The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933, May 05, 1894, Image 4

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ROYAL Baking Powder is
reported by the U. S. Gov
ernment, after official tests,
highest of all in leavening
power. It is the best and
, most economical, and a pure
cream-tartar baking powder.
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LINES TO A CYNIC.
H dally trod the ways of busy men,
Silent, serene; and In the city's mart
lliey often marked his placid features, when
They could not read the anguish in his
heart.
Inscrutable, and grave of mien, to all
Gave ' trie he Beemed a man of marble
wrought,
But I, I knew his calm was but a pall"
Wherewith to shroud the skeleton of
. thought.
Was not his secret writ upon his brow,
Jn one sharp symbol, pitifully plain?
That furrow was not turned by Time's dull
plow. ..(. , '
Rather a sword cut dealt by deathless pain.
Ho daily paced the city's populous ways,
But through his heart a sad and hopeless
. song . ,
Went ever singing, and his patient gaze
Was fixed on something fur beyond the
throng.
University Courier.
BICYCLES. '
Swift, Light, Strong,
' Reliable and Beau
tiful. A live agent wanted In
every city and town in Ore
gon, Washington and Idaho.
Bend for catalogue and
terms. .. ; .
FRED T. MERRILL CYCLE GO.,
387 Washington St., Portland, Or.
YOUR SAFETY
Lies in purchasing reputable brand ef
Be ting and Hose. If you want the kett
. and full valuefor money, ask yourdealier
for Maltese Cross and hed Sirip Bellfme
and Maltese CrosB, Ridgswoed and ViaJ
lubout Hose. You can rely on tbese:
brands. ' Every length guaranteed.
Gutta Percha and Rubber Mfg. Co.,
Established 1855.
Portland, Or.
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR
WHEELER'S CARBON BISULPHIDE,
FOR EXTERMINATING
Ground Squirrels and Cophers.
F. a. cook & CO., ,',
Sole Agents, - ' - Portland, Or.
ira, WEARY WIFE
Never has trouble with bread made with
Golden Vest BakingPowdei"
It is absolutely pure. CLOSSET & DEVERS, the
makers, Portland, Or., guarantee every can.
TAKE IT
rW.PrUNlDER'S.
Oregon Blood Purifier.
IBIFIER
-CURES-
3PEPSIA. jA
UStASESy 1
ESSr I
L.KIDNEY OLIVER DISEASES. DYSPEPSIA.
.PIMPLES. BLOTCHES AND SKIN UlStAStSi.
JHEADACHE COSTIVENESS.
Taste
has lost lives. In former
years people wouldn't take
Cod-liver Oil on account of
Its bad taste. Now we have
Scott's
Emulsion
the Cream of Cod-liver Oil,
which is palatable and easier
. on the digestive organs than
plain oil, besides being more
effective. Physicians, the world
over,' endorse it.
. - Don't be deceived by Substitutes!
ProparedhySoott A BorfM, N. Y. All Draggiit.
CURES
.SCROFULA
Mrs. E. J. Kowell, Medford, Mass., says her
mother hat been cured of Scrofula by the use
of four bottles of (KSraCl after having had
much other treat- ment, and being
reduced to quite a low condition of health, as It
was thought she could not live.
I Cured my little boy of heredi
tary scrofula xA whichap-
peared all over his jYi For
a year I had -Sefl, given up all nope
of his xrvX5'5Tecovery, wnen flnallT
I was Vsjy.' Induced to use
Afewbo rttles cured him, and no
symptoms of the disease remain.
Mbs, T. L. Mathbbs, Mathervllle, Jllss.
- Our book on Blood and Skin Disease, mailed free.
Swift Sfscific Co., Atlanta, Ca
rl. P. W. TT. No. 642 -S. F. N. U. No. 619
Rambler
Printed
man Ink.
Agents.
with Jaenecke-Ull-PALMER
& REY,
5?
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.
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JOE JEFFERSON'S SUMMER HOME.
