Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Lake County examiner. (Lakeview, Lake County, Or.) 1880-1915 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 1909)
V I.AKK tOUNTY KXA... I. . kKM I - Till h . 1KB. IS, UiOtf. tHHKB Maey Abapleat Nights, Owing te s PtraUtent Cnugh, liet I ound atriiM. 'Tor sr-vorsl winters pust my w ir lis lin troubled with a n.ost itnlxt nt himI dlmirwiihla coiikIi. which I i vnrlnlily Hxstnled ovsr n irmd of ssvimhI wsoks nnd cstissd her iiinny bwlrtns uluhts," writ Will llyinr, editor of thn lliirlry, Colo., Hiillntln "VHrlnim rtinmilicM wirtt trlsd ihcIi ynr, with no horn-Heidi re suit In Notpmls-r lust Ilia hkhIii fut In nn spin'ratum iiml my wlf, hiiI Iiik on thn miuuimlliiii nf m frloml, iurcliiiM(l a dot t le of (.'hum barlnlu'a Cim'uh Itoim.ily. Thn result VMS, lll'lltrxl, lllfir Vxl-tllH. Alll'l" tllfil" cIoni-h thn i'dhkIi entirely l I i 1 1 1 fi r I Slid bus not inniilfi'Htt"l Itself nl ncn, This rioui'ily U for hhIo ly I inly A Hull. Tilt1 Ix-ni mnj m lirm iniitrt thill ll'i' frostbitten Is nut In sprinkle them with cold wnlcr, km hiIkM hm-iii ikiI urn I. Inil t ut tlinn In a cool lm where tin- fniMt will come out kcikI unity. The water process uiiiki-rt thin Mltof;ft Imt too rnpld. Save Mnnr by Huylnf Chamhfrli Va Cough Memady, Vim w ill i ii y jiiht hh much for h bottle, of ( Mi it ii 1 1 -1 I ri Ciuiuh Item pi I j to. for Hity of tliH other c-miuli liii-ilicliii-K lot you artVH money In Imyinu It. Tin' Hitviou in whut von lint, not wluit you imy. Tim sum to-ours you imlity U every b iltlo of tliU remedy, anil you nut cmul refills when you tali It. S'i-kIi-i'Ii- I i'oIiIh often develop h serious (Munition, mid wlii-n J on liny ii roiiKh ini-illi'liio vim want In Im mirn you are. ifcttinu; one tliHt will corn your cold. CliHiiitier Uin's Con uli Kerned y nlwsys cure, l'rioo 'JXt and M cents h bottle. For Halo by Vny A lltill. The K'rl who lon;tn for pink finder Ball should remcinlicr t lint there l.i nothing so effective In developing them brisk circulation of tin- blm-U en gendered by different forms of house work and by bathing the liiinU.i three times a day In warm rilshwiitcr. Wc cM sure thnt rrery mother will buck us in thla recipe. Tha Secret ( Long Ufa. A French sciential has dicsovered one secret of long life. 1 1 In method dents with the blood, lint long ago millions of Amerlcaus had proved Klectrlo Hitters pioloiiK life and makea It worth llrlng. It purltlea, eur'oht-H and vital iea the blood, re' builda wanted norvi cella, ImpRrta life and tone to the entire HyHtmn. It is a godHend to weak alck and dubiliated people. "Kidney troublo blighted uiy life for nionlha", writes W. M. Hhernian, of UuahlnK, Me, "but Klectrla Hitters cured me entirely." Only UK), at . L. Thornton's. One of the drawback with living In the northern at lit en is fouud In the fart that neither In winter nor sum mer does a fellow (uned Kunerlcully know when he k-x'k to bed at night what thlekntwa of undurahlrt he Is golnif to need the next diiy. This may be said to Rive variety and spice If It does breed catarrh and pulmonary complnlutn. Tbore Is not any better Ralve than I)e Witt's Carbolized Witob Hazel Hal re. We hereby warn the public that we are out roponslble;for auy in jurlous elfecta fanned from worthleas or poisonous Imitations of our Car bolized Witch Hazel Halve, the origin al. It la sood for anything when a salve Is neded, but it la especially pood fur piles. He sure you et L)e Witts. Hold by Daly and Hall. While there may be some discussion monic dairymen and stock ralsera as to the relative valuo of different kinds of food ratlouR, there la entire agree ment when It cornea to the nweaslty of giving the furm animals en abun dance of pure fresh water. The sink hole water supply uinn may tx found here and there when It cornea to ac tual practice, but he never takes part In a discussion to defend his practice. AD'aHbJe CATARRH Ely's Cream Balm la ailcHlf abaorbad. Oivaa Relief at One. It cleuawH, Hoothcn, hoal and ji rot oris the dineiuii'il mem. brane rnaultin from Catarrh mid drives away a Cold In the raters stores the Keunes of HAY FEVER 'lasts and Hmcll. Full kiz'- 1 f ts., utl.ru 1 gints or by nmil. In li ji-.i I for.ii, ",5 