Decatur Democrat, Volume 41, Number 20, Decatur, Adams County, 29 July 1897 — Page 11
This is the Package—remember it. It contains rU - GQJSr : O Washing Powder * that cleans everything | ■ quickly, cheaply and |||g perfectly. I Largest paetage-greatest economy. . Uh?h|n|i phWflgF THE S. K. FAIBBANK COMPANY, X** Chicago. St, Louto New York, -* 1 Boston,. Philadelphia.
Complexion Preserved PR. HEBRA’S »A VIOLA CREAM fW Remove.-Freckles, Pimples, J >Lr Liver Moles, Blackheads. VjA Sanborn and Tan, and re- \ stores th'’ skin to its origi- 1 ..' nal fre-itness. producing >\4jlX ?3F ■ clear and h.alt.'y eom.fE. Flexion, superiortoallfacet- - ■ mpnr.iiions and perfectly harmless. At all druggists, or mailed for sOcte. Send for circular. VIOLA SKIN SOAP ■imp’y incomparable as a (kin p’i ’ ■ Sna P' unequaled for the toilet, ami without u rinlfor'h- nursery. Ah-olutelv pure and delicately mediAt druggist Price 25 Cents. TheO. C. BITTNER CO., Toledo, O.
’ Archbishop Janssens* Successor. Baltimore, July 26. —It is announced here that the names of Archbishop Kean. Bishop Camillus Paulmaes, D. D., of Covington and Bishop Thomas Heslui, D. D., of Natcnez have been sent to Rome in order that a selection may be made for a successor to the late Archbishop Janssens of New Orleans. Steamed Coffee. A housekeeper guards against incompetency on the part of the maid with the morning cotfee by having it steamed—a process advised by some cooks. It is made in a double boiler, the usual proportions being followed. After the toiling water is added the vessel is set in its hot water kettle and steamed for 20 minutes. There is norisk that coffee made in this way will be spoiled from standing or overcooking, according to the B' sten Cooking .School Magazine. Raspberry Jam. Boil the fruit first with a very small quantity of water, then add sugar, three-fourths of a pound to a pound of fruit, and boil three-quarters of an hour. While boiling the fruit must be well stirred. A nice way to put up this jam is in small jars or glasses, like jelly, covering them with rounds of paper wet with brandy, and then with a second paper wet with white of egg or with a tin cover. Little Clarence (with a rising inflection) —Pa, you kuow— Mr. Callipers (trying to read) —No, I don’t. “Don’t what, pa?” “Don’t know the answer to whatever question you are about to ask. ” “Why, you don't know what I am going to ask, do you, pa?” “No, of course nor. ” “Then how do you know you don’t knew what it is?” “I don’t know what it is that I don’t kuow, but, all the same, I know I don’t know it.” “But, pa, if you don’t know what it is that you don’t know, how do you know you don’t know? If you don’t kuow, it seems to me that you don’t know whether you know or don’t know, and"— "I know I don’t know simply because I know I don’t know the answers to any of the outlandish questions that your peculiar inquisitiveness is forever prompting you to ask.” "But, pa”— “Oh. well, ask your question and bo done with it. What is it that you want to kuow?” “Why, I—l don’t know. You’ve made me forget it.”—New York Sunday World.
GETTiHG READY Every expectant mother has & trying ordeal to face. If she does not M\ 8 ready for it, \ I i there is no telling l L what may happen, tj Child-birth is full of uncertainties if ’ ature is not given proper assistance. Mother’s Friend ® hie best help you can use at this time, t w a liniment, and when regularly apP led several months before baby comes, makes the advent easy and nearly painJ®- It relieves and prevents “ morning ® c kness,” relaxes the overstrained musc es, relieves the distended feeling, short®>s labor, makes recovery rapid and cerwithout any dangerous after-eilects. other’s Friend is good for only one POrpose, viz.: to relieve motherhood of and pai n . sent ar per bo ttle at all drug stores, or Fn»Vx>J lress 0!1 receipt of price. tfon for „ OKS ' containing valuable informaUpon apphcatiy 11 ' ** 66111 to auy address THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga.