A New and Fireproof "Crow's Nest" at
, Busnrd't Bay,
The new summer home which Joseph
Jefferson has erected on his Crow's Nest es
tate at Buzzard's Bay is as near fireproof
as possible. The old Crow's Nest was
burned down a year ago, entailing; a loss of
$300,000 quite sufficient to give a man of
ordinary good sense a wholesome dread of
fire and Mr. Jefferson concluded he would
run as little risk as possible In rebuilding.
So the new house was built after his own
plans and every possible precaution taken
afrainst another conflagration.
, The architecture of the structure is of a
composite style which is difficult to clas
sify, but it is .handsome and substantial
beyond the generality of summer resi
dences. It is situated on the high bluff
overlooking the waters of Buttermilk bay
and commands an expansive view of the
bay and the surrounding hills of the pictur
esque country. The foundation and first
story are of rubble and the second story
and gables of brick. : The roof is of copper
in imitation of Spanish tile, and there is but
one other like it in the eastern states.
While the bricklayers were at work on
the tower, which is at the northwest end of
the building, one of them arranged the
bricks so that the word "Rip" stood out in
bold relief. Mr. Jefferson noticed it when
THE NEW CEOW'S NEST.'
passing a few days later and dryly remark
ed that in future the bricklayers need not
pay attention to relief work without orders.
The word still remains on the tower. --,
The arrangement, finishing and decora
tion of the interior leave nothing to be de
sired in the way of comfort, utility or
beauty. The.house is lighted by electricity,
and there are electric bells and speaking
tubes in-every room. The woodwork of the
rooms in the first story is of oak. The
other stories are finished in white pine. Mr.
Jefferson has not forgotten to provide, a
studio, where he can indulge in his favorite
pastime of painting. It is on the top floor
and has a large oval window, with a splen
did north light. There is a door from the
studio into the lookout of the tower.
A little distance south of the house is an
attractive structure designed by Mr. Jeffer
son for an engine room and dynamo sta
tion. Wires leading from it supply the
house with light and also connect with the
cottages of his sons, who are his nearest
neighbors. Gray Gables, the summer home
of President Cleveland," is not far away,
and the .great 'actor is a frequent and wel
come visitor there. ;
Pattl Has S3 75,000 Worth of Diamonds.
Adelina Patti's diamonds have been
valued at $375,000. The Empress Eugenie
gave Patti as a wedding present when she
married the Marquis de Caux a comb set
with twenty-three diamonds. A gift from
Queen Victoria was a superb diamond
locket. .
Baroness Burdett-Couts once gave the
songstress an enormous diamond set in a
ring. The diva's wonderful set of sapphires
was sold when she was obliged by French
law to divide her fortune with her first
husband.
The emperor of Russia was the giver to
the prima donna of a. pair of large dia
monds mounted as earrings. Emperor
William of Germany gave her a splendid
diamond brooch, and the emperor of Aus
tria a bracelet of diamonds. Patti possesses
twenty-three diamond bracelets, and has a
necklace of very large and fine emeralds.
Her turquoise jewelery set with diamonds
includes four pins, two bracelets, earrings
and a handsome pendant. Jewelers'
Weekly. ;
A Story of Italy's Queen.
The favorite governess of the queen of
Italy when she was a child was Mile. Rosa
Aberser, who was a girl of twenty-two
when the ten-year-old princess of Savoy
beeame her pupil.- The two became very
much attached to each other, for the Vien
nese teacher's yoke was easy, and her in
struction was pleasantly imparted. The
princess at that time received a small
amount of pocket money every month.
The governess at one time noticed her
pupil had spent nothing of it for several
months, and when asked what she in
tended doing with it gave an evasive an
swer. At the end of the fourth month,
however, Princess Margaret of Savoy pre
sented ber governess with her initials in
diamonds. Revue de Famille.
One Way of Making Piecrust Flaky.