ir i tly tirothera, CO Wnrreu Htrcet, New 1'ork It the wuiiiU'IiiukH have made their burrows here mid there In the orchard nd one desires to be rid of them, plug np all but one of the opening with dirt and Into the other Insert a piece of absorbeut cotton moistened with carbon bisulphide and stop up this bole In the same way. If his wood chuckshlp bus begun bis winter sleep when the Job Is done, he won't wuk up In the Bprlng, If the holes era thus carefully filled and the occupant pot out of business, It will prevent the bur row from becoming a harbor for rab bits during the winter months. Niutal Catarrh quickly yields to treat, tnont by the ngroeubln, aromatic Ely's Cream liulm. It is received through the noHtrikt aud tl-'iuiws mid licals the whole aurfneo over which it dilTusns iUulf. Drug gluts 11 the COd. size. Test it and you are suro to ooutinuu the treutmuut till re lieved. Announcement. To acoommixl ito thoso who are partial to the use of atomizer in applying liquid' Into the miMitl pitsxugos for catarrhal trim ble, the proprietors prepare (JreumUalm i liquid form, which willbu kuown as I.' Liquid Cro.un U.ilm. Price including t Spraying tuhe is 75 cents. PriiKgints or tiiuil. The liquid for n emlimUi stlia no I loiusl properties of the solid preparation L ton mopped In for twenty-one nrtn turn, though I never had the r nance to try, but In America ail tlm! Is quite (Jirfi-reiit, us dl.Terent nn the very way I hey any "seimlile," with their accent on l!ie l.rnt distend of the Inst syllable. Nolxidy thinks about watches. Toil Just bnthe and bnthe as long as you feel like It. When you are tired of II you coum out. Then you bake your self li the mi ml for n little while If you like iiml run buck to bcln over ncnlii. II I) heavenly. No other ad jective half exprcsnc It. When wo (1 1. 1 really ninUe up our tnlii'l-t to Ktop out for good and had ilrenncd otirMi-lves, feeling like g-xl-ib-NNcs Jii' t I ii tii of the foam (or giMla, us I lie ciHi' mlyht bei, we nil met our party. Hie I'ltchleys and my counln to nrrani;e about what Mnliiinnlelgh would do. It Necined that .Mrs. I'llchley had In vltel him to tuiH'h, and as hIic hud been so kind liboilt the bathliotino he es philueil to I'otlcr lie thoiiKlit that lie toiililii't very well refuse. Alnit stop ping on he would deride later, but be conm-iiled to drive with nn In the afieriiooii in a motor cur of Potter's that IioIiIm six. Ily that tlmo he would have Iiml II'iii- to send n wlro to a friend of hi) In New York nnd to make up bin mind what ho Iiml better do lilxuit I'iiIiik luli'k. When we got home we found Mrs. Is Kay much better and tip Khe wan Inclined nt llrnt to be (Tons with Sally ami Cotter for tiiklnc me to the beach, but when she heard about i MoIiiiiixIcIkIi. she forgot to be vexed, anil Heeuied iilmont excited alxiut him. I enn't think why. She onked lots of cpieMtlons. very quickly, one after the other, brighten lug up wheu Potter told how he had Invited MoliiiiiHlelKli to come to the Moorlir. Hit looking quite strained nnd wild at the news about his lunch ing with the I'ltchleys. "Ton oughtn't to have let him go. Potter." she said. Potter shrugged bis shoulders those square American shoulders of his. "Strange us It may seem to you, he wonted to. That settled It I didn't monkey with the gunpowder." Mrs. Kks Kny's Hps went down at the comers and her eyes flashed. "How easy It Is to see that woman's gome." said she. "Cora Pltchley knows thst Mra. Van der Wlndt and the committee will be only too anxious for us to go to the pink ball now. and she thinks she sees a way of getting there, too, nfler all. Mark my words, she's got her earl; it'll go bard with her If she doesn't stick to him. Betty, can't you do something? He's your cousin. You've a right to him." j "I dou't know that I want him par ticularly." I confessed. "Mohunslclgh's a dear, queer old thing, and I'm fond of him, but we haven't seen much of him nt home for years. And 1 know ho can't be bothered with me." "Anyhow, he certainly ought to be here," said Mrs. Ess Kay anxiously. "It will le perfectly loathsome If we have to sit still nnd see tm I'ltchleys I gobble him up." ! "Poor Mobunslelgh!" I exclaimed.! "tt'tif u-lint will thnr An xrith him"' And