Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 3, 1894)
Royal Baking Powder Imparts that pe culiar lightness, sweetness, and fla vor noticed in the finest cake,biscu it, rolls, crusts, etc., which expert pas try cooks declare is unobtainable by the use of any oth er leavening agent. ROYAL BAKINO POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., N. V. When the Eyes Stick. Inflammation of the conjunctiva or mem' brane, which shields the front of the eye ball from the air and takes the rub of the eyelids, is indicated by the glued state of the eyes in the morning, and more espe cially by their bloodshot condition, the ves sels being bright red in color and winding about in great irregularity, with no dis cernible order or plan. Hall's Journal of Health. A Thankless Profession. Widower Doctor, your bill is something outrageous. Here you have just doctored my poor wife to death and now you bring In a bill like this. Doctor That's just what I expected, you fellows always kick. I don't believe that there's a bit of gratitude left in this world. "SWJEKT SIXTEEN "-A.JT EXQUISITE ... , CALENDAR. .- Hood's calendar, which is always 1 oked for with interest and pleasure, has made its appear ance f r the yt ur 1S94, and is In many respects more beautiful than ever. The head is that of a lovely girl Just " sweet sixteen." lithographed in delicate and natural Colors. Besides being a thing oi beauty, tie calendar is especially val uable for the general infonnatlon presented. The figures are plainly prin'ed in pleasing and harmonious colors, and the effect as a whole is ' niostsatisfaeiory. The calendars can be obtained oi almost any druggist, or by sending six (6) cents in stamps for one and ten (1") cents fT two to C. I Hood & Co., Lowell, Muss. An edition of over eigtit millions of these calendars was printed in order to supply the immense demand. This seems a simple statement, but its meaning is almost beyond human concepiion. The card used f r the upper ponion of this number of calendars would cover nearly fifty-two (62) aores of ground, and the paper conKumed in making the puds, if cut m one ooniinuous strip of the same width as the puds, would be over eighteen thousand ( 8,00 ) miles in length. These calendars are issued by the proprietors of Hood's tjaisapnrilla, the well-known medi cine wheh has gained such renown by its won derful euros In cses where the bloa was poi soned or impure. The history rf this prepara tion in entirely unique, the business having grown from a small retail trade until at the present time the great laboratory in which it is ma e has a capacity for flf y thousand (0,0 0) bottles a day, and is the laigest building in the wr d devoted to the manufneturo of a medi cine. The sales of Hood's Sarsuparilla in all sections of the country are enoraious. The pro prietors have never claimed that it. would curr every allium. t, but they show by thousands of tesimoiiialk that Hood's Sarsaparilla purines and v talizfB ttie blood, builds up the system a- d curex those diseases caused by impure blood and debility, such as sorofula, salt rheum, CHtxrrh, rheumatism, etc. As a preventive of the g ip Hood's Bars pariUa has proved to be uniqualed, and it restores the wased vital forces alter a siege of that dreaded malady and jortifles the system against future attacks. The fact that great ca'e is exercised in the preparation of this uediine and that nothing has ever been claimed for it except as warranted by previous cureB has much to do with the con fidence felt by the public in its curative powers. me motto oi tne proprietors is, 11 it is not What we say, but what Hood'o Sarsaparilla does, that tells the story, and it is what Hood's Sarsapa rilla has done, us shown by thepiibli-hed state ments of persons whom it has cured, that has placed it at the head in the field of medicine in the presen t day." FREE. If you have not received one of the Aueust Flower ana uermai syrup wary Al manacs for 1894, send your name and address on a postal at I ' A A ! s I once, asking for Almanac No. 39, and you will receive by return mail, free of all expense, one of tne most complete