To make piecrust flaky spread the crust
when rolled out for the top of the pie
with a thin layer of butter. Dredge with
flour and cover your pie with the crust as
usual. When ready for the oven tip the
pie slanting, holding it in the left hand,
and pour pver the pie a glass of cold water
to rinse off the flour. Enough of the lat
ter will stick to the butter to fry into the
crust while baking and make it flaky.
Exchange.
Onion Notes.
Onions are improved by soaking in warm
salt water an hour or so before cooking, as
this removes some of the rank flavor.
They cook tender much quicker if sliced
in rings instead of splitting. If they are
peeled and sliced with hands under water
some "idle tears" may be avoided. Ex
change. , j .
Many persons buy material for their own
tray cloths, have them stumped at some art
establishment, then embroider them them
COMES OF FIGHTING STOCK.
General Mlhps, . the Greatest of Indian
Fighters, Inherits His Military Ardor.
Major General Nelson A. Miles, who will
succeed to the command of the military di
vision of the Atlantic on the retirement of
General Howard during the present year,
seems to have been born for a military ca
reer. He is not a West Pointer, as every
body knows who knows anything about
army matters, but achieved his military
reputation "even at the cannon's mouth,"
in actual service on the field of battle dur
ing the civil war and in suppressing vari
ous Indian rebellions in the great west. He
Is unquestionably the greatest of Indian
fighters. His career in this regard makes a
Iplendid argument in favor of atavism, for
Ms earliest ancestor in America, Rev. John
Miles, a Welsh minister who came to Mas
sachusetts in 1643, left the pulpit to lead a
company of colonists in the bloody King
Philip's war. ' ,, . -i
Later on another Miles fought through
the Revolution from Bennington to York
town and took an active part in the war of
GENERAL NELSON A. MILES. .
1813. From Plymouth Rock to Pine Ridge
the Miles family seems to have been of con
siderable service to the nation, and as to
the subsequent extraordinary usefulness of
its present leading representative the whole
American people are amply prepared to
testify. , ' ,
When the war broke out, Nelson A. Miles
was in business in Boston. He entered the
army as lieutenant of a company of Massa
chusetts volunteers in 1861, being then 81
years of age. Five years later he was mus
tered out as a major general of volunteers,
the youngest soldier of that rank" who came
out of the war. He was at once appointed
a colonel in the regular army and served in
North Carolina throughout .the "recon
struction" period.
Then he was ordered west to look after
the restless red savages of the plains. The
Cheyennesand the Arapahoes in 1870 were
first to get a taste of his quality. Next he
Inflicted exemplary punishment on the Kio
was, Comanches and Cheyennes in south
ern Kansas. After the Custer massacre he
went up to the Yellowstone region and
wiped out Sitting Bull's band, and next he
performed the same kindly duty for the
wily Chief Joseph and his Nez Perces. Ev
erybody remembers how he cooped up Ge
ronimo and his Apaches, leading his troops
for weeks over mountains'and across sandy
wastes. Under a broiling sun, clad in noth
ing but their underclothes. f
One of his western veterans said of him:
"He never asked us to go anywhere he
wouldn't go himself, and we'd have follow
ed him through hell. We did, pretty near,
I'm tbinkin, when we were after old Gero
nimo." . . . - .. ,
A Boy with a Heart.
First Little Chap Sacksey Swipes, he's
th' right sort of a boy. He's got a heart
in 'im. -. . .
'" Second Little Chap Wot did he do?:
.."Ye know his brudder got killed by a
explosion last Fourt'." .
"Yep. Too much powder in der lead
pipe."
"Well, that little brudder had four
packs o' firecrackers wot he didn't have
time to shoot off, an Sacksey never
touched 'em.". ' );
"Didn't?" , -""Nary
one. He saved 'em till this
Fourt'. Sacksey wasn't around this
Fourt'. D'ye know where he was?"
'Nope." .
"He was off to der cemetery shootin
off them firecrackers over his little brud
der's grave." Good News.
A Borden Elected Sumner.