for a lurid Instant I beheld Miss Pltchley and Carolyn as beautiful ogresses, with their lips red too red. "They'll go to the pink ball with him and by him They couldn't without him. That's what they'll do." said Mrs. Ess Kay, as If she saw my cous in's whitening bones ( Icked clean by the Pltchley family. "And we shall have to be' Intimate with them the whole time he stays." "Oh, you needn't feel bound to for my sake. It Isn't as though Mobunslelgh"- I began, but Mrs. Ess Kay snapped my poor sentence In two, as If It had been cotton on a reel. "I have to think for all of us," said she. "Cora Pltchley Is a climber." We changed our dresses (Sally says one must be forever changing one's dress at Newport), lunched, and then at the door appeared a gorgeous white Ai I stood foWtutiiip, tomebody knocked. motor car lined with scsrlet, wblcb 1 had never seen In-fore. As we all had on white, from head to foot, we match ed It beautifully, and. feeling that we looked nice enough even to grace an accident, If it must come, we started to pick up Carolyn Pltchley and my cousin. Mrs. Esa Kay didn't go, for ahe wasn't quite herself yet. and. besides, she perhaps thought that In the cir cumstances Mohuuslelgh ought to be brought to call before she met him In formally. I don't know that any of ua were as sorry as we ought to bsve been not to have her. The Pltchley house, which la called the Chateau tie Plulnance, la on a much grander scale than the Moorings. It thinks It Is un old French chateau and tries to convey the same impression to beholders, as do several others of more or less the same sort But It's a hope lees effort. The poor dears might aa well give up and resign themaelvea once for all to being a blot on tbe ex cmhdte blue and gold landscape, though perhaps if they can bold out tor two or three hundred years they may do better. The farther we went, long a glorious road called the Cliff Jrlve, and tue more charming colonial bouses and delightful "collages" I saw, the more I fell (hat the regular pal aces were rnlntukes. with Newport for ; setting nnd the ea for a background. ' I nm glint that I didn't live at the time when nil the real can ties of the world were young and awkward. Per haps they looked Junt us crude as thcxe at first, though It's hnrd to Im agine It. When we went back the first thing that Mrs. Is Kay linked was, "Well, what nbouf Lord MohuiiNli-lghT" "lie's in.!!.' up his mind to stop and send for hi things," said I. , ".You gave hlui my note? He's coin- I lug to usV " gave him the note, nnd he's com- ; lug around prccutly to thank you for Im-I lift so kind. Hut -lie feels he bad better stay with the I'ltchleys. You ' mi-, H's like till. They happen to Is? sending n servant to New York today ! to do some coinmlnnlons for Mrs. Pitch ley, no the man will go to Mohuns lelgh's hotel too. And as they're doing so much for him and Mrs. Pltchley and hyp- hustmiid know some friends of bis at home, he thinks but he'll tell you all about It hlniKelf." "I told you so!" suld Mrs. Ens Kay Chapter 10 IIILE we were motoring Mrs. Ess Kay bad leu terribly buny with her secretary, getting Invita tions ready for a violet tea. She win giving the tea, she explain ed, to Introduce me to Newport society, and she was having a violet one be cause It was uot tbe right time of year for violets. I meekly suggested that as a reason for giving some other kind of tea. but she said not at all. She wished to have that kind because violets were bard to get. though not impossible. 1 would see when the time came that she could get them. And I should also see, If It were Indeed true that I did not know, what a violet tea was. She wsuted It to Ixs a surprise for me. She thought I would like It 1 hadn't long to watt before learn ing tbe true Inwardness of a violet tea. for Mrs. Ess Kay was determined to get me "out" aa soon as possible, and It seems that In America tbe time to bring a girl out Is at a tea. At least that ts one way, and as Mrs. Ess Kay was even then planning to give something very big just before the much talked about "pink ball." so as to "take the shine off that grand af fair," ahe wished to get tbe teacups washed up before she sent out tbe next Invitations. I'm sure mother wouldn't