HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-10-23 Dr. Munyon Built His Hotel On Big Island (Palm Beach Times)Ac /913J/jq5
Dr. Muni y�i
Built His Hotel
On Big Island
By ROBERT PETERSON
Times Staff Writer
NORTH PALM BEACH — What seemed at first to be a
wild goose chase later took on a new dimension as old timers
in this area recounted that indeed a hotel once stood on Big
Munyon Island and that Dr. Munyon's Paw -Paw remedy was
the drink of the day.
The search began when John MacArthur loaned The Even-
ing Times a picture, showing the hotel surrounded by coconut
palms and with a small boat harbor in the foreground. Fire
leveled the wood and stone structure which was built in the
early 1900's, according to MacArthur, the present owner of the
island.
At first there s only a narrowing of eyes and the look of
skepticism in the faces of those questioned as to a hotel ever
having been on Big Munyon. Nobody asked had been in the
area for more than 35 years. A scout leader scoffed at the
idea. He had taken a -troop camping to the island many times.
Yet he did admit to having seen a weathered foundation which
he took as being a remnant of an old fishing shack.
Many said a hotel was just never there.
It took a local historian -librarian to uncover the truth. Half
convinced that the hotel in MacArthur's picture was located
not on Munyon Island but elsewhere in the Palm Beaches, Mrs.
Nancy Moore (whose grandfather was a Seminole Indian
fighter in Florida) kept probing into the mystery until her
search led her to 70-year-o!d Mrs. John Dubois of Jupiter. It
must have been the right lead since propped up on the front
yard of Mrs. Dubois' home is a century old Indian canoe which
her two boys used to paddle around in.
Sure enough from out of her voluminous files Mrs. Dubois
produced a tattered, yellowed issue of the Palm Beach News,
dated Oct. '20, 1905 showing an article about Dr. Munyon and
his Hotel Hygeia. The article also mentioned Dr. Munyon's
"medicine," which was claimed to cure a host of disorders
that modern medicine has not ;'et found the answers to. The
exaggerated claims for Munyon',,; Paw -Paw tonic contained in
an effervescent advertisement would today cause "The Great
Natural Remedy" to be stripped off the retail shelves faster
than a bar of soap could squirt from under a wet foot.
Yet Dr. Munyon was a great believer in what he did, for on
the back cover of the music score "Down When the Paw -Paw
Grows," (obviously a promotion song, "On Munyon's Isle all
hearts beguile . . .) the stern faced doctor with right index
finger pointed to the sky, proclaims, "I co:isider my prepara-
tion of Paw -Paw the crowning achievement of my life knowing
as I do the great blessings following .i:ts use."
Mrs. Dubois is sure Paw -Paw had a high alcohol content.
There was nutritional value since papaya juice went into the
bottle with the alcohol. WhatevR.r else was added to the mix-
ture if anything may never ',e known ..since the Fedhral Food
and Drug Administraticn and federal 'Trade Commiss:+on didn't
then exist.
paw -Paw `gas a household word at the Hygeia Hotel and
when the contents were drunk the bottle would end up on the
island's trash heap, worthless. The craze of bottle collecting
sweeping the country has put new life into Munyon's Paw -Paw.
Where once the bottle _and its contents were sold for one
dollar, the fair collector's pace for the quart sized, rectangu-
lar amber bottle is $14. The figure is contained in Ralph and
Terry Kovel's, "The Official Bottle Collectors Price List
(1971) . "
The bottle sitting on a collector's shelf is but a skeleton, a
relic and a reminder of a page in history. An avid collect)r
extracting his treasure from a former trash heap may % e
more than a bottle. There was also the long-haired man
years ago intent on achieving success and overtly declarg
that he would put "my reputation and my fortune behind it.
"I want the public to know it as I do and to believe in it'
I believe in it. I value your confidence and respect more tha , 1
value your money." (He had money too and formed a corpora-
tion with $5 million in capital) .
If staking his reputation and fortune on the tonic were not
enough, Dr. Munyon appealed to the public to heed the value
Paw -Paw would bring to the body.
"Don't take whisky; don't take beer; don't take narcotics,
which are worse than either of them. Remember Paw -Paw
exhilarates, but does not intoxicate. It lifts you out of despon-
dency into the high altitude of hopes and holds you there. Set
aside all drugs, all medicines, all stimulants and give Paw -
Paw a fair trial and you will have cause to give your heartfelt
thanks to MUNYON ."
On the label were written the words: "The great natural
remedy for indigestion, dyspepsia and all stomach ailments,
cures nervousness, sleeplessness, loss of vitality, rheumatism,
catarrh (inflammation of the mucous membrane of the nose or
throat) , kidney, liver and blood troubles, poor circulation, diz-
ziness, and constipation. It furnishes blood to pale people, gives
life and snap to the overworked and run down, makes the old
feel young and the weak feel strong." (There seemed to be
something for everyone.)
Directions: "Take from one to two dessert spoonful's three
times daily, preferably with your meals or oftener if required,
especially when tired and depressed."
Paw -Paw was in part a vegetable pepsin. Papaya fruit con-
tains pepsin, a stomach enzyme that aids digestion.
Buffs of mythology know that Hygeia was the goddest :of
health, and one of the daughters of Aesculapius, the mythical
god of healing. A good name for a hotel. that sold Paw -Paw
tonic.
Mrs. Moore, who is reference librarian at the North Palm
Beach Public Library, is compiling a history of the commu-
nity. It's a slow and tedious process, leading to many dead
ends.
Pain Beach Neighborhood
Times October 23,1973