Hi-- My great-grandfather, Dr. James Brady, used to manufacture a stomach tonic called "Brady's Neurotone No. 7." Going through some old boxes in our house, I found large advertisement that was in one of the local papers for it. Of course, with my luck, the ad doesn't have a date on it, but it would have been in the paper in the early 1900s, when my great-grandparents still lived in Cottage Grove. They moved to Paris in the early 1920s. Anyway, I have a favor to ask: if any of you who look at old papers on microfilm ever run into an ad for Dr. Brady's Neurotone No. 7" or Dr. Brady's store (he was a jeweler and optometrist at 216 Poplar St. in Paris), could you mark down the date it was in the paper and let me know so that I can make a copy of it? Also, I keep finding things related to his business, such as his business cards, stationery, labels for the bottles, but the one thing I still cannot find is a bottle of his Neurotone No. 7 with the label on it. If anyone out there has one or sees one in a local antique store, let me know and I will pay for it. Thank you Shannon McFarlin Paris, TN. Also, I have boxes (and boxes) of old sheet music (both popular and classical) that my grandmother and her twin sister, Ellie Snow and Nellie Jenkins, used to teach pupils in Paris. I really want someone to get some use out of it--does anyone know anyone that would be interested? Some of it is designed for music teachers. Boxes of it are very high-brow musically since Nell was classically trained at the conservatory at St. Louis. Many others are sheet music for popular music from the early 1900s. _________________________________________________________________ Is your PC infected? Get a FREE online computer virus scan from McAfee® Security. http://clinic.mcafee.com/clinic/ibuy/campaign.asp?cid=3963