The Murray news. (Spring Place, Ga.) 1896-19??, May 14, 1897, Image 4

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Mental Science Enthusiast. “All disease comes from the fear of it.” Disputant—But children have no thought of sickness, “Oh, they are surrounded by an atmosphere of anxiety. Children ■would never be sick if it were not for their mothers worrying about them.” “Yes, I see. Then please account for a recent epidemie of scarlet fever in an orphan asylum. Rocked on the Crest of the Wares, The landsman, tourist or commercial traveler, speedily begins, and not only begins, but con tlnues, during to feel the extreme of human misery At the transit across the tempestuous lanMc. But If, with wise prescience, he lias provided nlmself with a supply of Hoatettor s Stomach Bitters, his pangs are promptly mitt gated, and then cease ere the good ship again drops her anchor. This is worth knowing, and thousands of our yachtsmen, summer voyagers tourists and business men do kuow it. A doctor says that probably half the deafness at the present time is the result of children having their ears boxed. Nn-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Over 400,000 cured. Why not let No-To-Bac regulate or remove your desire for tobacco? Save* money, makes health and manhood. Cure guaranteed. SO cents and (1.00, at all druggists. Does the man who shaves himself always got face value? ______ ______ Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬ tion, allays path, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle. If afflicted with sore eyes nse Dr. Isaac Thomp¬ son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25o. per bottle. Impure Blood "I have found Hood’s Sarsaparilla an ex¬ cellent medicine. My little girl was afflioted with eczema for seven years and took many kinds of mediolne without relief. After taking a few bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla she was cured.” Mbs. Emm* Franklin, Honeoyo, New York. Get only Hood's because Hood’s Sarsa¬ parilla I» thebest—In fact the One True Blood Purifier. Hood’s Pills are pills, the aid best digestion. after-dinner 2t>c. About Paper. It is a strange fact that while paper 8 being used for dozens of purposes formerly monopolized by wood, or even a harder material, such as car . wheels, boxes, barrels, tubs pails, ; etc wood is rapidly driving other in- ! gradients to the wall in the manufac - ure of nearly all the cheaper grades of P ft Paper P* r - floors „ manufactured , . , at , I are Emsledein, Germany. In the form of & pasty mass the paper is spread upon tliA surface to be covered and submit ted to pressure. It behaves like pies ter of paris, and is said to be noiseless under the foot, and particularly effect ive in preserving a uniform tempera- ! ture. Having no joints, it presents a perfectly smooth surface. Decadence. Wallace—What a difference there is between the present and the days of the pioneers 1 Ferry—All the difference in the world. The first thing the pioneers would do was to make a settlement, but that is the chief thing their de¬ scendants ore trying to avoid. 1 A HEALTHY WIFE Is a Husband’s Inspiration. A sickly, half-dead-and-alive woman, especially when she is the mother of a family, is a damper to all joyousness in the home. 1 sometimes marvel at the patience T of bands. If some hus¬ 3 If a woman finds that her energies V are flagging and that ( everything tires her, J! her aleep isfl{ W-y* disturbed by horrible dreams, and that she often wakes sud¬ denly in the night with a feeling of suffocation and alarm, she must at once regain her strength. It matters not where she lives, she can writ* a letter. Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., will reply promptly aad without charge. The following shows the power of Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound, accom¬ panied with a letter of advice: “ Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—I have suf¬ fered for over two years with falling, enlargement and ulceration of the womb, and this spring, being in such a weakened condition, caused me to flow for nearly six months. Some time ago, urged by friends. I wrote to you for advioe. After using the treatment which you ad vised for a short time, that ■H* SSffcfprible stopped. I flow am l now gaining strength and flesh pv f \ and better have \ health than I have hed for the past ten years, I wish to say to all distressed suffering women, do not suffer longer, when there is one so kind and willing to aid you.”