mustratea books of the kind ever issued, in which you can keep a Daily Diary or Memoranda of any matters you desire. Write quick, or they will be all gone. Address G. G. GREEN, ' Woodbury, N. J. Free by On reeel pt of Onh Dollar h WHOLE GARDEN. Let in mail you our illustrated Catalogue which wilt tell you all about it. unet Sued ind Flant t'o (Blierwood Hall Nursery Co.), 427-9 Sansome Street, wan Francisco, selected Seeds a specialty Dr. Williams' Indian Pile , Ointment will cure Blind, ' Bleeding and Itching Piles. i It absorbs the tumors, allays . the itching at once, acts as a poul ' tine, irives instant relief. Dr. Will- I iams' Indian Pile Ointment is prepared for Piles and Itchinsr of the private ports. Every box is warranted. By drug cists, bv mall on receipt of prici, 50 cents and $1.00 WILLIAMS MANUFACTURING CO., Proprietors, Cleveland, Ohio. ' FOR SALE. One celebrated Tuerk Water Motor; new; will develop 10 to 15-horse power. Water is the bet and cheanest power to use, and the"Tuerk',' is the best and cheapest motor in the market Will be sold at a sacrifice. Address PALMER & REV, Portland, Or. is- HIP I xnuMi ur. Evorv'e jnnrK. CATARRH The Great Cure roruaiarrn, uearness, voiua, oure i umai., Hoarseness, Headache, Fetid, Slcltenlnii IV nil fs I 1RI Mm r WATER MOTOR lilt I .a ifmt mm Bmell,ctal'ri'e5Cc.alldrii(i(iiH3 0i mall. . !i:VOKYIU.n'ro!s., . 3j! ink bt.t jiroulUyui ft. x SECURITY DEMANDED FOR MEALS, Odd Ways That Lovers Have for Paying for Theater Suppers. The restaurant was crowded. At the table on the reporter's right sat a tall, straight haired young man with glasses, and his companion was a girl of eighteen, who seemed to be in the last stages of con. sumption. She was hollow eyed and hol low cheeked, and she was so pale faced that the writer supposed she had come for a glass of wine to give her strength to get home. The young man's order was very simple. All he wanted was a cup of coffee and a roll. The young woman took the menu and read it over twice in a cool and delib erate way, and then ordered fried oysters, coffee, rolls, cake, potatoes, cold turkey and four or five other things a hearty meal for a laboring man. "That's a queer thing," said the re porter to the manager, who had taken a seat beside him. "Not a bit queer," he answered. "In fact, it is what might be expected. Out of any dozen couples who come in here after the theater for lunch at least ten of the females will eat twice as much as their es corts. They come to make a regularmeal, and it's astonishing how much they can get away with. I honestly believe that most of them go without their 8 o'clock dinner in order to get up a good appetite at this time." : "Does a large woman eat more than a little one?" . . "No, sir; the reverse is the case. Look over there at that third table at the right. There's a girl who doesn't weigh much over 100 pounds, and you can see what a spread she's ordered. There's food enough to make a longshoreman a good meal, and you can see how uneasy her young man is." "Whyf" "Because it's going to be close figuring whether he's got enough cash to pay the bill. These young fellows you see in here are mostly salary men, working on from fifteen to twenty-five dollars per week. These lunch bills on top of the theater tickets and coupe bills sometimes pmch them very close. The girl doesn't know this, or if she does she doesn't care." "Then it sometimes happenB that the young man can't square up with your cashier?" , . "It happens every night. ' I expect the cashier could show us two or three watches and a dozen pins and rings waiting to be redeemed. But that's private, you know." "Then you don't raise a row if the young man can't pay your' , "Far from it. There's a case at the desk now." - A young man, who was looking very red in the face and was plainly very much em barrassed, was holding a confidential con versation with the cashier. He slipped a ring off his finger and passed it in, wrote his address on a slip of paper, and returned to the table where his girl was still eating away as if eho had just been taken off a desert island. - "Suppose he hadn't had anything