Cape May Wave, 9 July 1887 IIIF issue link — Page 1

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VOLUME ' XXXIlL

CAPE HAY CITY. NEW [EHSEY, SATURDAY. JULY 9. 1887.

WHOLE NUMBER. 1710. ■

CAPE MAY CITY, N. J.,. J. Btsnr KHMWfM, PtUUhtraml P~prUU.. B KB ft r r. PABD.fUtUr. 11-00 tint Strictly is Adnace 0figo » rui w»a» HOT rate ■■ unite*, j ? ataJUidl Partis. £*AMING 4 BLACK, attorns y6-at-l a w, CAMDEN, A J. tn-y pB J. F. LBAMTN6 A HO«7~ y DKHTI8T8 omc* Data: cm Mat Crrr. Oar. Ha* ti«* iU Oeeu •troata, Taessej aaoa aattl Wmmv »ffrc»r* Mat coobt Hoc**- THotaJati and s*t>iA|i MPTJ a* ivjr-i.a — Trlil atb. J- AMIS M. E. HILDRETH, j attorn eyvat-law AND ■OUriTOR a ASTER AND EXAMINER IN CHANCEET. omo« At N<S>Mhln*ton Htreet. Cape Mar ,. pennin^ton t..hildbeth, attorney - at - law solicitor in chancer! , 10* MARKET ST., CAMDEN. N.J. waa w«tardAr>m*' " ° ip* Cm"t ni|*£r lUiiNi (Snit. i b- littlkj" PHACTICAt. painter and glazier, CAPE MAT CITY. N.J. 5 Or '•** nar M ton at E. Joanaoa-a «tor»^^ ^ Q. PILE, house, sign and fresco ( fainter, * CARE MAT CITT, N.J. ESTIMATES FURNISHED.

^urrogate'8 office. ' JJtobpmuSM " " "W """"" "* 1URROOATE OF THE OOUNTT OF CAPE t Ma one* at Ca "Mi Ooart Hoaaa on • TUESDAY AND SATURDAY ( if aaahwaa*. WILLIAM HILDRETH^ ' ptxw. cox. 3«an, TbIhcco, Pipes ani Fancy Goods. barber shop attached. CAPE MAT COURT HOUSE, N. J. m^sTASSiiinoNs BOLD PENH FtMHINO TACKLE ROPE . TWlNNB^nAMMOCKILFULLYH AND pocket clftlert, brash and copper wire, albums^ on rom oh^frames, So« aat of rood violin STRINOS aaal to utr Foat OOoa addrero in ttir If nttot S"atro on receipt o! autj-flra otau. J. S. OARKISON. ••ATI WaaniDfuo Be. Cape Maj N. J. A Packet of Condimental Spice, which costs only three cents, will if given to a horse, keep him in good appetite right along. He will stand the hot weather better and will do his work easier and with more vigor. He will improve in his appearance and be more satisfactory in every way. MP- All Mores hara H. ' " EP-IF • * . HMsalGrJsiilCltwMi TRoroyaiT Eis-iraoM. Pus NV* Willi. »r LANDHETH'S lawn grass seed, 3S32&— D. LANDRSTH A SONS, KroMtMtahtoOl «e yeMra.^ra- tar core T'^aithfat i . lit 11 .!<•:' C *v"r "co- "***•

L. E.MILLER, G£N£RAL CONTRACTOR. moving buildings a specialty, CAPE WAV CITY. N. J. iri'-y •_ Sotfls and Boarding Bousrs. MARINE VILLA, CAPE MAY. N. J. OPEN FOR THE SEASON OF ISO. FIRST-CLASS IN ALL ITS AITOINTMENIS J mT-am Mrs. F.' HALLENBECK. AMERICAN HOUSE, ' Chestnut Street bet. 8th and 9th) Philada. IrMHj i>. McCI.Ill.I.AN. Prnprlrlor. West Jersey Hotel, FOOT OP MARKET STREET. CAMDEN. N. J. Am subiu* 8TBPHKN PARSONS. Lola of ParuxCr Hotel, (Mn JOHN POTTER. Clrr*. - . )i»-j Boots, Watt Baptrs, <?tr. ELDREDGE JCHNSON 39 Waablngton SI., Cape Mar,'N.J., DEALER IN BOOTS AND SHOES, Larrat and moat complete stnc.t oMl>>l.^0nr*p Boou ano snmra, in tU tor latent Style, qaality RUBBER GOODS A SPECIALTY. Alao a Out eapply ootuuntly on bond of Fine Wall Papers of the Latest Patterns, Suitable tor Cnttacea. IliHeU, etc. Call and examine awe* and price. att-y A. L. IIAYXES. Stoves, Ranges and Heaters,