THE HOUSEHOLD. New Wrinkles In Canning- Vegetables. BUmigating With Camphor- How to Make Raspberry Jam. The maimer of preserving vegetables for winter use is now so simple that one prefers to prepare her own and have them in glass jars, these being better than the vegetables to be purchased in tin cans and less expensive, for the jars may be used a number of years with the addition of only new rubber bands. An important item is to make sure that the jars and covers are perfectly fitting, thus being air tight. When filled, they should be kept in a dark, cool place. Green peas claim attention, as the early pickings seem the sweetest and best for canning. Wash the peas and reject all imperfect ones. Fill the jar with peas, shaking them down closely and filling it to the brim. Pour over the peas cold water, letting every little space between the vegetable be filled. When no more bubbles come on the water and the jar overflows, fit the covers on securely. Stand the filled jars in a boiler of water, placing them upon a wooden rack or something to prevent their coming directly into contact with the bottom of the boiler. Place the boiler over the fire and let the water boil over the jars for three hours. If the water in the jars evaporates so the jars are not full, upon no account remove the covers to fill them up. The vegetable will be best left as it is. If the cover is loosened during the process of boiling, it must be screwed on as tightly as possible when taken from the water. String beans may be treated in the same manner, except that less boiling is required for this vegetable. Cut the stem and tail from the beans and string them, then cut the beans into strips lengthwise and then in halves, or, if preferred, cut them into pieces about one inch lona. Put the cut beaus in the jars, filling them very full and pressing the vegetable down closely before pouring in the cold water; then proceed as with the peas, boiling the jars containing the beans a shorter time. Two hours will be sufficient. Ripe tomatoes may be canned whole and kept perfectly without the usual cooking. Drop the fruit into hot water to loosen the skin. When the peel has been removed, take out the stem end so no green remains. Pack as many of the peeled tomatoes in the jar as can be put in, having them whole if possible, though any too large may be cut into halves. Press the tomatoes as closely together as possible without breaking them. Turn over the packed fruit boiling water, pouring it in slowly so the liquid will run into all the little crevices, and allow the jar to overflow before screwing on the fitted cover. As each jar is filled with the boiling water and covered stand it in a tub, boiler cr some large vessel that has been filled with boiling water, having the water deep enough to completely cover the jars. When all the jars are in the water, cover the vessel holding them with a rug or blanket and let it remain until the water becomes cold. As the jars are taken from the water tighten the covers if they have loosened, but upon no account lift them off. When the jars are opened to use the tomatoes, the surplus water with the fruit may be drained out and not used. This manner of preserving tomatoes whole has been well tested ami without the loss of a single jar, the fruit coming out fresher and nicer than when cooked as in the former mode of canning, says a contributor to the New York Sun and authority for the ingFumigating With Camphor. Black ants and little red ants are difficult to drive away. Three or four good camphor smokings, however, will be found quite effective, according to Mrs. Rorer, who tells in The Ladies' Home Journal bow to proceed: Put into the closet a tin or granite pan containing a few live coals, sprinkle over about two tablespoonfuls of powdered gum camphor, close the door and allow the fumes of the camphor to thoroughly saturate the closet. These fumigations will also drive away the little silverfish that are, perhaps, the most destructive of all the summer pests, as they not only at- j tack books and papers, but will eat silk, and cotton and such articles as are used during the summer. Camphor fumigation will drive mosquitoes from sleep-' ing rooms. In camp fumigation is the only man- , ner of gaining relief from the persist-1 ence of flies and mosquitoes. Procure | for the purpose an ordinary iron spider, | using either charcoal or live coals. I Twice a day—once in the morning for ; flies and once at night for mosquitoes— I fumigate thoroughly. Lavender may be mixed with the camphor or a little dried pennyroyal. The best mixture tor fumigation is equal parts of camphor, dried pennyroyal, lavender ami luce " se - Allot these are perfectly harmless. The rooms should be tightly closed during i the fumigating process.
