The Pickens sentinel. (Pickens, S.C.) 1911-2016, June 21, 1917, Image 7
CLIMBED STAIRS
ON'HER HANDS
Too ilto Walk Upright. Operation
Advised. Saved by Lydia. E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
'This woman now raises chickens and
does manual labor. Read her story:
Richmond, Ind.-"For two years I
was so sick and weak with troubles
from my age that
when going up
stairs had to go
very slowly with
my hands on the
steps, then sit down
at the top to rest.
The doctor said ho
thought I should
ha.ve an operation,
and my friends
thought I would not
live to move into
ournewhouse. My
daughter asked me
to try Lydia E. Pinkham'e Vegetable
Compound as she had taken it with good
results. I did so, my weakness dis
appeared, I gained in strength, moved
into our new home did all kinds of
garden work, shovefed dirt, did build
ing and cement work, and raised hun
dreds of chickens and ducks. I can
not say enough in praise of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable- Compound and
if these facts are useful you may pub
lish them for the benefit of other
women."-Mrs. M. 0. JOIINSTON,Route
ID, Box 190, Richmond, Ind.
0,000 ACRES OF LAND
in the Great Mattamuskeet Drainage
District in Hyde County, N. C., are now
opened for sale. Here are some of the
richest and most productive lands in
the State. Men will buy these lands
as soon as they know about them. We
want agents everywhere to take up the
sale of these lands. We will pay a lib
eral cash commission. Let us tell you
all about it. Inclose this advertisement
with .your letter and address (KW)
New Holland Farms, Inc., New Hol
land, Hyde County, North Carolina.
LABORERS - White and Colored
Steady Work -- Good Wages
Excellent opportunity for handy men to
advance in all trades. Can also use all
classes of Mechanics at Good Wages.
Apply in peyson to
Bethlehem Steel Co., Sparrow's Point, Md.
Back to Earth.
We had a friend who had been pret
ty prosperous, but who came upon evil
days. We met him one day and he
said that lie was pretty close to be
ing busted, but he was still hoping.
Then he honked his horn, mournfully,
and drove away, and we didn't see
himn again till the other day when we
bumped Into him on the street, says
the Cleveland Plaindealer.
"a ello, old scout !" we said. "How
are things breaking now?"
"Fine !" he answered. "I'm on my
feet itain."
"Bully I" we exclaimed. "How di1
You do it?"
"Sold my car."
The joke was so obvious that we
didn't see It till after head gone.
Women "Man" Mall Vans.
Seven hundred horses bl~'onglng to
the royal mail vans of Great BritaIn
are "planned"' and run entIrely by
women, uder the guIdance of a skIll
ful veteri unry surg(eOn. .Thme sick
horses are groomed and cared for by
uni formed, women, who wea ordnar
'breeches andl knee-long coats of dark
blue linen. Thle drivers of the mall
carts wear very smammrt uni)forms of
(dark blue1 serge, edgedl wIthI red and1(
having brass buttons with th le royal
cipher. Their dark blue peaked cap)s
have also a line of red andi a badge
showing that they are on his majesty's
service.
PARENTS
who love to gratify
children's desire for
the same articles of
food and drink that
grown-ups use, find
INSTANT
just the thing.
"There's a Reason"
ON FLAG DAY.
WILSON TELLS
WHY WE FIGHT
Extraordinary Insults and Ag
gressions of Imperial German
Government Left Us No Self
Respecting Choice But to
. Take Up Arms In De
fense of Our Rights
Military Masters of Germany
Denied Us Right to be Neutral
Filled Our Unsuspecting Commqnities
With Vicious Spies and' Conspirators
-They Are Themselves in the Grip
of the Same Sinister Power That
Has Stretched its Ugly Talons Out
and Drawn Blood From Us-When
by Our Arms Kaiserism is Crushed
Our Flag Shall Wear a New Lustre.
Washington, June 14.-President
Wilson delivered a notable speech
here in commemoration of Flag Day
in which he again outlined the posit
tion of the United States in regard to
the world war. The address is in full
as follows:
My Fellow Citizens: We meet to
celebrate Flag Day because this flag
which we honor and under whicir
ive serve is the emblem of our unity,
our power, our thought and purpose
as a nation. It has no other char
acter than that wiich we give it from
generation to genervation. The choices
are ours. It floats in majestic silence
above the hosts that txecute those
choices, whether in peace or in war.