TIN ROOFING and GUTTER WORK, [ "LIVE AND LET LIVE." Carriage Horses and Road Equipages to Hire. Homen taken on I.lvery. Hatlafactlon Uaaranteril. GEORGE L. LOYETT, DEALER IN Flour, peed, Hay, Straw, AND ALL KINDS OF MILL FEED, ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. No. 43 Jeckeon St.. Cor. Washington. apAlm CAPE MAY CITY. J. j c'j3La fire TiTsdrang^agincy Jit 1° Cape May County. -XWMHkIeKL Duly M-Clffi Cmtanits Bmmtct Itate* u Low as is any Companies. AppMeaUoaafromanytnrtMUiecnaalyirUlrecelri W. SCOTT HAND, Afforit, — W- - * ^ ^ CAPE MAT COURT HOUSE, N..'. STEAM HEATING. ORLANDO KELSEY, NO. 510 ARCH STREET, PHILADELPHIA Kelaay's Patent Sectional Safety Steam Generator. Best in the World. Adapted to Hotels, Manufaciuriea and Buildings of Rvery Description, lU'-y JOSEPH P. HENRY, House, Sign and Frescoe Painter,; CAPE WAV CITY. N. J. lea, NATHAN C. PRICE. Surveyor and Conveyancer, CAPE MAY CITY, N. J. fs-y ; DUKE & DOAK, 1 Contractors. and Carpenters, \ CAPE MAY CITY. N. 4. DAVID." W, RODAH. FOOT OP JACKHON STMEMT, CAPE MAY . N.J. • FIELD^XND" GARDEN SEED • At lHaornaM© Mere. Alao dealer tn beat q mailt r of a Coal A Wood, Flour A Feed of all Kindt, Fresh A Salt Hay in Bales. All "Mi"* lb bare ■neWcoraEmm^wi deep hrhoaqa, a, .am. t. Id* mill mn, • ~~ goff & s!mith7 ; BRICKS, POTTERS BIIFFANBUMY I «* kaap enatauly on Band a tor*. Work euaftlynf Bnn* wktek «e will mil at tne IY LOWEST CASH PRTCFJ^. • FMiorto* « S*ttoptala aK MUMS a; cm-, smitp* br*wj store, W A Brew, tit*. MWrOI*. N.J. '"^N/aouIS £ Practical ^Plumber, Gas and Steam^ Pitter,

THE UTTLE. MAID OVER THE WAY." At btuj .tf bniy ean be; But I tbir.k P» U UmlA 1 eltlnk abe', Afrali. For ibe never looks onr at uc la the shade, I 8be nererjooki orerst taw A Utile white sbawi on her shoulder, lies. But I'd art all tbe jiea'ttb there Is undrr Urn (If I bad tt, you Enow), to to! so near her eyes, Bui I hsre not quito got. n, you know. Bite holds In her finger* a Utile siub pen, ± That she pushes and prtlto In and fro; If aba only eouhl Know, ,rer here In e den. There's a frllow who'd pt*e hall his life lor that ' Thath hutting II *troi'«. hut- It's u. I don't kouw her nsunr. and I'm sure I donl | r,«r lliero's n.-iuubt In a name, as you know: , Hut there', nothing that I wouldn't do, yes. and IS . it she'd only throw «>o tUOe .klanoo Iron, _ I II only oho ghrnoe she would throw. i ITho Is she, and what dor, she do. do T» ask. I Why. she works at In'suranoe. a dry sort ofjaslr'' I While I in an attnnspbere I e«*l do bask, When I'm not looking o* sr the way. -Jlosfim fJlobe. A STRANGE STORY. A MALTESE CROSS FOUND IN THE GRASS. * Having no particrJar pet theory to vemilatc, 1 am not about to write'aii '* essay on dreams. My purpose is to relate -well, if you wish, we shall call It a story, which has at least the merit of - truth if it may not possess the interest of liction. 1 had fairly enter ed on my career as a lawyer, and my ,, health, never the m».t«ro!mst, of L ife h.'ui been causing me considerable aniioyuiioe. 1 hud been always diip-osed lo agree with bhakespeare's apothecary and " throve ptivsiP tri the dogs," but in the end I was obliged to apply to & physician foi advice. It was nei-vooa prostration, ■y he assured me, brouglit on by excessive - study, nnd I must forthwith close my bonks and get away to the country. "Yon will find the very tonic you require iu the- salt stv breeze at some pleasant watering p lace," he said to 1 ilte. On reaching tit r lonely, room that ' ; evening I hunted up n letter received j from -an old college chum some days ! before, and this is w sat I road: . - (h