-OVE’S ROSARY. B’veet names the rosary of my evening prayer, Told on my lips like kisses of good night To friends who go a li’ile from my sight, , And some through distant years shine clear and fair. ! 8° this dear burden that I daily boar Nightly God taketh and doth loose me quite, And soft I sink in slumbers pure and light With thoughts of human love and heavenly care. But when I mark how into shadow slips My manhood’s prime and weep fast passing friends, And heaven’s riches making poor my lips, And think how in the dust love’s labor ends, Then, where the cluster of my hearthstone shone, “Bid me not live,” I sigh, ‘‘till all bo gone.” —G. E. Woodberry in Harper’s Magazine. THE BIG POLICEMAN. The big policeman felt unusually pleasant this morning notwithstanding the fact that a disagreeable rain was falling—mean spring rain, which hud mixed itself up with a cold ruin in such a manner that when it came dashing around the street corner it caused profane pedestrians to say words which would look ill if printed, and the “other kind” to say “My goodness,” or something equally relieving to pent up indignation. Looking down, the big policeman saw a little woman, attired in some ' kind of gray stuff and with big pathetic I eyes, standing beside him, and somehow i she seemed frightened at the crowd, the , passing vehicles, the clanging street ' car bells, and the constant passing of the cars themselves. She was white and shivering, and her garments, wet through, clung about her iu a hindering fashion, which kept her from rapid movement, and as she stepped close be- . side the big policeman he felt a curious i desire to take her up, much as one would take up a child, and carry her to 1 a place of safety. She hesitated a moment and then she attempted to go forward, but, alas, whether the rain blind ed her or she just then remembered that she was in baste and must at any risk go on her way, she attempted to cross over the track just in front of a swiftly moving ear. In vain did the gripman shout, in vain did the bell ring. The little gray clad figure fluttered on and the crowd just behind her, feeling that a tragedy was about to be enacted, was hushed into instant silence. The big policeman also comprehended the awful danger of the woman and his teeth came together with a snap and his fine eyes flashed as he sprang after her, his hand outstretched in a frantic effort to reach, grasp and pull her back. The car was almost upon him, the noise of the grinding wheels filled his ears, he knew, as men know whose wits are ever on the alert, that it was risking his life for the life of a stranger, but a mighty effort, the flinging of his body forward, and the deed was done, the woman was drawn out of the reach of the cruel wheels; but the big policeman’s left leg gave the passengers in the car a sickening jar as th a wheels passed over it and the tragedy for the crowd had been furnished. Nobody noticed the woman, who, unhurt, mingled with the crowd and went her way, but had they done so they would have seen her crying behind her veil and every now and then clutching her fingers together as if in mortal misery. And she was miserable, poor little Marie Denton, who was only a dressmaker’s assistant and who had lost her mother, her only known relative, only a few weeks befor< She had cried so much iu the little room she called home at night that sleep went away from her and she was so exhausted when morning came that she could hardly eat her meager breakfast, and it was late when she started for the down town establishment where she was employed. It was this thought that impelled her when she tried to cross the street and which had resulted in such a disastrous fashion for the big policeman. Marie remembered that his glance had fallen upon her kindly, and while she had made no effort to push her way to where ready but tender hands were caring for the brave fellow who had risked his life to save hers, yet she registered a vow in her heart that she would nevI er rest until she had told him how I grieved she was at his hurt and how much she appreciated his heroism. He might hate her for being the I cause, but Marie was a brave little woman when her duty confronted her, and she knew as well now as later on that she must do what shq could to atone to the poor fellow who was enduring the torture of an awful hurt. All day she worked in silence, but she saw the picture of the kind eyes ever before her, and she resolved that she would buy an evening paper and in the account of the accident would ascertain the name of the man who at one bound was raised to the dignity of a hero and who was a hero, too, as great as any of those whose names were blazoned on fame’s banner. What if he was only a policeman and the saving of life was in the line of his duty? No man is required to risk his own life to save that of another, and as Marie remembered that, save a bruise or two, she had escaped without injury while her rescuer was suffering, and all for her sake, she whispered low to her heart ■ not “the hero,” or “a hero,” but “my 1 hero. ” And she blushed a little as she . said it, but somehow it was so much like music to her that she did net drive ! it away, but kept it near her and around it wove dreams. When she started home in the evening, from the first newsboy she came across she bought a paper and with rare good | fortune finding a seat in the car which bore her homeward she quickly unfold- | ed the paper and began to scan the i headlines. There were big, double head- j lines on the first page, but there was nothing about the affair which was of such vital interest to her, and she turned the paper over, and —there it was, “The Deed of a Hero,’’and the big ■ policeman—whose name was William