And yet. though silent, it speaks to
us,-speaks to us of the past, of the
men and women who went before us
and of th a records they wrote upon
it. We col brate the day of its birth;
and from its birth until now it has
witnessed a great history, has floated
on high the symbol of great events.
of a great plan of life worked out
by a great people. We are about
to carry it into battle to lift it where
it will draw the lire of our enemies.
We are about to bid thousands, hun
dreds of thousands, it may be mill
ions, of our men, the young, the
strong, the capabie men of the na
tion, to go forth and die beneath it
on fields of blaod far away,-for
what? For some unaccustomed
thing? For something for which it
(has - never sought the fire before?
American armies were never before
sent across the seas. Why are they
sent now? For some new purpose,
for wvhich this great flag has never
been ca-rried before, or for some old,
familiar, heroic purpose for which it
has seen men, its own men, die on
every battlefield upon which Ameri
cans have borne arms since the
Revolution?
These ar-e questin~ns which must be
answered. We are Americans. We
in our turn serve America, and can
serve her with no private purpose.
We must use her flag as she has
always used it. We are accountable
at the ba~r of history and must plead
in utter frankness what purpose it
is we seek to serve.,
It is plain enough how we were
forced into the war, The extraordi
nary insults and aggressions of the
Imperial German Gover-nment left us
no self-respecting choice but to take
up arms in defense of our rights as
a .free people and of our honor as a
sovereign government. The military
masters pf Germany denied us the
right to be neutral. They filled our
unsuspecting communities with vicious
spies and conspirators and sought to
corrppt th~e opinion of our people in
their owvn behalf. When they foundi
that they could not do that, their
agents diligently spread sedition
amongst us and sought to dIraw our
own citizens from their allegiance,
and some of those agents were men
connected with the official Embassy
of the German Government itself here
in our owvn capital. They sought by
violence to destroy our industries and
arrest our commerce. They tried to
incits Mexico to take up arms against
us and to drawv Japan into a hostile
alliance with her,-and that, not by
indirection but by direct suggestion
from the Foreign Office In Berlin.
'They impudently denied us the use
of the high seas and repeatedly exc
cutedi their threat that they would
send to thei-r death any of our people
who ventured to approach the coasts
of Europe. And many of our own
'people were corrupted. Men began
to look upon their own neighbors with
suspicion and to wonder in their hot
resentment and surprise whether
there was any community in which
hostile intrigue (lid not lurk. What
great nation in such circumstances
would not have taken up arms? Much
amj we had desired peace, it was de
nied us, sad not of our own c'hoirae.
Tis flag under which we serve wouldl
have been dishonored had we with
held our hand.
But that is only part of the story.
We know now as clearly as we know.
before we were ourselves engpge that
they are not our enemies. They did
not originate or desire his hideous
war or wish that we should be drawn
into it; and we are vaguely conscious
that we are fighting the!r cause, as
they will some day see it as well
as our own. They are themselves
.- the grip of the same einister power
that has now at last stretched its ugly
talons out and drawn blood from us.
The whole world is at war because
the whole world is in the gri-p of
that power and is trying out the great
battle which shall determine whether
it is to be brought under its mastery
or nfing Itself free.
The war was begun by the military
masters of Germany, who proved to
be also the mastra of Austria-Hun
gary. These men have never regard
ed nations as peoples, men, women,
and children of like bldod and frame
as themselves, for whom governments
existed and in whom governments had
their life. They have regarded them
merely as serviceable organizations
which they could by force or intrigue
bend or corrupt to their own pur
pose. They have regarded the smaller
states, in particular, and the peoples
who could be overwhelmed by force,
as their natural tools and instruments
of domination. 'Their purpose has
long been avowed. The statesmen
of other nations, to whom that pur
pose was incredible, paid little at
tention; regarded what German pro
fessors expounded in their classrooms
and German writers set forth to the
world as the goal of German policy
as rather the dream of minds detach
ed from practical affairs, as prepos
terous private conceptions of German
destiny, than as the actual plans of
responsible rulers; but the rulers of
Germany themselves knew all the
while what concrete plane. what well
advanced intrigues lay back of what
the professors and the writers were
saying, and were glad to go forward
unmolested, filling the thrones of Bal
gan states with German princes, put
fing German officers at the service
of Turkey to drill her armies and
make interest with her government,
developing plans of sedition and re
bellion 'in India and Egypt, setting
their fires in Persia. The demands
made by Austria upon Servia were
a mere single step in a plan which
compassed Europe and Asia, from
Berlin to Bagdad. They hoped those
demands might not aroue Europe, but
they meant to press them whether
they did or not, for they thought them
selves ready for the final issue of
AIrms.