"DkaJi Chawfor o:— I've heard aritk ; considerable eoncei n that your healtli ■; has been failing y ju lately, and tliat a ln j too close appllcati on to your bonks is .| I the cause. Surely this is an eminently ! proper time to f ulilll » promise so :l ! often made to sp<;nd a few days With | me. '1'ho iuvlgorr.tln g sea breeze wjll ^ j nnHd you up in no I jme. (.'omo away p, j ttieti. from that wll'leriieis of bricks and mortar Uiey call New York, and „ learn what happiness can be found in a |t healthy country life. - I shall not takt „ nay for mi answer, so don't compel mt p to run np to town an d carry you away ., '.mi grr nut I pre. " Yoiirr, etc.. Fin u LiviNOPTox." Within an hour a valise was packet, a and a letter written to the OTice stating tl nty intention of ta lihp a short vaca- it tioiL Jhe anticipatii «i*J a long-wished- s! I for holiday, and its cmasequent excite- tl - | ment rendered me U ttrrous and restltas, » and when 1 retire 1- to bed it was to o ' ; remain awake an i feverish through i| i half the night ^ t' I Toward mornl'ay; r grew more com- t posed, and felt that blissful sense ot l J restfulness whLch 1; braids a peaceful ; t I sleep. The trr.nj.itioir ffu'm the reality h 1 1 of these wake fr.l hoc ,ra into the u fan- i j tastic realms " of t deep musf liave 1 1, i been Instai danoouB. A. palpable pres- : , ! ence was i'.i the room and bending ov«r a j me, and a voice was whispering softly, ' r " Leslie Crawford, I * am thy guanl lain > j talry' Tuou hast b< inn poor and ill and ,] I lonely, and I liave s nrroured witli thee, t i lint the shadows of the past are clear- ! v ing, and a brighter future will open j ' for thee to-morro, r. Within a stone's j j tlwow of the frie ad't: house thop art t [ ! about to visit thou . will ilnd a treasure I that will bring tb ee happiness." My i ; former knowledg s or fairies had been ! , i confined to those of th e species that in i j abbreviated sklr'a appear occasionally ' , i in burlqsque. Jir.t my guardian fairy ( | seemed a widel y di Serf nt being, albeit , endowed with all the attributes of a j , ' sweetly-perfet ited voir.anhood. We j i ■ never notice the star Ultig incongruities j , of dreams uutil we wa ke from them, ' | and to me there was nothing that was I , no> serenely proper ln this tall and:, stately girl, dressed tv la mode, bending | , over me as I slept :3o vividly was her | ] v corporeal presence i sr pressed upon my ; - ' retina while 1 slept . that I drew her ; portrait when I wo k», ln these words: A fairy -clothed in all the "ripe and , real " charms of a woman, with the voluptuous form < if a Juno, the ethe- ! ' real beauty of face of a St Cecilia. I It was late In tl- « afternoon when I reached the endof - my Juuruey by rail * - and started on t! le half-mile walk to my friend's Jjom a I had been there some years riefo re, a nd tbe road was i not altogetlwr t .nfai alliar to me. We . were lads Uien, hut now I woald And tdrn a married man cultivating the - I. domestic vlrt je a a.id bucolic 'rrit i* As 1 reached the gate 1 stooped to _ brush the du at from my shoes, and aj I did so a gii ttei -lug object hidden id the grass, attracted my attention. With sor. je curfr eity I picked it up, ai T I wundi- ,-wi was i Jits the treasure trove if which. the ai'jylof my dreams had told can It wr« a Maltese cross of j. F°l'*!, gu ifntly cl uued.and with a single o. 8»4>phir e pet in the center. Did I bent -'.leve t'j dreams? ; Xot then, indeed. Such "belief I regnrted aa a miporetl- , Uon, v /hlch time had consecrated inte f a relig ion for the ignorant Fred Livingstr in and his ehruining wife received . „ me -with a cordial warmth that was; very griuifyi ag. - V ht, Crawford, you da it deed seem !