to put up?" . ' "We Bhould have taken his address and let him call later to square the account." "Would he have done so?" , , "Most certainly. I've known scores of cases, and I don't remember one instance where we suffered a loss. Puts him dead on his honor, you see. It would be like going back on his girl to beat us." "How much of a bill did you ever see a couple make here f " "Six dollars, and the young man hadn't but forty cents in cash. He was a clerk on a salary of nine dollars per week, and he left a ten dollar watch as security. He was two months paying that bill." "And did he marry the girl?" "No. Within two weeks she was in here with another young man, and I've seen her with different ones since. The wait ers call her Miss Appetite. Her check is never less than $1.50, and if she's feeling good her escort goes out of here dead broke and wading In sorrow up to his neck." Chicago Inter Ocean. , , The Oldest Hat. Mrs. Sarah Hampton, of Roswell, Ga., has a hat made of cow's horn that has been in the Hampton family for over 400 years. The hat is about five inches long and three wide at one end and two at the other. The box is minutely fastened together with brass rivets. On the lid is, "W. C. H., 1609," cut with a knife. ., In the bottom of the box is a piece of paper, but part of the writing is so dim it cannot be read under a glass. One can read three lines. It says that "this hat has been in the Hampton family 336 years, 1699." Master Comant Hampton now possesses the old relic. Although he is only seven years old he prizes it very highly. The hat was carried through the Revolutionary war by one of the Hamptons, Master Co mant's great-great-grandfather. Chicago Mail. . A v, . 1 Mushroom Spawn. ' Mushrooms, although of spontaneous growth, are raised from spawn. The best spawn Is made in England and is the droppings of horses, cows and sheep, dried and pressed into bricks. Artificial growers take great care to have the soil changed in the beds frequently, and they also keep the heat of the beds at a certain temper ature. Thermometers are stuck in the soil at short distances apart and are consulted every few hours, both night and day. This carefulness results in producing good mushrooms, but it is not necessary in the production of. ordinarily good ones. New York Telegram. ' What a Comma Looks Like. "Aunt Polly" was a Btrict disciplinarian, who taught their A B C's to unruly ur chins at Tremont seventy years ago. One day she was drilling the class in Webster's spelling book on punctuation and asked one Bill Milliken what a comma looked like. "It looks like a pollywog, ma'am," was the answer. Bill got his ears .cuffed, but not a scholar there ever failed to rec ognize a comma at sight after that defini tion, Lewiston Journal. Nicely Corrected. . We are often informed that there are "quite a few" of some articles under con sideration. This peculiar use of the word quite was exemplified by the young wom an who was strolling with her lover. He remarked that there was quite a moon, to which she happily responded, "very quite." Detroit Free Press. Better Improve the Time. Newly Engaged Young Lady Do you think it's right for a girl to let the man she's going to marry kiss herf Confidential Married Friend (with a sigh) -Well, I suppose she might as well. She'll have it all to do herself afterward. Kate Field's Washington. . . ,, Still Young. Teacher I am surprised that you are not farther advanced. You are extremely backward for your age. Little Girl Yes'm. Mamma wants to marry again. Good News. Fireproof Materials. At the Berlin exhibition of means and contrivances for the prevention of acci dents in industries and otherwise, prizes were awarded for the following proc esses for fireproofing, respectively dimin ishing the combustibility of tissues, cur tain materials and theatrical scenery: For light tissues, sixteen pounds anuncv mum sulphates, five pounds ammonium carbonate, four pounds borax, six pounds boric acid, four pounds starch, or one pound dextrine, or one pound gelatine, and twenty-five gallons water, mixed to gether, heated to 80 degs. Fahrenheit, and the material