take as much trouble for s bouse party to meet tbe king and queen aa Mra. Ess Kay did for that violet tea, and I daren't think even now, though it happened weeks ago, of tbe money she must have spent For one thing, she and Sally and 1 had to bave violet dresses. She would buy mine (I dou't see how I should bave doue it If she hadn't, especially as Vic wrote Junt then that mother felt poorer than ever, and that man hadn't yet proposed), and It was beau tiful; pale violet silk muslin, trimmed with violets and their leaves. Then violet and silver livery was ordered in a great hurry for tbe four footmen to be worn on one afternoon, and no more! But these things were mere sketchy details, compared to other preparations. One room, where tea was to be served, was entirely draped with violet silk, from the palest to the darkest shadea, and for tbe smaller of the two drawing rooms the one where Mrs, Ess Kay would stand to receive ber guests wire frames were made from measurements to fit and cover all four walla. I couldn't Imagine what these frames were for at first, but when their hour came they were padded with moss and covered with fresh violets." The curtains - were taken down from tbe windows, and a net Work of violets was bung up In their place, with an effect of great loveli ness wheu the light streamed through the screen of flowers. And even this was not all, for a soft thick mat of grass and moss waa spread over tbe polished floor, with a sprinkling of vio lets. All of the furniture was taken away and Instead, along the wall, were placed banks of artificial moss and vio lets. No doubt these would have been real, too, but when crushed they would bave stained tbe dresses of those that eat upon them. Altogether, the room was turned Into a woodsy bower of violets, and I was given a great bunch of the deur flowers to carry. There bud been only a week In wblcb to prepare these sensutloual effects, but everything wns finished In time and without flurry. Already I knew a great many of Mrs. Ess Kay's friends, and on tbe duy of the tea It seemed that each ix-rson whose acquaintance I had made bad remembered me with a cartwheel of violets. All my flowers were placed In vases on tables In the big drawing room, adjoining the bower of violets, and a a card waa attached to each bunch, pinned on the masses of violet satin ribbon which trailed from It, each giver could bave tbe pler.suie of seeing how bis gift com pared with his neighbor's. It was a wonderful display a violet show. And, as Mra. Ess Kay had said, "it was wot tbe right time of the year for violets." . We stood on our feet for hours, smiled yards of smiles, and said tbe same things over and over again so inuny times that I began to feel like a phonograph doll wblcb I aaw In my IS first New Tort shop. Only when I ran down noliody wound me np, and I had to go on by myself as best I could, which was fatiguing and made the iinifliliicry squeak. Hut everyUidy said It wns a huge success. The New York patrs had each more than m column almut the "function." us they called It. and Mrs. Ess Kay was piously hnppy. I had thought we were very gay be fore, but nftcr the violet feu. from get ting up to going to bed, we never bad a moment that hadn't Its own appoint ed place In the procession of boors, like the be:n In m long ronury. After breakfast we went to the Ca sino to piny tennis, to listen to the concert or pretend to and to gabble. There we would meet everyluxly we Lnew, nnd It was odd to see the calm but slightly conscious air of superior Ily with which the everylxdl(?s, going In or out, panned the poor tioIkmIIcs as sembled to watch the Casino entrance. see their millionaires nnd especially millionairesses going to enjoy them selves. Fancy If Londoners reduced themselves to n state of collapse for the pleasure of seeing Mr. Belt take off bis hut to Mrs. Wertbelmer! But the millionaires In America seem to be like our aristocracy, only more Impor tant, for the nonrnllllonalres take a groat deal more trouble to stare at them than the common people do at us. After the Casino there was always the beach, and tbe most delightful things happened at the boacb. It was never twice the same. Then we, wonld lunch with some one or some one would