fellow, the little woman- ani 1 Shau ' send you back to Sew York with the ) blood in your cheeks again." "Indeed we shalL Fred. And now ' I'm going to let you two talk over old .times while I look aftcr/liniier." ' "Before you go, Mrs. -Livingston, let " me show you a trinket I found at the I ' gate below, and which very likely is "Why, Fred,"- she exclaimed^ " if it j ain't Virginle's lost brooeh. Perhaps j it ain't a valuable article, - Mr, Craw- ( ford, but the way my friend was put . 1 out over the loss, It must be an old t heirloom. • j { " Or the gift of a lover," her husband j , -uldi-d, dryly. " Tbe young lady Is a i school friend of my wife, and Is spend- j ( l ing a little time with us. For your ) uivu- sake, old man, I hopp there's an i *: e.itaiiglement in Xew York, for if f you've come down here heartwhole i you're a 'goner.'" / "Fred " < / "I beg your pardon, my dear; but i here is the lady returning from her i walk. Come over, Crawford, and judge t for yourself." . . I I approached the-window, and a cry i of amazement almost escaped me. t Surely I could not mistake the grace- ' - ful pose of that shapely head, the low, ' broad brow, tho exquisite curve qf the I almost faultless mouth and, above all, : 0 "the tender blue of the large,loving eye." i 1 Yes, she was the fairy of last night's | " dream. By an effort I controlled my agi- 1 11 tation as she entered the room. 1 f "Oh! Vir£inle, your cross has bqen 1 1 found." Mrs. Livingston said, and let ! me "introduce the gentleman who ro3 stores it Mr. Crawford, Miss Vane." e As her eyes met mine she started Z violently, aqd 'as she gazed intently on ^ my face her own assumed* paler hue. Of course, this Incident could not fail * to attract the attention of Livingston ' and his wife, and when claiming an in1 vulid's privilege to retire early the former followed rae to my room. e " Well, what do you think-of Miss t Vane ?" he asked. '■ "That she is a very handsome girl, " and better, still, she has the subdued c manner and gentle voice that are very 0 soothing to ono who suffers from ner- ' vous irritability." , "Crawford, you know I would not 3 try to extort your confidence, hut I you have met her before." 'J

" ITpou my honor, no." " And yet her evident agitation on j.' meeting yon, »ud certain furtive fa| glances at each other during the even- . ing. Well, I suppose I must take it as c| case of mutual love at .first sight." y " Friil, my good boy, I have always s, believed tliat love at first sight M a y passion possible only to foola" a, From ray childhood I had loved tlm and many hours were spent along j, the shore, often alone, but rather g| ofteticr with Miss Vano as a.com- M pahion. Even If her beauty haefnot R almdy entliralled me, the society of this gentle, cultured girl should have 0 an Inexpressible fascination for me; l( and, as . the days wore on, I realized „ the love, of which I had only, rend (l books, awoke iti my heart at last a , strange, unquiet joy. For what could new-bora passion bring me but sorrow? When this brief holiday was over our paths ln life must necessarily V far apart. And yet, "liowr happy 1 days of Thalaba passed by." For r the rest, when the parting came, surely " 1 could learn to forget in mental toil « this first sweet madness of my man- 1 hood. ' I My holiday had already been proj longed far beyond the limit I st first 1 intended, but a letter I received one afternoon from my law.-partner snm- ' tunned me peremptorily and at once to Xew York. I found Virginia Vane down by the beach, where I sought her , say farewell There was a swift up- ' ivnrd glance and a sudden drooping of the silken lashes— that pretty trick of | hers I had so often admired— when I j told her I was leaving In the morning, i " And the thought of getting back to : York again makeS you feel hap- | plerf" "I would have been happier If I never came here. I do not think that summer vacation by the seaside will tend to brighten the dull routine 1 i of my city life. May I not sometimes 1 j think of many a ramble by this shore 1 when/night after night, I Walk from a . lawyer's offlce to a solitary home, along i the same streets, the same avenue and I i meet the same frowsy women aud r! unkempt children, and ever to be ' ; haunted by the memory of a dream*?" ' j She listened to regrets that mast f seemed to her. almost childishly : petulant, ln ellMPoe, -and— well. Heaven I only knows bow It happened; but I > had come to say fart well, and I rc- - j mained to tall her that I loved her. I I mn nut going to place on record here 1 tho woids ln which that declaration F was made. II BE* long been a settled > ' conviction of mine that ln the supreme I Miument when a man wishes, lo appeu' i dignified ln one woman's eyes, he suei oeedi in being only ridiculous; and I 1 believe that any young lady who luu s evar been made lore to will sustain me 1 in that convletl on. For the first time 9 I had known b er the faintest flush of 2 color warmed llrgtnie's checks, as she a said: l "Mr. Crawford, will you call it fea male vanity or female intuition If I a say I knew you would tell me this ? I*> 1 you believe in dreams ? Why do I aak ? t you would sa y. The flight before yon ( . came here, 1 saw. you in a droara. I ,. dreamed you. came to mo to restore L this Maltese cross, but ofi one oondi- [. Hon, that I Areold promise to be your ( wife, and the coincidence was startling enough to explain my agitation when 1 $ met you the following day." j 1 Some mo ralUt talis us that no secrou j should exist between husband and a wife, and Fred Livingston once said te ^ Jme, "It's a beautiful sentiment Cr.i-.v-