Their plan was to throw a broad
belt of German military power and
political control across the very centre
of Europe and beyond the Mediterran
can into the heart of Asia; and Austria
Hungary was to be as much their tool
a.nd pawn as -Servia or Bulgaria or
Turkey or the 'ponderous states of
the East. Austria-Hungary, indeed,
was to become part of the central
German Empire, absorbed and domi
nated by the same forces and in
fluences that had or!ginally cemented
the German states themselves. The
dream had its heart at Berlin. It
could have had a heart nowhere else!
It rejected the idea of solidarity of
race entirely. The choice of peoples
played no part in it at all. It con
templated binding together racial and
olitical unIts wvhich could be kept
together only by force,-Czechs, Mag
yars, Creats, Serbs, Roumanians,
Turks, Armenians,--the proud states
)f Bohemia and Hungary, the stout
ittle commonwealths of the Balkans,
the indomitable Turks, the subtile
peoples of the East. These peoples
liid no wvish to 1)e united. They ar
dently desired to direct their own
affa.irs wouhld be satisfied only by un
disputed independence. They could
be0 kept qiet only by the presence
or the constant threat of armed men.
They would live under a common
powver only by sheer compulsion and
etwait the day of revolution. But the
German military statesmen had reck
onedh with all that and were ready
to deal with it in their own way.
And they have actually Carried the
greater part of that amazing plan into
execution! Look howv things stand.
Austria is at their mercy. It has
actedl not upon its owvn initiative or
upon the choice of its own people
hut at Berlin's dictation ever since
the war began, Its p~eople now de
sire peace. but cannot have it until
leave is grantedl from Berlin, The
so-called Central Powers are in fact
but a single Power. Servia is at its
mercy should its hands be but for
a moment freed. Bulgaria has con
sented to its will and Rtoumania is
overrun. The Turkish armies, which
Germans trained, are serving Ger
many. certainly not themselves, and
the guns of German warships lying
in the harbor at Constantinople re
mlindl Turkish statesmen every day
that. they have no choice but to take
their orders from Berlin. From H1am
burg to the Persian Gulf the net is
spread.
Is it not easy to understand the
eagerness for ipeace 'that has been
manifested ,from Berlin ever since the
s:nare wvas set and sprung? Peace,
peace, peace has been the talk of her
F'oreign Oflce for now a year or more;
not peace -upon her own initiative, but
upon the initiative of the nations over
which she now (looms herself to hold
the advantage, A little of the talk han
bee~n madeO public, butomost of. it has
been private. Through all sorts of
chsannels it has come to ,me, and in all
sorts of guises, but never with the
terms disclosed which the German
Government would be willing to ac
cept. That government has other
valuable pawns in its hands besides
these I have mentioned. It still holds
a valuable part of France, though with|
slowly relaxing grasp, and practically I
the whole of Belgium Its armies
press close upon Rus'sia and overrun
.loland at their will. It cannot go
further; it dare not go back. It
wishes to close its bargain before it
is too late and it has little to offer
for the pound of flesh it will demand.
The military ma.ters under whom
Germany is bleeding see very clearly
to what point Fate has brought them.
It they fall back or are forced back
an inch, their power both abroad and
at home will fall to pieces like a
house of cards. it is their power at
home they are thinking about now
( nore than their power abroad. It is
hat power which is trembling unser
their very feet; and deep fear has
entered their hearts. They have but
one chance to perpetuate their mill.
:ary power or even their controlling
political influence. If they can seedre
peace now with tihe imamense advan
tages still in their hands which they
have, up to this poinit apparently
gained, they will have justified them
selves before the Germuan people: they
will have gained by force what they
promised to gain hy it: an immnense
expansion of German power, an in.
mense enlargement of (erm:an idus.
trial and commercial opportlunitles.