lunch with us at tbe Moorings. Afterward there would be a drive, calls to make, perhaps two or three wonderful "at homes"' or concerts, with great singers and entertainers from New York, twenty minutes' rest J snd then a scramble to dress for din ner, with a "dinner dance" to follow, or amateur theatricals. Of course, as I bsven't been pre sented yet and don't know anything about what the season Is like In town, except what Vic has told me, I can't Judge of the differences at first band, but then Vic has told me a lot. and I have beard Stan and Loveland talk, besides one seems to know one's own country and country people by Instinct without having actually to see what they do, and I'm sure that even In tbe smartest set at borne tbey don't dream of bothering their beads to think of such original entertainments as in America. In England there are Just two or three kinds of parties. Tou give a j crush, which Is grand If yon have a j big house, or you ask a few bright, particular ones and enjoy yourself. Or In tbe country you nave a bouse party and pick ont the men because they can shoot and the women because j they are pretty, or else, If it'a winter, I you bunt and you bave theatricals. ' But tbe Americana at Newport turn up their noses at that slow, old fash ioned kind of thing. Tbey He awake nlgbta (I'm sure they must) to think of something so original that nobody ..... ... .... ... " ... least iih ue.ore. .i v, oeuer, to have It very sensational and star- tllng. If you are invited to a party. you never know a bit what It will be like, whether you will dance In a barn and eat your supper on horseback out of decorated mangers, whether there will be captive balloon, at garden party, whether a Noah's ark will bave been rigged np on a minia ture lake or whether you will bave a pair of skates provided for you and find yourself cutting figures on the ice In a gorgeously illuminated skating rink, with tbe thermometer up to good ness knows bow many degrees outside. Of course, in a place where every, body gets nervous prostration trying to outdo everybody else In originality and extravagance, It wouldn't be like Mrs. Ess Kay to let herself fall behind. She simply made up ber mind that her big entertainment should be the affair of tbe season before she decided what form It should take. She thought Instead of sleeping for several nights and began to wear the expression on her face wblcb I bave in motor cars when I think we are going to tele scope with something twice our size, and am trying to prepare for eternity with a pleasant smile on my lips. She ate scarcely anything, telephoned a good deal and took pbenacetin in hot milk. Then suddenly It came to her I mean the Idea. We were at lunch when she thought of It. and luckily there were no visitors except Mra. I'ltihley and Carolyn, Mobunslelgh and Tom Poremus. -It was bad enough eveu with them, for 6he half sprang up. then sat down again, first golug red, theu going pale, and we all thought she was gettlug ready to faint. But as soon as. ahe could speak she said, when we shrieked at her, "It's nothingnothing. I've Just thought of something, that's all." Afterward, when she and Sally and Potter and I were alone together, she told us that at last she bad got tbe Inspiration for her big entertainment It was two days after the violet tea, so it was qutte time she should get it, she suld. and she bad been dreadfully worried because the Invitations ought to go out almost at once. . Tbe famous pink ball at the Casino was for the 23d. and she wanted to bave ber party the nlgbt before, so that everybody would be worn out, and the ball would fall flut. ' "But we've got our cards all right now." aald Totter.. "Why do you want to queer tbe show? Just as the middle nnd lower class f ' '" ' ' , people stand till they are ready to RJ 1 , . drop only to see the queen drive Into Jf J;; " ii :'jfl ' th patk or leave Buckingham palace T t- ! dreadfully bored to open a bridge, so VjL ' Jt$j ' ' . these Americana Jostle each other to '-V'T'Tia3rCl:i2Tlfi "I intend to abow , lira. Tan der Wlndt what I can do," she answered. "Suppose lot of tbe people you ant refuse you, so that they can M fresh for the ballf Sally anggested. Coat's isd oa Face Bis . asr. sk. a it I ERECTED IN 1900 MODERN THROUOHOIT FIRST-CALS5 ACCO.