lonl, but it dQnt work worth a ecu!.' [ ... Virgitiie Crawford never knew of my : own tin-am until she read this inaim"It was real mean to keep this * "secret from me," was hef- only com. menu "hut wilt .any of your readers, Leslie, believe the story." ^ > Tli© Origin of Lawn TrnnU. ' Football never became naturaUzed in X bat various other games (lour- j Ished there. The most impqftant of : there was unquestiounble the jeu de paume— tlio parent game ot fives, rackets I and tennis The ball used was a hard ! and was struck backward and for- ; j ward by players ranged in two opposing lines. Later padded gloves were intre- , ; dueed, and later still the racquet. In a girl named M argot excelled all players of the game. She Wore nc j , glnvos, sndwtrucb the ball indifferently 1 " with the palm and bat-1: of her hand. ! : The name "lives " seems to point to a j . development of the jta de" paume . in . which there were live players aside; ami j Is on record tliat n match of this ' description was played at F.lvelham by Marquess of Hertford's servants for the edification of Queen Elizabeth, who. in duty bound, expressed herself vastly delighted with the performance. But long before the days of Queen Bess - tennis propej had buret int > its cotnplicated life, ilet royal grand fat Iter -fuul ; father were both gteat exponents of the i game, and It Is to be noted with sorrow ; that the former pursued the reprehensipractice of having "something on ' the game." There may still be seen a ' paper of accounts with the entry, " Item, • . for the king's loss at tennis, twelve pence; for tho loss of balls, three pence!" The memory of Henry Villi's great i game is still grAm in the annals of tennis. He played wiih the Emperor I Maximilian against Die l'rince of Onmge mid the Margrave of Brandon- . burg; and eleven games were played. . and then the parties agreed to leave of, , though on what ground this last step was takeu Is not very obvious to the modqpi, w|>o lias a tendency to believe I that one side must have the advantage . after an uneven pumlmrof games. The . direct descendant of tennis is tlte game known as the lawn tenuis. Though id I ship is not less obscure than that ot Junius's letters; aud the warfare already Junius s letters; ami the wanare aireauy

