a short time and then comes into laying in the spring and continues laying during the summer monthB until fall. The best fowls In the flock are those that require tha least amount of rest" Production of Turkeys Decreasing Every Year The production of turkeys seems to decrease yearly. Perhaps this Is due to the Increase In fhe production of capons. Certain it is that capons are much easier to raise, and there are many people who will re you that they like capon meat better than that of the turkey. Little has ever been done In the way of raising turkeys in confinement. When It has been tried the results have been discouraging. Capons, on the other hand, can be raised successfully in t^ls manner. Easy to Treat Pigs. • Pigs are easily castrated when five weeks old and their recovery from the operation will be much more rapid If they are still nursing. Wean whea nine or tan we^oM. doctors wantb TO OPERATE Un.QmBm TeQs How Lyfia & Sawed Her fan u Operate --"After dselMfc tor nine years with diffena* physicians anvrebef at al^thcw satdat last that nad> icina would not rsanh my case snd 1 should have an operatka. I had beardof Lpfla E. Pinkham's Vega* table Compound ani often saw it advar* tised in diffecant papers where soma women had -- it would do for me. and before i baa finished the fourth bottle I was modi better, the weakness stopped and tha severe pains in my sides left ma. I am now much stronger and do my own work and work in the factory bestdea.1 '.' '"*• '•'*"£iJl!l •vjj '•14 .,.11 rlf i "ill •4.*' '.Jp ! % Women should head such warning symptoms as bearing-down pains and weakness, for they indicate some female trouble, and a persistent and faitbftd use of Lydia E. Ptnkham's Vegetal* Compound Will seldom fail to helpw DulllUUcU Rheumatics Backache--* of Kidney Md Bladder trouble Quick RelieF wrifh FOLEY yv The Answer. "What atfe our young people com* tag to|" asked the lecturer. "Old age. Just like the rest of us," replied a wise philosopher In the sudlence, and tha argument closed. CORNS Stop their m in one minute t For quick lasting relief from ' Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads stop the in one minute by removing die c --friction and pressure. Zino-pads are thin, safe, i healing, waterproof and cannot duce infection or any bad after-ef!ect% Three sizes--for corn*, callouses sa# bunions. Cost but s trim. Get a boot ta» . dsy at your druggist's or shoe deakrfffc 1)1 Scholl's lino-pacts owe on - the palm t* gomt Castor Oil. The score of a hitherto unknown waits by Rossini has been found among his manuscripts In the Liceo at Pisa. It bears the smuslng title "Castor CHI.M Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION za _ 6 BELL-ANS Hot water Sure ReSet ELL-ANS 25* AND 75* MCKAGES EVERYVWCRt "CURESCOLDS - LAGRIPPE im. Z4-Ha*urm ua S fim/0 r--CASCAW QUININE--i •fi '€1 Standard cold teoiady workl ov«r. Dmim4 box bearing Mr. Hill's portrait and rianatarai At All Druggist* -- 30 Cants what 00 YOU SUFFER FROM ASTHMA ? Iuha!« it toeootae thro* Rob OS B«ca and choot to r*firr» aadnauat Tak«internally to«l rtaon ind&mmatiaa throat and lungs. mtutivum SawTwt kr ^ f'. • j"; ':»• '.tm '"IM ..V • , V:*T.