The name Borden, which has come so
sadly into notice in connection with the
late Fall River murder, is one that has
long been prominent in Fall River. It
once furnished a Massachusetts member
of congress in N. B. Borden, and a rep
resentative in the state legislature from
that town bearing it was the member
who gave the vote .that first elected
Charles! Sumner to the United States
senate after the many weeks of that cel
ebrated controversy. He was the onjy
Whig who voted for Mr. Sumner, and
his defection from the Whig: party in
sured Mr. Sumner's success. Boston
Herald. '
YOUR GOOD HEALTH,
ii you're a sunenng wo
man, demands Doctor
Pierce's Favorite Pre
scription. There's no
other medicine like it,
for women's peculiar
ills. No matter how
distressing your symp
toms, it relieves your
aches and pains, .and
if faithfully used will
bring a permanent
cure in every chronio
weakness or , derangtt.
ment, in catarrhal inflammation, and in the
displacements of women. Lfhert i Q
Dr. R. V. Pierce: Dear Sir I can cheer
fully recommend your valuable medicine, the
"Favorite Prescription," to suffering- females.
Three years ago my health beenme so poor
that I was scarcely able to help with the house
hold duties. I was persuaded to try your
medicine, and I purchased six bottles. That,
with the local treatment you advised, made
me strong and well.
My sister has used it in the famllv with lifca
It is sold on a guarantee by ail drug-
cista. It cures Inoipient consumption
2nd Is th bast Cough and Group Cur
. An Industry of I lie Future.. .
The banana is one of thd most valu
able food products of the earth. No
other vegetable compares with it in pro
ductiveness, as Humboldt pointed out,
and none other is as rich in pure food
constituents. '. Yet it is in one sense al
most a neglected product. Bananas are
eaten as fruit more and more" every
year, but until now hardly anything has
been attempted in the way of making a
staple meal from them, although banana
meal was known as long ago as the time
of the Monteztimas.
- It has been supposed that this meal
could not be made in a manner to keep,
but recent experiments have proved
that it may.
Several governments notably those
of England, Germany and the United
States have now become interested in
the question, and it is altogether likely
that within a few months the manufac
ture of banana meal will be an estab
lished industry in various parts of the
world. New York World. ,
Over a Hundred Stone Knives. .
While plowing a field on Jesse Doan's
farm, in Buckingham township, near
Furlong, one day recently, Frank Doan
struck a curiously shaped flint stone of
a kind not found in that vicinity. It
was about 5 inches long by inches
wide in the center, with the edges sharp
but irregular. Convinced that it was
an implement left by former' Indian
residents of that neighborhood; it hav
ing been found on the site of a wood
near a chestnut tree that is said to be
over 200 years old, Mr. Doan concluded
to investigate further. He dug down
several feet, and was rewarded by find
ing 110 stones of the same shape and
kind, which tho3e learned in the ways
of the aborigines say are "skinning
knives." Doylestown (Pa. )Intelligencer.
The Summer Umbrella.
The rise of the sun umbrella is mani
fest these insufferably hot days. Per
haps it would be more strictly accurate
if it were designated the rise of the
summer umbrella, for the most practi
cal article of that description is one
equally adaptable to sun or rain. It has
a light stick handle, and is in a shade of
light blue or dark green for this in a
summer when it rains as unexpectedly
as the sun shines fiercely. There is no
adjunct of later day costume that is a
greater boon than the summer um
brella. W. A. Clarke in Clothier and
Furnisher.
. Stanley's Stepfather lu Homestead.
Watkiu James, the aged stepfather of
explorer Henry M. Stanley, is one of the
strikers at Homestead. , Mr. James is
a Welshman, and married Stanley's
mother some years after the African
hero was born. He is a gray haired man
of about seventy years of age, and speaks
English with a strong Cambrian accent.
Stanley's mother, who was Mr. James'
first wife, died many years ago, and the
old mill worker has since twice mar
ried. Pittsburg Dispatch.
-.: 1 A Miscalculation.