waged iu pamphlets on the subject i> probiiblv but a forctasle of the dispute that will lie raised a few hundred >•■:■• • when there will have been urn. the credit ot mlnpUng tl unl open air. Tennis proj-er forluiiot- 1» siirvrves. though not with tlte di: > vigor which characterirea ibe equa'.ii ancient king of baU-gume*. — crnL-' Golf, hockey and trapball y<|t fion .-' their own places: but bamlrebell f stonlbnll, riugbaU, clublcill aud pal, ■ mall seems tedterit.g Into an early , grave. Marbles sUU afford trams, a tliongb not perhaps. In the sam-- • n. a of society as in the fifteenth «•• .itnry and tho nndergratlnates of Oxfotvl. in obctlienre to the statues, have left oil playing the game on lite step* of the . tchooL • The Onmbits. it ap|ieau. fonn a nallon Wtth a considerable body of ordinate., 5 Tbrir supreme chief Is Hie "sacioi pole." It isa cottou-trec which. wanting roler, Utoy felled two hundred years ' ami. having put bair on its head. Invested with authority. It Is regularlj greased. A prominent warrior is believed to have lost his leg from omitting _ to grease the polo. Scalps are offered to it Omalrns arc imaginative in their iiames. Among them arc " ltusty-y ellovv Corn-lmsk," "Stomach Fat," "Forked Lightning AVnlks," " She who is liel nniing Bellowing." and " She who is Madt Muddy as She Moves." Omaha matrimonial law is based, like that of most primitive clans, on the view that the , community has all the same ancestors. 1 An Omaha may not wcd-hls dcoea.vil . wife's sister unless tho dying wife should have said to- her brother, "Pit) your hrother-in-law. Let him marry my sister." ' polygamy, within limits, is lawful, witii the first wife's consent. A man may not lawfully iqieJlK to htt wlfe'a graudniotlier. So atrict is tlie Omaha etiquette about mothers-in-law that a son-in-law will fly from the room ia which his mother-in-law happens to be O malms are cleanly lu their habits, they bathe daily. An untidy man or woman is nicknamed "The man who 1 does not wash his hands," or "The woman who does not comb her hair." 1 They are so redoubtable as archers that they can send an arrow right through a \ buffalo. They are skilful in games, • one of wltlch, described as shooting ol ; the rolling wheel, might bo popular In ! Europe. Dancing, howefer, is tbeir > favorite pastime; and they have a 1 variety of societies or clubs, each of 1 which owns a characteristic dance. : There is the rare buffalo daqce, danced ' after the recovery of a patient by doc- ' tore, who may invite members of the 1 horeo dance, and not of the wolf dance. 1 The grizzly bear dance has not bAii > danoed for ten years. Its dancers pain: > their bodies yellow, and one wears a ! grizzly bear's skin. Tbe scalp dance is s a woman's dance, ln the ghost dance no woman may join. J For attaching mouldings and othei light lumber, a new kind of nail Ha* I been contrived, wltlch leaves no nail " holes. It is made with a point at each i ' end and with an outwardly projecting head or ahoulder midway between the e points. The nail la first driven into the ' wood by means of a punch which. r itraddles the protruding polrit and bear* If on the head. When enough have been driven in. the moulding is plaow3 a v. the nails and driven down. * -i • ' d Be who can oon templet* Us peat Ufa, ' and not receive many warning* from It, I moat have had aremarkaWr uiat-

01 \y\ JERSEY j . ■BY .U TiiOUlTY! h *' i! . . ■ ■ I r ' , <to *

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,> '!! ,«m* jro reo-wt^reprolsl, «mt uu* act ait ; a i ! . : , . I . ln)ri.re,*»llrei», BwttuTor11©!! t mmri aj^' a* i -Jlvwali ^r,!MvirJwi,n*:f< *t»p ammat *eail ee tatty c ■regPSj*,.: ,'v a t.at niK exccrmtisqne u> Ranawa Her Youth. - Mt». .t'lia-bu Chj-sk-y, PctoteoD, t Co.. Iowa. taOk II"- following remark! ■ liv^fie n-idi ni- of "lint town : "1 ; ;;l years old, have been troubled » , khiney complaint and inmi nesaform < years i could not drew myelf witli '' i,p p. Now 1 ant free from all pain . o.renos, and am able to do all my i '■ IwunBWtirk. 1 "owe my tlianka to E «c Bittern for having renewed my yo and removed completely all dlsDalM: pain." Try a bnttlc only 80c. at I)r , ,\. iC, nncd'i '- Druz Slam, •i A fountain erected in Clifton, O., i Pit of *9.000. was pros: nled to tbe 1 lagc aa a gift by its Itayor, Henry 1 ' ilrenkesnaia er tbe Llqnor Habit FeeiU , «-""aaarea j U«n b« Rhra In a^fl^yt ceSreo^tsa 1 v nent^amt «i-- - ' „ Thus ^ Fv*s>-is.— ' i ■■ "at mrdlcinc mcdirlne taat^^ »| j V lib tin. v.- three effects oedfl >J I 'druggUrts. Try iti