Smith, nothing but plain William Smith —was much praised for hie noble deed in “saving the lit. of a foolish woman”—and here Marie nodded her head in assent —and the “story” went on to say that, “while he would not lose his leg, yet the officer would be crippled for life,” etc. But what Marie wanted to kuow was where the hurt man was to be found, and this the newspaper story failed to tell beyond the fact that he had been taken to a hospital. Marie sighed and puckered her white forehead into a frown, while she thought of a “way,” and then at the next corner she climbed off the car and waited for a policeman. She asked him if he knew where Officer William Smith, who was hurt by a cable car ; that morning, had been but the i policeman did not know anything about the accident, and he did not kuow Offi cer William Smith, and, being a gruff fellow and tired of the mud and other disagreeable things which follow a | rainy day, he added he “didn’t care. ” Marie was also tired, and it was past her dinner time, but she went on until : she found another wearer of the star, and to him she put the same query regarding Officer Smith. This time she was given “ie desired information, and she boarded another car. with a heart which held iu it a determined purpose. The next morning she went to work as usual, but when it was time to return home she asked her employer for a “day off, ” and because of the unusual request readily secured permission to be away the whole of the next day. That night when Mane reached home she carried somewhere next to her innocent heart a crisp, new §1 bill, and this she placed inside of her worn little pocketbook. Yes, she meant to do it—she meant to buy some flowers and some fruit and take them to her “hero,” and that night she did not feel so lonely as she had done w hen she remembered that her mother was lying in the grave far from her own sunny France, for a new interest had taken possession of her, and a new purpose had been evolved in her brain through a sense of justice. She carefully brushed the pretty brown hair the next morning and tacked a little fresh lace in her collar and mended a very small hole in her best gloves before putting them on, and then, when she was quite neat and very, very sweet, she went forth in search of flowers. She bought a single pink rose and a few ferns and a half dozen white carnations, and then she bought a tiny basket of pinkish green grapes, and she was ready to find the hospital. It was a long ride, but not a very long walk, and finally Marie, with her heart fluttering like a bird in its cage, found herself in the presence of the man who but yesterday was strong and well, but who today was as helpless as an infant. His eyes did not shrink when Marie stood beside his narrow cot, but looked, at her with the same kindly light which they bad worn when she stood beside him at that fatal crossing, and there was a strange sweetness in the thought which came to Marie that at least he did not hate her for the misery she had brought upon him. She began to say in a hesitating fashion how sorry she was for the accident, but, as was said, she was brave in what she considered her duty, and presently she grew calm and, with only the encouragement of the kindly eyes, went on and confessed that she meant to do what she could to atone for her heedless conduct, and that she ‘ ‘had begun by bringing him some flowers and a bit of fruit.” The big officer held out his hand to the little woman, and without any hesitancy she placed hers iu it, and a kind of a compact was thus sealed. He said in a gentle way )A"was glad he saved her life,” and she had promised to come again and had gone the flowers were laid against the mustached lips, and there was a feeling in the big heart for the little woman that was very tender and very sweet. Well, of course the little woman came again, and of course the big policeman was glad to see her, and as the days went on the old story was again new for these two people, who had been so near to death together, and when the blessed day came that Officer William Smith was released from the hospital almost well and not so very lame, either, it was understood that there was to be a wedding, by which Miss Marie Denton was to become “Mrs. Officer William Smith.” And, sure enough, the wedding came eff in due time, and the big policeman’s chief was present, besides many of his brother policemen, and among the gifts was a gold medal, which was bestowed on the groom in a neat speech by the chief and which bore the inscription, “For bravery,” and there is a pretty little home in one of the quieter streets which bears upon its simple brass door plate the name “Smith, ” but at which nobody thinks of asking for the big policeman for all that. He has a rival—a pretty, pink cheeked, round, rollicking baby, which the neighbors, as well as the silly parents, call the “little policeman,” and which looks enough like the big policeman to be called “a chip off the old block.”—Rosa Pearle in Chicago Tribune. Japanese Looms. According to reliable statistics, there were in Japan in 1896 949,123 looms in operation, distributed among 660,408 different establishments, giving an average of less than 1 looms for each establishment. This average shows that the weaving industry of Japan is still to a very great extent a home industry and is far from having reached that degree of centralization which it has iu this country. The number of persons employed in the weaving industry of Japan last year was 57,850 ihales and 985,016 females, and the total estimated production for 1896 was 96,187,235 yen, including silk cloth amounting to 46,471,401 yen; silk and cotton amounting to 10,281,272 yen; cotton cloth amounting to 37,083,757 yen, the balance being hemp and sundries.—Dry Goods Economist.