impregnated with the mixture, centnfugated and dried, and then ironed as usual. One quart of the mixture, costing about three or four cents, is enough to impregnate fifteen yards of material. For curtain materials, theatrical deco rations, wood and furniture thirty pounds ammonium chloride are mixed with so much floated chalk as to give the mass consistency. It is then heated to 125 to 150 degs. Fahrenheit, and the material given one or two coats of it by means of a brush. A pound of it, cost ing about eight-tenths of a cent, is suffi cient to cover five square rods. Berlin Letter. - : ' ' ' ' 1 ' ; A Terrible Thing in a Battle., The house committee on naval affairs for some days has had under considera tion a bill providing for the addition to the navy of a novel craft. The feature of the design is found in an enormous submarine gun carried at the bow below the water line. The pro jectors feel that they have now a prac ticable means at hand to drive an enor mous shell loaded with an explosive charge of gunpowder or gun cotton into the hull of any ironclad afloat and ex plode it in the very vitals of the ship. According to the design submitted to the committee and explained by (Jen- eral Berdan, a hydraulic buffer projects from the bow of the vessel. This is so adjusted that it will stop the boat a dis tance of eight feet from the enemy's ship without injury to the boat. At this short range the buffer automatically dia charges the submarine gun directly at the hull of the ship, and lodges within it a shell carrying a bursting charge of 450 pounds of powder, sufficient to blow down every bulkhead in the ship and wreck the bottom. Cincinnati Com mercial Gazette. Glad to Get Bid of Him. A few days ago Governor Buchanan was called upon to exercise executive clemency in a very peculiar case. The person concerned was a man held in jail at Jackson till he should produce a $300 fine. He had been there over a year without showing any signs of liquidating with the commonwealth, and it is prob able he would have remained a prisoner for the next fifty years if payment had been waited for. The county court, recognizing him as an incubus to the amount of forty cents a day, passed a resolution asking the governor "for the Lord's sake to forgive that little $300 and let the man get out and earn his own living. The trial judge and the attorney general and the members of the jury all appeared on the petition sent up in ac cordance with the resolution, but not a single friend of the prisoner was among the signers. Nashville American. Made Her Left Handed by a Blow. Three years ago a young lady of Fall River, Mass., was hit upon the left side of her head by a falling sign as she was walking along a street in Boston. This was followed by brain fever. , After some weeks she was as well in mind and body as ever, but from a right handed person she had become so left handed that she could neither cut, sew nor write with her right hand, but found it easy to do all' these things with her left. Her right hand was just about as useful as her left had been before she was hurt. What is strange is that, with so recent a change in the use of her hands, she never makes an awkward motion and is as graceful in the use of her left hand as if she had been born left handed. Bos-' ton Post. A Greedy Mountain Lion's Fate. 'Dr. French, a seventy-year-old resi dent of Alamo, killed a mountain lion one day last week at the Tule ranch in the pineries. The lion had crawled into a pig pen through a small hole, and after feasting on two shoats was too big to get out through the hole. Thus he was an easy prey to the doctor, who gave him a hypodermic injection of birdshot in order to see him perform. He per formed to the entire satisfaction of his tormentor. The doctor administered a 44-caliber pill, which put him to sleep. The animal had immense claws, and measured six feet from tip to tip. San Diego Sun. A Gret Famine Predicted. A prophet in Athens, Ga., predicts that the crop yield this year throughout this country will be the largest ever known, but that beginning with ' 1893, and for two years thereafter, there will be