— Mbs. F. S. Bknnstt, West¬ phalia. Kans. WRITE FOR Sfcee^ouue In Actual Business. Railroad Faro Paid. Positions Guaranteed. Students of both sexes admitted dally. No vacations. Average course three months. Georgia Business College, MACON, GEORGIA. Monarch MORPHINE, Home Cure Co., New AhBOXiT.lJSD. HE WORRIED ABOUT IT. When the weather was murky, he gazed at the sky And he worried about it; Hv watched the gray cloudlets go sourryiDg by, And he worried about it; *T11 bet it will rain,” he would say to a friend. All manner of dire disaster portend; His life was one fret from beginning to end, For he worried about it. He had a few troubles, as human kind Will, i A n( j he worried about It, The good ... he belittled , and , magnified ._ . ill, An(J he worr i e( i about It; His health nigh perfect, but then, . if , you was please, He fancied he had mostly ,, every disease, ,, And martialed his ailments in columns of threes, And he worried about It, No doubt when bo entered the world long ago, He worried about It; As a matter of fact, when he marriod, you know, He worried about it. And when he departs from this scene of de¬ spair, And mounts on light wings thro’ ethereal air, When ushered right up to a heavenly chair, He’ll worry about it. —St. Paul Dispatch. THE LOST ISLAND. 'E had called at Mauritius on our way from Liver¬ pool to Bombay in the ship Fare wdll, and were live days out from the island when the ad venture occurred by which we lost the captain and laid the founda¬ tion for this story. afternoon of a bright'day,*tS K e’f the „ hi not maUing B abov 0 ur ltnota ho ur. What se a ther0 was Qn WQuld not haye bothered a ter boat ’, d the ship lifted t o a wave only t long inter vals. The second ma j 0 and j were superintending eome work forwardf whi i e the captain was alone on the quarter deck. All of a guddcn> and wlthout the slightest warning> the sea began to boi | aad heave under and around U8 in tho m06t violent manaer> aad for iive miBnteg ove ry maa had to hold on for Ms life> In her pito hi ng the craft ghi ed three or {om green aoftS( wh ioh e i eared the decks of everything movftblej but wo wero congratulating ourselves that all had escaped when the captain was found to be missing. The man at the wheel had had a nar¬ row escape from being swept over¬ board, and for two or three minutes had lost sight of Captain Graham. The last sea we shipped had no doubt carried him away, and by the time we had come to this conclusion it was too late to make any move. The sea had been disturbed by an earthquake. Just where we were when the agitation began the chart showed tho depth to be a full mile. Three months later, when soundings wore taken by a French vessel, it was found that a mountain, two miles in circum¬ ference at the base, had been heaved up until its crest was only forty feet below the surface. The set of wind and wave before and after the agita¬ tion was to the westward, and ten minutes after the ship had come back to a level keel the wind changed to the east and blew half a gale for the next seven hours. As a matter of record, the ship pursued her voyage and made the port of Bombay without further adventure, and the remainder of the story relates to the captain. He wa* swept overboard by the last wave, just as we concluded, and pres¬ ently found himself fur to leeward among a lot of spars and casks which the same wave had taken from the main deok. While the man seized a spar and passed a lashing around his body, he had no hope of rescue. Almost before he realized his posi¬ tion the ship was a mile away, and he felt sure that no boat would be low¬ ered to make a search for him. The spar to which he was lashed drifted away to the west and evening came on. Between five o’clock and sunset four ships passed the drifting man, but all too lar away to see or hear, and when night came down he felt that there was no longer the slightest chance lor him. He drifted to the westward, as I have told yon, but how far has never been known. Night passed and another day came, and toward the close ot that day Cap¬ tain Graham lost consciousness. He may have drifted a day after that— perhaps two days. When he came to his senses again he was lying on a sandy beach, with his feet in the water. He had been cast ashore on an island. It was surely an island to the north and west of Madagascar, but for reasons which will be explained later on it cannot be more definitely located. For an hour after opening his eyes the man could not unlash him¬ self from the spar. When he had finally aecomf4i«l(ed that object he had to crawl on hands and knees to reach the shade of the bushes. It was high noon and the weather hot, and the Captain was so exhausted that if he had not found fresh water and wild fruit