-inon.vnoNs SArif'LE ROOfl For COnriERClAL TRAVELERS COURTEOUS TREATMENT fl VI 09ft ""I""! f""l 11 . SeoMow LIGHT & HARROW, Proprietor Sonaat Maasjina off era ft c view or REVIEWS . . . S3.00 SUNSET MAGAZINE .... 1.60 WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION 1.25 pprp wHh AND COUNTY ORCHARDS MUST BE SPRAYED i All farmers or fruit growers in Uk count hereb notifled tDat nnder the ,8te iaw it , imperative that all fruit trees should be sprayed, For that reason fruit growers mast obtain proper appliances in order that such work can be done during the ceriod previous to budding in the A."?' found lodgement in tbe county. Spraying will destroy all insects and fungus growth. All fruit growers will observe this official notice, and com ply witb the requirements of tbe law. Dated, New Pine Creek, Ore., Dec. 19 1908. A. M. Smith, Inspector. TOWER'S FISH BRAND. look berrer-vears longer bodily comfort vf oecause cur on j. largo paucin. yci coiti no more lhan the "just 05 aood Kinds SUITS$3o?3llCKER5v3Q? SOLD EVERYWHERE fvrry oarment $NER Dcarmq ma . - j . ygn of tha liJh I aSyjaal A j to CO OS u 1 a ' IQWfP QNAP'AN CO j'W.Tf Q TP POX TO CAH $1,250 Reward. The Harner count Live Uiovk Aaaocia lou, of wlilcb 1 am a member, psya $760 reward lor evidence leading to the con viction, of parliei Healing mock be longing to in mem- Deri. luaaultloDl oer 400 reward. Horae brand horse shoe bar on eilhei or both Jawa. Re corded inSoountlea Kange, tiarnev, Lake and Crook Counties. tloriHsa vented when sold. UoracaaoM to paaa thlf throuen thtiaectlon will be reported in paper. It not ao reported, pleaae write or tele phone Tbe Timet Herald, Main 824, Burna.Ure gou. . W. w Jirown, bums, ore- Reward for Horses 1 will g;lve $5.00 reward for Inform ation that will lead to tbe discovery of any horse branded witb an old horseshoe brand on both Jaws, placed as in the cut In this advertisement, with fresh triangle brand underneath the horseshoe. The triangle placed In such a manner aa would cover up a bar on both Jaws. Animals must be fouud In the posseHsiou of some person or persons. , OAOTOItlA, Bears tbs Ihl Ui Y Hart Alwara Bougftt Blgaatua 7Al T Ml J TV-V M 1. uuio r(t sr KVuiZsii ijiiroac.i: LAKEVIEW SADDLERY S. F. AHLSTROM Proprietor The best Vanqueto saddle on the market Also a complete line of wagon and buggy har ness, whips, robes, biis, riates, spurn, quirts, rose ttes, in f ai t everything in the lln of carriage and horse furnishings. Re pairing; by competent men. AKKTI1TT tha readers af this paper tb best opportunity of the year ALL FOR $3.00 your order, a beautiful premium, a 73-page Boon illustrated la tour colors with US Western views. SUNSET MAGAZINE tp am raeciso. CAUrosm The Jar of Coughing jBSBaaeBBaBaeBaaaBjaBBBaaJBBBMaBBBaoBe Hammer blows, steadily ap plied, break the hardest rock. Couching, day after day, jars and tears the throat and lungs until the healthy tissues give way. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral stops the coughing, and heals the torn membranes. Tha best kind of a testimonial "Sold for over sixty years." A Made bf . O. Ayr Oo.. Iirall. am. aUao aaaniUaoiurara of V .4BAA!LLA. yers PILLS. HAIR VIGOR. Wa lave ao eeorata t Wa publUb. the formulae of all ear medlelaee. Biliousness, constipation retard re ' covery. Cure these with Aver'a Pills. There is no need of anyone suffer-' ing long with this disease, for to effect a quick; cure it is only neces sary to take a few doses of Chamberlain's Colic, Gholcra and Diarrhoea Remedy In (, in most cases one dose is sufficient. It never fails and can be relied upon in the most severe and dangerous cases. It is equally val uable for children and is the means of saving the lives of many children each year. , In the world's history no medicine has ever met with greater success. PRICE 23o. LARGE SIZE 50c. FeTT'llnbMlbM.AIlMMiirv.M. tile retailer aaiaauew .11 iml fi.L!. Umtfd aud uu& un. You rnti w. rt-i. PuurlikeptorrminantauM ka. W a take unguis; ruaiouoiwiiM. HD70C tue vm vmuii'imm! ana most ex pert au gruw- iu Ajuartue. ii to our advantage to mi-jut you, w a win. lor aale every. wMa wr i" Annual nee. w rne to . M. rCRrtv A CO, DIARRHOEA