When the crew started to string the
cables for the suspension bridge to
Topsham, it was discovered that they
were seventy-eight feet too short, neces
sitating ordering new cables, thus de
laying the work. Brunswick (Me.) Tele
graph. .
Nearly 60,000 veterans have indicated
their intention to attend the national en
campment of the Grand Army of the
Republic in Washington in September.
. '" ' .
THE COMPLEXION OF A CHINESE
Is not yellower than that of an unfortunate in
dividual whose liver eomplaint has asmimed the
chronic form. The eyeballs of the sufferer as
sume a saffron hue, there is dull pain in the re-
gion of the organ affected, the tongue is coated,
reath sour, sick headaches usua ly hut not al
ways occur, and there is sometimes dizziness on
arising from a sitting posture. Constipation
and dyspepsia are also attendants of this very
common ailment, always in its aggravated form,
liable to breed abscesses of the liver, which are
very dangerous. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters
wholly eradicates it, as well as the troubles
complicated with it and which it originates.
In chi Is and fever, a complaint which always
yields to the Bitters, the liver is seriously in
volved. This fine alterative tonio removes cos
tiveneBs and indigestion, rheumatic, nervous
and kidney trouble and debility.
The soda-water fountain and the pink-shirt
habit are again dimly discernible as features of
life in the immediate future.
ST. JACOBS OIL
cures . . .
PERMANENTLY
DROP
Don't buy any but the
"A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR
GAIN." MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES
SAPOLIO
Hay Forks, Rakes. Scythes,
289 WASHINGTON ST., PORTLAND, OREGON.
Cut this advertisement out, and
Printed wih Jaenecke-Ull-
man Ink. PALMER & EEY,
Agents.
TU.K GENUINE AND THE SHAM.
Every good thing has i,ts host of imitat
ors; every genuine article its counterfeits.
The imitators always choose the most val
uable and popular article to counterfeit, so
that when they 'claim their sham to be
equal, or as good, or the same as " So-and-so's,"
the publio may depend upon it that
" So-and-so's " article is the best of the
kind. '
Allcock's Pobous Plaster is the stand
ard of excellence the world over, and imi
tators in their cry that theirs is "as good
as Allcock's " are only emphasizing this
fact and admitting "Allcock's" to be the
acme of perfection, which it is their high
est ambition to imitate. The difference be
tween the genuine and these imitations is
as wide as that between copper and gold.
The only safe way for purchasers is to
always insist upon having Allcock's Pob
ous Plaster. It is the only perfect plaster
ever produced.
Brandrkth's Pills stimulate the liver.
He And what would you do if I kissed you?
She (wilh dignity) I'd call mamma. (After a
pause.) But mamma's out this evening.
Coughs and Hoarseness. The irritation
which induces coughing is immediately
relieved by "Brown's .bronchial Troches."
Sold only in boxes. '
Mr. H. Congratulations, old f :llow; boy or
girl? Mr. B. (horrowfully) Both! .
BEWARE OF OINTMENTS FOB CA
TARRH THAT CONTAIN MERCURY,
As mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely derange the wholeystem
when entering it through the mucous surfaces.
Such articles should never be used except on
prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the
damage they will do is tenfold to tae good you
can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh
Cure manufactured by F. 3'. Cheney & Co., To
ledo, 0.,contuinsno mercury, and is taken inter
nally, acting dectly upon the blood and mu
cous surfaces of the system. In buying Hall's
Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine It
is taken internally and made in Toledo, Ohio,
by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
fSold by druggists! price, 75 cents per
bottle. . ' i:
' Guard yourself for summer malaria, tired
feeling, by using now Oregon Blood Purifier.
Use Enamellne Stove Polish: no dust no smell.
Try Germka for breakfast.
OI?l$ ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs ia taken; it ia pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
fently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
aver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
tem effectually, dispels colds, head
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its,
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c
and $1 bottles by all leading drug
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it Do not accept any
substitute. ,
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
IOUISVILU, KY. NEW YORK, N.Y.