at hand he must have perished. He ate and drank his fill and then slept, and the sun was just rising next morning when he awoke. The island, when the castaway came to survey it, was about two miles and a half long by one mile in breadth, and its average height above the sea was not over fifteen feet. It was of volcanic origin and was entirely cov¬ ered with verdure, and there were six or seven different sorts of wild fruits. Along the beach were oysters and shellfish in abundance, and the Cap- tain soon assured himself that starva¬ tion would not be one of the perils of his situation. What struck him curi¬ ously was the entire absence of life on the island. There was neither animal nor bird, reptile nor insect. There should have been a dozen varieties of birds and an abundance of insect life on so fair a spot with its tropical cli¬ mate, but it was simply tenantless. And yet there was life there, and where the castaway least expected. He had been on the island a week or so, and had twice walked clear around it, when one day as he was gathering fruit in an open spot he was suddenly and fiercely attackod by a naked man. The surprise was great, and the Cap¬ tain had not yet recovered his strength, but, shaking the man off, he seized ;a club and laid abont him so vigorously that his assailant ran away. It was a white man, and from the marks on his hands he must have been a sailor. How long he had lived there and how he reached the island in the first place are maters for conjecture, but the fact of hie being nnde went to 1 show that he had been there long enough to wear out hie clothes. In breaking away from the Captain he ran for the beach. The latter followed at his heels, shouting for him to stop, but the unknown ran to the water, plunged in, and swam straight out to sea, looking back now and then and seeming to be in a terrible fright. He held to his course until he could no longer be seen, and there was no doubt he went to his death, as he did not re¬ turn. In a dense thicket the Captain found a rude shelter which the man had used, and among the dried grass forming his bed were a few fragments of cloth, which had once been a pea jacket. There was also a sailor's pipe and an empty tobacco box. Living there alone for years and years, with neither the note of a bird nor the qhirp of a cricket to cheer him, the man had lost his mind, and, looking upon Cap¬ tain Graham as an intruder, had meant to take bis life. When the castaway had been a month on the island without sighting a sail, he made up his mind that the fate of the poor fellow who had dashed into the sea would some day be his. Only the surf beating on the shore and the wind sighing through the trees broke the maddening silence brooding over tho island, and the man shouted with delight when a gale swept out of the west and blew down scores of trees about him. Ho felt that he would soon lose his mind unless he made a great effort to divert it irom the gloomy situation, and he began a closer survey of the island, The centro of it was considerably higher than elsewhere, and exactly in the middle was a single tree, surrounded by a thioket which he had never yet penetrated. In carrying out his ex¬ plorations he entered this copse, find¬ ing a hard beaten path, evidently made by a crazy man. Piled up at the roots of the tree the Captain found a great stock of small, iron-bound boxes, and it needed but one glance to satisfy him that they were treasure boxes. There was the cavity where they had once been buried, and the boxes were weather beaten as if long exposed. Two or three large shells lay about, which had doubtless been used to dig out the dirt, and one o. the boxes had been opened. The Captain shouldered this box and carried it down to the spot he called “horns,” and there inspected its contents. In contained about $6000 in gold coin of all nations, but prin¬ cipally English, and not a coin among them was of recent date. In fact, there were some which no longer cir¬ culated in England or India. From the material and construction the Captain judged that the boxes had been made by a ship’s carpenter. In the pile at the foot of the tree were fifteen other boxes of the same size. One was bioken open, and its contents fonnd to be the same as the first, and the amount very nearly the same. There was a total, as the Captain figured, of $100,000 more or less. This was based on the supposition that all the boxes contained gold, but as he looked into only two he could not be sure of the contents of the others. How came the treasure there? Cap¬ tain Graham believed it to be apirate’s cache, aud that the gold had been