Their prestige will be secure, an:t with
their prestige their political power. if
they fall, their people themselves will
thrust them aside; a government ac
countable to the people themselves
will be set up in Germany as it has
been in England, in the United States,
In France, and in all the great coun.
tries of the modern time except Ger
many. If they succeed they are safe
andGermany and the world are undone;
'f they fail Germany is saved and tile
world will be at peace. If they suc
coed, America will fall within the men
ace. We end all the rest of the world
must remain armed, as they wid re
main, and must make ready for the
next step in their aggression; if they
fail, the world may unite for peaco
and Germany may be of the ulion.
Do you not now understand the new
intrigue, the intrigue for peace, and
why the masters of Germany do not
hesitate to use any agency that prom
ises to effect their purpose, the deceit
cuf the nations? Their present partic
ular aim is to deceive all those who
throughout the world stand for the
rights of peoples and the self govern
ment of nations; for they see what
immense strength the forces of jus
tice and of liberalism are gathering
out of this war. They are emldoying
liberals In their enterprise. They are
using men, in Germany and] without,
as their spol-esmen whom they havo
hitherto despised and oppressed. using
them -for their own destruct ion.
socialists, the leaders of labor, the
thinkers they have hitherto sought to
silence. Let them once succeed and
these men, now their tools, will he
ground to powder beneath the weight
of the great military empire they wiT
have set up; the revolutionists hi
Russia will be cut off from all succol
or co-operation in western Plurope an
a counter revolution fostered and sul)
ported; Germany herself will lose he
chance of freedom; and all Europi
will arm for the next, the fina
struggle.
The- sinister intrigue is being no lest
actively conducted In this countr3
than in Russia and in every country ir
Europe to which the agents and dupes
of tihe Imperial German Government
can got access. That government has
many spokesmen here, in lalces high
and low. They have learned discre
tion. They keep within the law. It is
oplinion they utter now, not sedition.
They proclaim the liberal piurposes of
their masters; declare this a foreign
war which can touch America with no
dlangor to either her lands or her in
stitutIons; set England at the centre
of the stage andi talk of 1her ambition
to assert economic dominion through
out the world ; appeal to our ancient
tradition of isolation in the politics of
the nations; andi seek to undermine
the government with false professions
of loyalty to its principles.
But they will make no head way. Trho
false betray themselves always in
every accent. It is only friends and
piartisans of the German Government
whom we' have already idenltitled who
utter these thinly disguised disloyal
ties. Trho facts are patent to all the
wvorld, and nowhere are they more
plainly seen than ini the United States,
where we arec accust omed to deal with
facts and not with sophistries; and
the great fact that stands out above
all the rest is that this is a Peoples'
War, a war for freedom and justice
andI self-government amongst all the
nations of the woerld, a war to make
the world safe for tihe peoples who live
upon it and have made it their own,
the German 1)eople themselves in,
eluded ; and that with us rests the
choIce to break through all these
hypocrisIes andi patent cheats andI
masks of brute force and help set tihe
world free, or else stand aside andi let
it 1)e dominatedl a long age through b~y
slheer weighlt of arms and the arbitrary
choices of self-constituted masters, by
the nat ion whlich can maintain the big
gest armies anld the most irresistible
armaments.-a power to which the
world has afforded no parlallel and in
the face of whlich political freedom
must withler and perish.
For 11s there is but one choice. We
hlave made it. Wee be to the man
or group of men that seeks to stand in
our way in tis daty of high resohltion
when every principle wve hold dearest
is to be vindhicatedi andi made' secure
for the salvation of the nations. We
are ready to Plead at the* bar of
hlistory, andi our flag shall wear a new
lustre. Once more we shall make
good our lives and fortunes thme great
faith to whlich we were borD and a
new glory shalhl shine in the fae. of
our te nanne
CALOMEL WHEN BiL
ACTS LIKE
I Guarantee "Dodson's Liver Ton
and Bowel Cleansing You Eve
Stop using calomel! It makes you
sick. Don't lose a day's work. If you
feel lazy, sluggish, bilious or consti
pated, listen to me!