the greatest famine the world has ever known. During that time rain shall cease to fall, and the streams of the countj-y will all dry up, vegetation will no longer exist, and all animals will surely die. ' At the beginning of the famine the land will be infested with, alt sorts of vermin, and the living will suf fer untold tortures. An Australian agricultural paper makes note of an immense increase in the number of sheep in Australia in the last two or three years, a&d of She enor mous development of the grazing capa bilities of the country. The estimated number of sheep in Australia in 1893 is 60,000,000, against 81,000,000 in 1884. " The number of monarchies in Eurone has increased bv one during the Dast vear. the duchv of Luxembourg havingr become a sovereign state by the death or the queen or Holland. A gold brick was recently shipped to San Francisco from Yuma, Cal., the value of which was estimated at between $80,00Qand $90,000. It weighed a little over 39 pounds. WHEN WAR IS DECLARED Against a man's happiness by his stomach, the enemy may be pacified and brought speedily and easily to terms. That potent regulator of digestion, Hottetter's Stomach Bitters, disci plines the rebellious organ thoroughly. Indi gestion arises from weakness of the stomach, and the food in it, for want of the power to di gest, decomposes and acidifies, giving rise to heartburn, flatulence and pain, besides a multi tude of symptoms both changeful and perplex ing. But peace soon reigns when the great sto machic is resorted to and used with persistence. Dyspepsia gives rise to morbid discomposure of mind, and even sleeplessness and hypochondria in chronic cases. To the complete dismissal of these the Bitters is fully adequate. Liver com plaint, constipation, debility, rheumatism and malaria are completely subdued by this genial medicine. . . Force of Habit. "How closely Bibbs' new wife pays attention to every word he ay." " Yes; :oroe of habit!" "Habit?" "Certainly; she was his typewriter." NO DEBT. It is not merely pain that people dread in sickness. 1 Many a man will bear the pain unflinchingly who utterly breaks down in view of the heavy expense in volved, often increased by his being inca- Eacitated for work and thus deprived of is income. To such persons AllvOCk's Porous Plas ters are an unspeakable boon. They are within the reach of every one. They are genuine, too. Notwithstanding the in numerable counterfeits and imitations it is always easy for anybody to make sure of getting the real thing at a low price. Any one .suffering from weakness of the chest, throat, stomach, kidneys, liver or from lame back will find them a cheap and sure remedy. i Bbandbbth's Pills are a good corrective. " Don't despise the little things," remarked the retired grocer. " Little drops of water and little grains of sand made a millionaire out of me." ' , , 1 Sufferers from coughs, sore throat, etc., should try "Broum't Bronchial Troches." ASTHMA CUBED By Schiffmann's Asthma Cure. No waiting for results. Its action is immediate, clrect and certain. A single trial convinces the most skep tical. Price, 60 cents and $1, o druggists or by mail. Trial packsge free by mail. Send your address to Dr. B. Schifimann,.St. Paul, Minn. A POTTER PRESS. Size. 33x48 fnside bearers ; table distribu tion; bed springs; will print nine-column folio or six-column quarto; a splendid all round press for country office; for sale cheap ; guaranteed in order. Address Palmes & Rky, Portland, Or. The tax of 2 cents a pack on playing cards Is a deuce of a tax. HOW'S THIS ! We offer One Hundred Dollars Eeward for any case of catarrh that oannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. - F. J. CHENEY & CO., Proprietors, Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che ney for the last fifteen years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. WEST & TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. 