there long years before he was thrown on the beach. Pernaps the mad sailor had been one of the pirate crew. It was certain that he had unearthed the treasure at any rate, and it was hardly probable that he stumbled upon it by accident. Well, there was a big fortune there, and it belonged to the finder, but it might have been so much sand for all the good it could do him. Days and weeks and months passed away, and one day the castaway counted the peb¬ bles he had laid in rows along the beach to mark the time, and found that he had been eleven months on the island. On that day there came a furi¬ ous gale from, the east, with a very high tide, and from some wreck at sea the waves brought in a vast quantity of stuff. There was nothing to eat or to wear among the wreckage, but there were planks and spars and a carpenter’s tool chest, and as soon as the storm had abated the castaway went to work to build him a raft. He had determined to leave the island at any hazard, and after four or five days’ work he had his raft completed. It was a rude but stout affair, Wild fruits were taken for provisions, and fresh water was taken in a wine keg which had come ashore with the wreckage. From one of the boxes the Captain took $500 in gold pieces, and one morning when the wind was from the west he launched his raft and drifted off before it. By his reckon ing, which is probably correct, it was seven days befote he was picked up bv j the John J. Speed, an American mer chant vessel, homeward bound. The raft had made good weather of it, drifting most of the time to the east, and the captain judged her total drift to have been one hundred miles. ; His loss had been alluded to in the newspapers and talked of among sailors, and he was given a hearty welcome aboard the American. He related his adventures in full, except as to the treasure, and in due time was landed at Cape Town, He had figured out the latitude and longitude of his island to his own satisfaction, but the chart on board the Speed failed to show any such island. Cap¬ tain Graham at once set about finding a ship to bring the treasure off, A brig was finally chartered, but after a cruise of months she failed to find tho island. Where Graham said the island ought to be lead found bottom at forty feet, and in the immediate neighbor¬ hood a mass of trees and bushes was found floating about. But for certain things the whole story would have been put down to sheer imagination. It was a fact beyond dispute that Captuin Graham was swept overboard. He was picked up off a raft eleven months later. Where had he lived in the interval if not on an island? There was the raft to prove his story, and how about the gold pieces? Some of them were so old as to have an additional value as souvenirs, and scores of people at the Cape handled them. Where did he get the money if not from one of the treasure boxes on the island ? In the space of two vears he made three different voyages in search of his island, and when the story leaked out three or four other expeditions were fitted out. but iu all the sailing to and fro no human eye could find the looked for spot. It had been raised from the sea by a voloanic distur¬ bance. Had a second disturbance caused the sea to swallow it up? There are many reasons to believe that this was the fate which overtook it. About ten years after the cap¬ tain’s last voyage a volcanic island, which was simply a barren rock about a mile in circumference, was pushed above water about where his island was supposed to be, and it is there to¬ day with a fringe of trees all around its outer edge. It has been searched inch by inch for treasure, but not a a single gold piece has yielded up. Flowers Dclivereti by Wire. If you wish to send a box of Ameri¬ can beauties to some person in San Francisco to-night you can buy them in Chicago and have them delivered fresh and fragrant within half an hour. If your fair one resides in New Orleans, Boston or Philadelphia, or any other large American city, you can do the same thing in the same way. It can be done even in the Eu¬ ropean capitals. Florists of the United States are in a pool lor the rapid delivery of blos¬ soms.' The pay for the service is ef¬ fected by a system of trade balances through a sort of clearing house. You go to a florist in Chicago aud tell him you want to send two dozen American beauties to so and so in Ban Francisco. Ho makes out a bill, plus tho cost of a telegram, takes the money, and the flowers are in the hands ot the reci¬ pient almost as quickly as if delivery were made in Chicago. The telegraphic delivery of flowers is called into p'ay frequently. If