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel, when it comes into contact
with sour bile, crashes into it, breaking
it up. This is when you feel that aw
ful nausea and cramping. It you feel
"all knocked out," if your liver is tor
pid and bowels constipated or you
have headache, dizziness, coated
tongue, if breath is bad or stomach
sour just try a spoonful of harmless
Dodson's Liver Tone.
Here's my guarantee-Go to any
drug storo or dealer and got a 50-cent
bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone. Take a
A Panama.
The strw ht's rea Ippiearan lce led
iHarelay VIIlthur-ton, tle- l'hibidelphli
iiewsplaperi- owner, to say:
l"Before the var I often golfed it
TlaIrrit z, at the Chambre ('Atiour
golf links, looking out over tihe Bay
oif hiscay.
"Sonetines I had for cddie an old
Scotchian. I sild to the old Scotch
man one day:
(lorio-us view ! Glorious view, ei
"'Yes, Mr. Warburton,' suidl he. 'It's
wha1t you1 might call a very 11n1v
With the Fingers!
Says Corns Lift Out
Without Any Pain
Soie corns, hard corns, soft corns or
any kind of a corn can shortly be
lifted right out with the fingers if you
will apply on the corn a few drops of
freezone, says a Cincinnati authority.
At little cost one can get a small bot
tIe of freezone at any drug store, wihich
will positively rild oe's feet of every
corn or callus without pain or sore
ness or the daiintger of infection.
This new drug is an (t her compound,
and dries the moment it Is applied iind
does not Inflame or- even irritate the
surrounding skin. Just think ! You
can lift off your corns and calluses
now without a bit of pailn or soreness.
If your druggist hasn't freezone he can
easily get a small bottle for you from
his wholesale drug house.-adv.
Soldiers of One Army.
"Are not all true mtien that, live, or
that ever lived, soldiers of the saime
army, eilisted under heiaveni's captitl
ey, to do battle against I lae 8111110 ele
my, tle empie of larkness anad wrongi
Why shmld we milsknow one anot her,
fight not agiiis( Ihe enemy, but igainst
ourselves, fromt mere diffiereneo1 of uni
form'tt? All uniiformas slall be good, so
they hold In thetm true, val llat mien."
Carlyle.
Twenty-Five Years'
Experience With This
Kidney Medicine
It is a quarter (of a century Hitle I in.
trodneed Dri. Kuinmer's Swamap-Root to
my trade and they all speak very favor
ably regarding it, andl some friends said
it is the best medicine the:y have ever
used. TIhec sale we have enjoyed on the
preparation iand the splendid re'putation
that it feels is a positive proof that it is
one of the most meritorijous remnedies on
the market. Very truily yours,
F. E. BITT''ON, Druggist.
Nov. 28th, 1I916. Jonesboro, Tenn.
Prove What Swamp-Root WVill 'Do For You
Send -ten cents to Dr. Kilmner & Co.,
Jhiinghamitoin N. Y..,for a sample size hot
tle. It ivili convmeec anyone. You wvill
also r-eceive a booklet ol' valuiable infor
mation, telling about thle kidneys andl~ blad
dern. Whlen wr-itin g, be sure and1( muention
this paper-. Regular fifty-cent. anid one
dollair size bottles for sale at all drug
store.--Adv.
The Better Way.
"htI wet .tI trouigh In my tutar
iled life wvas ia (ati otn."'
"Whait I went through In miy mar
ried( life wvere may hiusbatnd's Pocket s."'i
important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORtIA, thait faulUs old remiedy
for infants and chIldren, and see that It
Signature of
In Use fQr Over 30 'rears.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Ciatoria
Appearaniuces maiy he dlevel itul but a
three daiys' gr-owithI of lhear liwayvs
is exactly w~hat it looks. I
Dr. Peery's "Dead shot" Is not a "to
a~enge" or ."syrup." but a real otd-inshitoned
dose of medicine which cleans out worms
or Tapeworm with a singte dose. Adv.