'WALDING, KINNAN & MAKV1N, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 76 cents per bottle. Bold by all druggists. Testimonials free. Lawyers are seldom poets, but they all write 'versus." ' WATER MOTOR. One Tuerk Water Motor, new, that will develop from 10 to 15-horse power; can be had at a sacrifice by addressing Palmes & Key, . . Portland, Or. Use Enameline Stove PollBh; no dust, no smell. Tbt Gebmea for breakfast. SViothers, When nursing babies, need a nourishment that will give them strength and make their milk rich. Scott's Emulsion The Cream of Cod-Liver Oil, nourishes mothers and makes babfes fat and healthy. Gives strength to growing children. Physicians, the world over, in dorse it. ; Don't be Deceived by Substitutes! Prepared by Soott & Bowne, N. Y. All druggists. This Trade Mark is on the best WATERPROOF COAT SSS55S? In the World! a. j. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS sr. ST. JACOBSOIL CURES . TERMANENTLY DROP "WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES." GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF The Past Guarantees The Future The fact that Hood's Sarsaparilla has cured thousands of others is certainly sufficient reason for be lief that it will cure you. It is the greatest blood purifier, the best nerve tonio, and quickest strength builder. Remember ; Hood's8,; Cures Hood's Sarsaparilla is sold by all druggists, 11; six for $5. Prepared by C. I. Hood & Co.. Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass. Hood's Cures Hood's Pills are a mild cathartic. Si.uuper .uoiue." One cent a dose. This Great Cough Curb promptly cure where all others fail. Coughs, Croup, Sore Throat, Hoarseness, Whooping Cough and Asthma. For Consumptien It nag no rival: has cured thousands, and will curb Ton if taken in time. Sold by Druggists on a guar antee. For a Lame Back or Chest, use BHILOH'S BELLADONNA PLASTER.260. CATARRH REMEDY, Havn vou Catarrh 1 This remedv is (ruaran. teed to cure you. Price, 60 eta. Injector free. in (?H P ffr EVERY OCCASION, QiOLBEP WEST 1MI1WS F2WBER Manufactured by CLOSSET fc DEVEKS, Port land, Oregon. The Portland Jeweler, Ta a roffiiln.1 nlri-tfma flroldsmith. TTe makes any style of jewelry one wants. Diffloult re pairing is nis noboy. SEEDS! TREES! Portland v Seed v. Co., 171 Second St., Portland, Or. . SEND FOR CATALOGUE. have: you GOT PILES ITCHING PIJiES known by molstni Ilka perspiration, oauae intense itching when warm. This form and Bloinx BiEBDIKG or PBOTBUDINO PIiE3 YIELD AT ONCE TO Dff. BO-SAN-KO'S PILE REMEDY, which acta directly on parts affected, Absorbs tumors, allays itching, effecting a permanent cure. Price 6O0. DrurffiBta ermAil Dr. Boaanko, Philadelphia, fa. YOU WANT THE BEST. ena ior our jniaiuj(ue ui J, I NCUBATORS. , Beat makes. Low prices. Easy pay- menu. Address w. v, ueacn, Kipon, California. PERMANENTLY CURED OB NO PAY. No PAY UNTIL CTRBn. We refer to 6,000 patients. No operation. No DETENTION FRO it BUSINESS. ,Wrlte or call for circular and bank reference. Examination Irii. TheO.E. MILLER CO., Marquam Building, PORTLAND, OREJON Incorpora'ed Capital and Surplus, 81,000 000. MASQUERADES, PARADES, IVI AMATEUR THEATKICAIiS. Everything in the above line. Costumes, Wigs, Beards, Properties, Opera and Play Books, etc, furnished at greatly reduced rates and in supe rior quality by the oldest, largest, best renowned and therefore only reliable Theatrical Supply Hwtse on the Pacific Coast. Correspondence so licited. Goldstein & Co., 26, 28 and 30 O'Farrell street, alBO 822 Market street, San Francisco. We supply all Theaters on the Coast, to whom we re spectfully refer. HERCULES SAS ENGINE. Run 'With Gai or Gasoline. Tour Wife can ran it. Requires no licensed engineer. Makes no smell or airt. No Batteries or Electric Spark. PALMER & RET, -San Francisco, Cal. Portland, Ob. BEATS STEAM FOWED N. P. N. TJ. No. 629 8. F. N. IT. No. 606 Y Rneumatism. IT IF YOUR BUSINESS DOES NOT PAY. Chickens are easily and successfully raised by using the Petaluma In cubators and Brooders. Our il lustrated catalogue tells all about it. rHJLOH'Sy A.Felileifiiifir IMRS. WINSLOW'S HV-Wi: FOR CHILDREN TEETHING , Fsr sale by all lrutrilu. 