a friend is to be married and some one who hoped to attend the ceremony cannot do so for any reason, it is a pleasure to know that a vaso of roses takes the plaoe of the absent one. If he likes, his card may be attached to the white ribbon that binds the long stems loosely together. When death comes suddenly a tri¬ bute may be placed upon the casket of the departed almost as if laid there by the loving hands of the sender. In Piccadilly and Regent street, London, there are two Frenoh florists who carry on a sort of International floral clearing house, There is no agency or member in Chicago. But from New York one can order flowers sent to friends in London, Brighton, Paris, Berlin, Nice, Rome, Madrid, Alexandria, Constantinople, Vienna and St. Petersburg.—Chicago Tribune. Third Set of Upper Teelb. Mrs. J. J. Lower, an aged lady, re¬ siding at Orrville, Wayne County, Ohio, is experiencing a singular freak of nature in the way of cutting her third set of upper teeth, she having lost her original second set ten years ago, after a severe attack of sickness. Early last fall she suffered greatly from weakness of her eyesight and an inflamed condition of her eyes. Since then she also suffered from much swelling and pain of the gums. The result is a large-sized eye tooth, which is almost full grown, while other teeth are rapidly pushing their way through the gums. Dr. Eugene D. Yager, who extracted and made Mrs. Lower’s arti¬ ficial teeth, pronounces the case al¬ most unknown in the history of den¬ tistry.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. ^ A Tree Clock. Professor Roberts, of Cornell, has growing around his house what he calls a “tree clock.," Trees are planted in suoh positions that one of them will shade a portion of the house at every hour of sunlight. For example, ex¬ plains Rural New Yorker, at 9 o’clock in the morning the “9 o’clock tree” shades a part of the piazza, while, as the sunlight changes, the “10 o’clock tree” shades another part, and so on through the day. On a hot summer day this “tree clock” insures a suc¬ cession of shady piaoee around the house. The Banana King’s Gift. John G. Garibaldi, of Chicago, known throughout the Northwest as the “Bansna King” is to build a home in Chicago for aged and indigent; Italians, lne Italian colony in Chi- I cage numbers 30,000 and they have never had such an institution. Mr. Garibaldi came to the Western metrop olis from Italy in 1863, a penniless boy, and by his industry and business sagacity he has become a millionaire. Second Only to London. Governor Black has signed the Greater New York charter of which the following is a brief synopsis of its main provisions: “The municipality is divided into five boroughs—Manhattan, Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens and Richmond— which are in turn each subdivided in¬ to ten council districts. “The mayor will be elected for four years at a sa'ary of $15,000 per an¬ num instead of for two years at $10, 000 as at present. “With the exception of the comp¬ troller, who will be elected by popular vote, all municipal officers will be ap¬ pointed by the mayor, who may re¬ move during the first six months of his tenure. “There will be only one police force, under a bi-partisan beard of four, as at present. The department of public works is abolished and water supply, sewer, bridge and street bureaus will replace it, their heads to be appointed by the mayor. “There will be a municipal legisla¬ ture of two houses, the council of twenty-eight members from each of the twenty-one senatorial districts in the Greater New York. Brooklyn and Long Island City are names no longer kn , ™ n °f lte ., L m ap. Gr New York tern- . . ea «, covers a tol 7 ° f 359 J 8( l uare “ lle8 ’ thirty-two f lon 8 and “ lle8 " lde > an estimated , population of about 3,400,000, second in both respects on ly to London.” A Hard One. “Speaking about remarkable acci¬ dents,” said Hilt, “I once fell forty feet—from the masthead to the deck —and, would yon believe it, I escaped with only a few scratches?” “Um,” murmured Davvy, “landed on your head, I presume?”—Philadel¬ phia North American. ARE YOU SICK? Consult n Skilled Specialist of Fifteen Years’ Experience. Cancers removed in 10 days, Liver, without Kidneysaud pain. Diseases of the Blood, Skin, Bladder, such as Dropsy, Fits, Catarrh, Asthma, Rheumatism and private Diseases speedily and permanently cured. Female troubles relieved. Treatment sent to your home for $5 per month. Guarantee. Dr. O. Henley Snider. Offices and Dispensary, 5 to 9 N. Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga. Time flies very rapidly, but not any faster than the interest on a note. Jr ST try a 10c. box of Caseareta, the finest liver and bowel regulator ever made. ANDY CATHARTIC CURE CONSTIPATION 10 * ALL 25* 50* DRUGGISTS ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED nle and booklet free. Ad. STERLING REMEDT CO.. •* Chicago. ' Montrenl, Can., ’ « or Sen lork. zt?. REASONS FOR USING Walter Baker & Co.’s M Breakfast Cocoa. 1. Because it is absolutely pure. 2. Because it is not made by the so-called Dutch, Process in which chSmicals are used. vi-1 3. 4. Because Because it beans is made of the by finest a method quality which are used. preserves unimpaired the exquisite natural flavor and odor of the beans. 5. Because it is the most economical, costing less than one cent a cup. Be »ure that you get the genuine article made by WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchezter, Mas*. Established 1780. FIRE PROOF—Proof Improvements against patented 1890 In tke TJ. 8., Canada and Europe. STRONC3—A sparks, cinders, burning brands, etc, RIGHT—Weighs heavy canvas foundation. complete. but 85 lbs. per 100 sq. ft. when indefinitely laid . , tOTlghfi0«. FI*E X I BEE—Contains no coal tar. and retains its leather-like pliability *nd EASILY AFPUtED—Requires no kettle or other expensive apparatus. Can be laid by any intel¬ ligent workman. SEND FOR SAMPLES AND DESCRIPTIVE PAMPHLET. H. W. JOHNS MFC. CO.. I OO WILLI AM ST., NEW YORK. CHICAGO: S40 A 342 St. PHILADELPHIA: 170 k 17S Korth 4th St. BOSTON: 77 It 7$ Pearl Bt, Fun^s: fimim WW\ ff and health making M are included in the f making of HIRES Rootbeer. The prepa¬ ration of this great tem¬ perance drink is an event of importance in a m illion well regulated homes. HIRES n Rootbeer ^ I | I Invigorating, is full of good appetiz- health. 11 11 ■ 1 ing, some satisfying. up to-day Put and 1 have it ready to put f l. ' s' f:‘3 down whenever you’re thirsty. 1 Made only by The ; Charles E. Hires Co., Philadelphia, A pack¬ age makes 5 gallons. Sold everywhere. — f%l UlvWiinoC ID^U ACC DIRECT from 1 ■ factobtes “SSSPS^ESSSff: consumers' supplies co., Troy, n. y. I ' — I 2:. CTS_ 1 * CURESWHEREALL W : strfs Distant Relationship. Stranger:—I notice your name is D« Million. Are you related to the wealthy De Millions of New York? Poor but Respectable De Million—I am a—a distant relation, sir. “Indeed. How distant?” “Well, as distant as they can keep me, sir!”—New York Weekly. A Red Hauded Murderer. Tetterine kills the germs of Tetter, Eczema, Salt-Rheum. Ringworm and other skin diseases. Most of these are caused by the exlstenoe of infinitesimal anamaleuiae, Tetterine murder# them at once and stops the agonizing iteh, then It soothes and heals the skin. At drug stores, or Savannah, by mall for 50 cents in stamps. J. T. Shuptrlne, Ga. In polities the scoundrel is the man who doesn’t vote as you want him to. CASC4SKT8 stimulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; 10c. M. I,. Thompson & Co., Druggists. Couders port, Pa., say Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the best and only sure cure for catarrh they ever sold. Druggists sell It, 75c. Fits £ rmanently cured. No fits or nervous ness a r first day's use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 981 Arch 8t„ Phlla., Pa. Piso’s Cure cured me of standing.—E. a Throat and Cax>y, Lung trouble of three years’ Huntington, Ind., Nov. 12, 2894. When bilious or costive, eat a Cascaret, candy cathartic: cure guaranteed; 10c., 25c. HALL’S Vegetable Sicilian HAIR RENEWER Beautifies and restores Gray Hair to its original color and vitality; prevents baldness; cures itching and dandruff. A fine hair dressing. R. P. Hall & Co., Props., Nashua, N. H. Sold by all Druggists. Haisaits Specific Tablets Quiet the nerves, equalize the circulation, vital¬ ize the secretions, impart vigor and give tone to all the functions of the system. Over-worked and run-down men and weak and nervous women are speedily restored by their use. 1 box $1.00; ‘i boxes $2.50, by mall. Address, HAO(MRI) SPECIFIC CO., 310 Norcross Building, Atlanta, Oh. LAM All & RANKIN DRUG CO., Wholesale Agents. HAY PRESSES! IMPROVED HUNTER FULL CIRCLE 'All , B o , “M. w » rt Tu5SS? ) MMS tw- WRITE FOR CATALOGUE AND PRICES. ill. B. LEW IS, Lessee, SHOPS Bo, W A ERID ^Il{?A?^l. GRDVES M m M - / H n 'A EM \H £IG F ATA1 K3 i Jv'y ^ TA5TELES5 CHILL TONIC i B JUST mer AS *e men GOOD cee FOR ADULTS, *nui va WARRANTED. PRICE 50 CtS r ^ 16 ’ Parl! Medlclne co, eoo Gentlemen: -we *oid last year, bottles or pertence of u yeara, in the drug business, have tacuoiTaa jour Tonic. Yooxatraiy, Te ” AB.vxr.CA*> *co. MENTION THIS PiPERS3“SSSS