✓Qandy cathartic | VUkftaWb/! CURE COKSTIPATIOH ; lO* ALL 25 1 50 t DRUGGISTS J IDQAT TITK*T V f t 0 cnre any <*a?e of constipation. fascarets nrp the Ideal I.axa I nDOUJju 1 uLj I UunlinlHDijV tire, never ?rip or aripe. bur cause easy natural results. Snm-A nle and booklet free. Ad. STERLING REMEDY (().. Chicawro. Montreal. Can.. or New York. 817. j •-«*-* »*■«. o-<nx>-«> MANHOOD RESTOREOSS “ I iv? w t,on of tt famous French physician, will quickly cure you ot all ner- / . Vi I vous or diseases ot the generative organ., such as Lost Mauhoct S V, -Z-mJI Insomnia, Pains in the Back, Seminal Emissions. Nervous DebilFy I ( wSr F im P* es , Unfitness to Marry, Exbanstlng Drahis, Varicocele anil •C / “/ Constipation. It stops all losses by day or night. Prevents quickness ot discharge, which it not checked leads to Spermatorrhoea and BEFORE t»oAFT r H all the horrors o( Impotency. «llPlli»K.Nßeleausestheliver, the " ” i-n kidneysand the urinary organsot all impurities. (TPIDENE strengthens and restores small weak organs. The reason sufferers are not cured by Doctors Is because ntnetv per cent are troubled with Pro. tat-tin. CUPIDENE is the only known remedy to cure wil hour an operation. SOeutesllwnlals. A written guarantee given and money returned if six boxes docs not effect u permanent cure. (1.00 a box, six for $5.00. by mail. Send for ft.ee circular and testimonials. Address DAVOS. JSEDICINi: CO., P. O. Box 2075, San Fraticiscc, Cat FfrrSolebv W. H. NA< H rlilf rl. Druggist, Decatur, Ind.
OCATIOS FOIi BI’SIN’ESS MEN On Chicago Great Western Railway, in towns situated in best, sections of lowa, Illinois M innesota ami Missouri. Ovet fifty different lines wantea including bankers, bakers, blacksmiths, doctors, drugs, hardware, harness, furniture, general stores, grain and stock buyers, marble works, creameries and various manufacturing industries. Informa- . tion and assistance free. Send for maps and maple leaflets containing farm lists ami description of each location. W. J. Reed, Industrial Agent. Chicago Great Western Railway, 604 Endicott Bldg, St. Paul, Minn. One Way to be Happy Is to attend to the comfort of your family. Should any one of them catch a slight cold or cough, call at once on Smith & Callow, ! sole agents amt get a trial bot>le of Otto’s l Cure, the great German Remedy, free. We \ give it away to prove that we have a sure I cure for coughs, colds, asthma, consump- ■ tion and all diseases of the throat and 'lungs, Large sizes 50c and 25c. Au Important Question. It vour friends or neighbors are suffering I from coughs, colds, sore throat, or any throat lor lung disease (including consumption.) ask i them if they have ever used Otto’s Cure. This I famous German remedy is having a large sale i here and is performing some wonderful cures Os throat and lung diseases. Smith & Callow I will give you a sample bottle free. No matter what other medicines have failed to do. try Otto’s Cure. Large sizes 25 and 50 cents. “I have never had a days sickness in my life,” said a middle-aged man the other day I “What a comfort it would be,” sighs some i poor invalid, “to be in his place for a year ;or two.” Yet half the invalids we see might be just as healthy as he, if they I would only take proper care of themselves, I eat proper food—and digest it. It’s so I strange that such simple things are over- ! looked by those who want health. Food ! makes health. It makes strength—and strength wards off sickness. The man who had never been sick was strong because he always digested his food, and you could become the same by helping your stomach to work as well as his. Shaker Digestive Cordial will help your stomach and make you strong and healty by making the food you eat make you fat. Druggists sell it. Trial bottle 10 cents. Bine Lake. Visit this delightful waterside for health and pleasure. Highest point in Indiana. Easily aceasible but quiet and secluded. Flowing mineral wells and springs, good board, good boats, tine fishing, sandy beaches, fine camping grounds. Cottages and tents for rent. Prices all reasonable. For full particulars address Elmer E. Gandy, secretary, Churubusco, Indiana. 