6 Cents a b.ttl. , 1 Don't buv any bHt the Petaluma if you want strong, vigorous chicks We are Pacific Coast Headquarters for Bone and Clover Cutters, Mark ers, Books, Caponising Tools, Fountains, Flood's Roup Cure, Morris Poultry Cure, Creosozone the great chicken-lice killer and every other article required by poultry raisers. See the machines in operation at our exhibit with the Nerwalk OBtrich Farm, Midwinter Fair, hatching ostriches and all kinds of rggs. Catalogue free: if you want it, write tons. PETALUMA INCUBATOR CO.. , 760 762 75 756 Main street, Petaluma, Cal. The sower has no second chance. If Ik vou would at first suc- ' ceed, oe sure and start with SEEDS. Ferrv's Seert Annual for 1804 contains the sum and substance, of the latest farming knowl edge. Kvery planter suouia nave it. sent, iree. P.M. Ferry &Co Detroit, Mien. DR. GUN.VS ONION SYRUP FOR COUGHS, COLDS AND CROUP. GRANDMOTHER'S ADVICE. In raising a family of Bins children, my only rem dy for Coughs, Golds and Croup waB onion syrup. IB Is Just as ffeotiva to-day aa it was forty years ago. Now my grandohildnm take Dr. Gunn'B Onion Syrup whioh ia already prepared and more pleasant to tna taste. Bold everywhere. Large bottles 60 oenM. Take no substitute for It. There's nothing as good. DOCTOR THE GREAT CURE ' FOR INDIGESTION AND CONSTIPATION. A- Regulator of the Liver and Kidneys A BPECIFIC FOR Scrofula, Rheumatism, Salt Rheum, Neuralgia And ill Other Blood and Skin Diseases. It is a positive cure lor all those painful, deli cate complaints and complicated troubles and weaknesses common among our wives, mothers and daughters. The effect is Immediate and lasting. Two or three doses of Da. Pardee's Remedy taken daily keeps the blood cool, the liver and kidneys act ive, and will entirely eradicate from the system all traces of Scrofula, Salt Rheum, or any other form of blood disease. No medicine ever introduced in this country has met with such ready .sale, nor given suck universal satisiaction whenever used as that ol Dr. Pardee's Remedy. This remedy has been used in the hospitals throughout the old world for the past twenty live years as a specific for the above diseases, and It has and will cure when all other so-called remedies fail. Send for pamphlet of testimonials from those who have been cured by its use. Druggists sell it at 11.00 per bottle. Try It and be convinced. For sale by MACK & CO., 9 and II Front St., San Francisco. Bladder, Urinary and Liver Diseases, Dropsy Gravel and Diabetes are cured by HUNT'S REMEDY THE BEST KIDNEY AND LIVER MEDICINE. HUNT'S REMEDY Cures Brlght's Disease, Retention or Non-retention of Urine, Fains In the Back, Loins or Side. HUNT'S REMEDY Cures Intemperance, Nervous Diseases, Genera Debility, Female Weakness and Excesses. HUNT'S REMEDY Cures Biliousness, Headache, Jaundice, Sou,r Stomach, Dyspepsia, Constipation and Piles. HUNT'S REMEDY ACTS AT ONCE! on the Kidneys, Mver and Bowels, restoring them to a healthy ac tion, and CUKES when all other medicines fail. Hundreds have been saved who have been given up to die by friends and physicians. - SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. RL00D POISON A SPECIALTY. Primary. Second nrv rif Tnrl.lnrv Syphilis permanently cured In 15 to 35 days. You can be treated at home for the same price and the same guarantee- with those who prefer to come here we will contract to cure them or refund money and pay expense of coming, railroad fare and hotel bills, if we fall to cure. If you have taken mer cury, Iodide potfuh, and stilf hare aches and pains. Mucous Xalchesiin mouth. Sore Throat Pimples Copper-Colored Spots, Ulcers on any part Of the body. Hair or Eyebrows full I no: out, it Is this Syphilitic BLOOB FOISOtf that we guarantee to cure. We solicit the most obstinate cases and challenge the world for n. case we cannot cure This disease baa always baffled the skill of the most eminent physi cians. $500,000 capital behind our uncondi tional (ruaran tee. Absolute proofs sent sealed on application. Address COOK. JCEMEDlf C O., 13X5 to 1831 Masonic Temple, Chicago, 111 Consumptives and pecDle who have weak lungs or Asth ma, should use PIso'b Cure for Consumption. It has eared thousands, ft has not injur ed uun i l in ii u L uau LU I IKU. It is tne Destoougn syrup. Bold everywhere. 3S5c Mm Mil IT