Too few. wotn en kinow howu~ to use
dIry goods aifter they get theta
Sold for~ 47 yeea.. 'Peg.
aGiefzama shq-- e
Is? N0 TOPt
DYNAMITE ON Li
e" Will Give You the Best Lver
r Had-Doesn't Make You Sick!
spoonful and if it doesn't straighten
you right up and make you feel fine
and vigorous 1 want you to go back to
the store and get your money. Dod
son's Liver Tone is destroying the
sale of calonel because it is real liver
medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore
it cannot salivate or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson's Liver Tone will put your
sluggish liver to work and clean your
bowels of that sour bile and consti
iated waste which is clogging your
system and making you feel miserable.
I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's
Liver Tone will keep your entire fam
ily feeling line for months. Give it to
your children. It is harmless; doesn't
gripe and they like its pleasant taste.
-Adv.
Started Right in to Fight.
"They qiarreleti intietilittely after
the wedding ceremony."
"That so? While thle guests were
there?"
"Yes, right in the presence of cv
t'rybody. It seemed itI disgraceful
ting to do unt i I caught the idea."
"Whalt was the idea?"
"It seemne lie .watited to convinco
all of us that he was not marrying
her to escape war."
FRECKLES
Now In the Time to (ct Rid of These
Ugly spots.
There's no longer the slightest need of
feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the
prescription othine - double strength - i
guaranteed to remove these homely spots.
simply get an ounce of othine-double
strength-from your druggist, nnd aply a
little of it night and morning and you
should soon see that even the worst freckles
have begun to dianppenr, while the lighter
ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom
that more than one ounce Is needed to com
pletely clear the skin and gain a beautiful
clear complexion.
Be sure to ask for the double strength
othine, na this is sold urrder guarantee of
money back if It fails to remove freckles.
Adv.
Forestalling a Shortage.
This restaurint shortetlke is appro
priately lituinil, all right. It surely
4 hwt ilo't list I 111g.
Granulated Eyelids, St- "f ^ 1"'n
relieved over night by rf .1
One trial proves its merl.
lie Who voulid elte
fIrst learni to witch h1
Kill All Flies TEYSEA
Plaed aaywixero.Delay Fly Kiiler attracts and hills sll
les. Neat. clean,. ornsmentai. ceavorusant. ad ceap,
fnte .c anS t a Iu
Daisy Fly Killer
Sold by dealers. or men$
1 7 sxpres. pteceld. $1.00.
HAROLD SOMERS, 150 DE KALD AVE.. BROOKLYN, N. V,
will reduce inflamed, swollen
Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Soft
Bunches; Heals Boils,' Poll
Evil, QuittorFistula and
infected sores quickly
as it is a positive atisep~itic
'and kermicide. Pleasant to
tiser does not blister or remove
the hire an.i yon can work the bort.
52.00 per botie, derlivered.
Dook 7 M free.
ABSOR HINE. JR.. the antiseptie liniment for mankind.
reduces Painful, swollen v'ein.. went. Ltrains. nruluest
atops paIn anid inntammatrion. Price 51.00 per bottle at
dealer, or delivered. will tell you mnore if you write.
Liberai Trial lottle for I0e in slamps.
W F. YOUNG. P' D. F..310TempleSt.,Sprinofield.Mass.
GREEN MIOUNTAIN
TREATMENT
This treatment,is the result, of rnnny years of sttud
.x ) thronit- by tihe late Dr. J. I Urlid,
grrinofNe York Miclol
ASS Ist~a n an auernianent phytinna, isand
priotuca rtraratiso on Astha it
cartses. tretat~rnnt, ete Bet'rt on
request.J. 1. tiusd Cu. iupert.A
Money boek withiouat qElrttlion
If HUT''s (CURE fans9 ins the
tretmrrent of ITlGIf, 1.0hiMA,
ltlN(;wOltMTETTrrflt orothr
50tj at rltrgglata, or tirt tt.fromt
A. B. Richards Med cine Cs., ShermanTeo.
SWERTOTATO LANTS.
Nancy Hall Can l Sot. N.o' Y. 000y.
Agen.t000su at~ 52.0ier0s3 W ere ,0a
D. F. 3A MISON SUMMERVILLE. S. C.
IFARMERS AND SHIPPERS NOTICE
4 9IE~ Makes Tender Feet Tou fh
fARM HANDS PA Wil
W. N- ., R K LOTT E, NO. 25..1917.
LTONIC.
ra'l, Chill. and P'ever. Aeem
g Tonic. 60ead $.00 tallnrgtena,