18 4 Why Pay Rent? Better own a farm! Start now! Correspondence solicited from intending settlers. The North-Western HomeSeeker gives practical information to those interested in the pursuits of agriculture, dairying and cattle raising Send for free copy to C. Traver, Rooms 3 and 4. Marine National Bank Building. Pittsburg, Pa. One fare excursion tickets are on sale (schedule permitting) between Clover Leaf stations. Limit date of sale apply to nearest agent. Clover Leaf will issue low rate excursion tickets from Illinois, Indiana and Ohio stations to Niagara Falls, for its annual excursion August 2. For further particulars call on nearest agent, n-a Clover Leaf will issue reduced rate excursion tickets, from principal stations, to various resorts east and west, and to upper lake points. Special low rates to camping-out parties. For further particulars call on nearest agent. 17-6 The Island Park Assembly meets at Rome City July 15 continuing until August 2. Rate from Decatur $1.70 on all regular trains. Morning trains will be run north on Epworth League Day, July 30 and on G. A. R. Day, July 27. Call G R. & I. by telephone and get a program by mail. J. Bryson, Agent. Low rates, one way and round trip tickets to the South, summer 1897. On the first and third Tuesdays of each month, June to October inclusive, the Southern railway has arranged for one way settlers tickets from Ohio and Mississippi river points to the south at rate of two cents per mile. Also round trip tickets at rate of one fare plus two dollars or the round trip. The best time to go south is the present time. Information as to conveniently airanged schedules and special rates to all points south upon application. Wm. 11. Tayloe, Ass'tGen’l Poss. Agent, Louisville, Ky. The Southern railway is the only line penetrating the eight great southern states. 12-8
F. 0, CORSETS, MAKE American Beauties CORRECT SHAPES. J||k ARTISTIC '©EFFECTS. A " AF'tJ Lengths. On Each Box. /l%rc/coY REWEST MODELS. Z 'V*u'Mg" y 9 FANCY ANO jipfek PLAIN. #|| FEATHERBONE CORSET CO., SOLZ MANUFACTURERS. SCLD BY KUEBLER & MOLTZ GO.
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES. JOHN D. NIDLINGEH, Trustee Union Township. Office Day—Monday, of each week, instead of Tuesday, 12-48 L, W. LEWTON. Trustee Root Township. Office Dav—Monday of each week, instead of Tuesday. 7-33 GEORGE W. BROWN, Trustee Kirkland Township. Office Day -Monday of each week, instead of Tuesday, 8-34 JOHN STEELE, Trustee Washington Township. Office Days—Taesdays and Saturdays at Surveyor’s office. —Wednesdays at home. WILLIAM F. SCHUG, Trustee Monroe Township. Office Day—Monday of each week, instead of Tuesday. 7-33 C. E. STOCKEY, Trustee French Township. Office Day—Monday of each week, instead of Tuesday. 7-33 The Chicago & Erie railway will run two special excursions to Chautauqua Lake, N. Y.. on July 2nd and August 2nd only. Round trip rate $9.60. Return limit 30 days. For further information call or address J. W. DeLong, Agent. Jlicltigan in Summer. Northern Michigan has increased in popularity as a place for summering, not only on account of the climatic conditions but because it provides such a variety ot pleasures for such a variety of people. With the opportunities so great for the enjoyment of congenial society, the fishing, boating, bathing, the excellence of the hotels and clubs, the comforts of cottage life, there is no chance tor monotony. The climate, owing to the proximity of the great lakes and the latitude, is no where equalled for the invigoration of tired and worn out humanity. Send for illustrated descriptive matter giving information about the different points, lists of hotels, rates of fare and train service of the Grand Rapids & Indiana R'y, the route of the Northland Express, the fast vestibuled train carrying through sleepers from St. Louis, Cincinnati, Louisville, Indianapolis and Chicago to Petoskey and Mackinaw. Address C. L. Lockwood. G. P. A., Grand Rapids, Mich. 12-8 Educate Your Howels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C C. fail, druggists refund money.