INSIST
ON
HAVING
THE
Belting, Packing and Hose, Boots and
Shoes, Rubber and Oil Clothing,
Druggists' Rubber Goods,
' MANUFACTURED by '
Goodyear Robber Co.,
73 and 75 First St., Portland, Or.
1 Write for catalogue free.
ism.
IT
IF YOUK BUSINESS DOES NOT PAY.
Chickens are easily and successfully
raised by using the Petaluma In
cubators and Brooders. Our il
lustrated catalogue tells all ahnnr It..
Petaluma if you want strong, vigorous chicks
Rneumat
ers, Books, Caponizing Tools, Fountains, Flood's Roup Cure, korris
Poultry Cure, Creosozone the great chicken-lice killer and every other
wuwo icuuubu uy yuuLiry rtuanrs. oee uie macmnes in operauon al
ur exhibit with the Norwalk Ostrich Farm, Midwinter Fair, hatching
ostriches and all kinds of eggs. Catalogue free; if you want It, write
tons. - PETALUMA INCUBATOR CO.,
760 762-764 756 Main street, Petaluma, Cal.
GALVANIZED &
WIRE NETTING,
24, 30, 36, 48 and 7 Inches Wide,
1 CENT SQUARE FOOL
O. B.STUBBS,
send it when you write.
i" FOR CHILDREN TEETHINO -i
For sale by all Urunlnts. tt6 Oeats a battt.
Mrs. A. C. Medloch
Orleans, Inl.
Good Reason for Faith
Cured of Scrofula by Hood's
Bcrofula permeates humanity. It is thoroughly
infused into the blood. Scarcely a man is
free from It, in one form or another. Hood's
' Barsaparilla cures scrofula promptly, surely,
permanently. Thousands of people say so.
Tor Instance, read th's: '
"I am Justified In thinking Hood's Barsaparilla
a splendid medicine by own experience with
it. I Was a great sufferer from scrofula, hav
ing dreadful sores in my ears and on my
head, sometimes like large boils, discharging
all the time. My husband insisted that I
take Hood's Barsaparilla. 0 the first bottle
My App3tlte Improved, ''
and I ielt'somewhat better. Bo I bought another
bottle, and by the time it was half gone the
scrofula had entirely disappeared. I am
Hood'ssPwCures
now entirely free from scrofula and was
never in better health. Hood s Barsaparilla
: also cured me of a terrible pain in my side,
caused by neuralgia of the neaiV Mas. A.
i C. Mkdlock, Orleans, Indiauai '
Hood's Pills cure liver ills, constipation,
biliousness, jaundice, sick headacne,indigt;stion.
Free by Rflail
On receipt of Onk Dollab
A Whole Garden.
.Let us mail you our Illustrated Catalogue which
will lell you all about It. Sunset Seed hihI Plant
Ou. (Sherwood Hall Nursery Co.), 427-9 Hansome
Street, San Francisco, selected Seeds a specialty
W. I.. dottgTj a s tan fiTtmn
equals custom work, costing- from
g4 10 o, dccc value lor trie money
stamped on the bottom. Every
pair warranted. Takenosubsti-
bee local papers for full
jscriptionof ourcompleto
lines for ladies and gen-
l-TtjsTr x1""0" or scna lor it
USJnstrated Catalogue
givmK 111.
structions
how to or.
der by mail. Postage free. You enn get the best
bargains of dealers who push our shoes. .
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 Bright'! 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, Sour
Stomach, Dyspepsia, Constipation and Piles.
HUNT'S REMEDY
ACTS AT ONCE! on the Kidneys, l,lTr
and Bowels, restoring them to a healthy ac
tion, and CIIKK8 when all other medicines
fail. Hundreds have been saved who have been
given p to die by friends and physicians.
80JLD BIT AliJL I)RUIST8.
DOCTOR
THE GREAT CURE
FOR
INDIGESTION
. AND : ...
CONSTIPATION.
A-
Regulator of the Liver and Kidnsys
It is a positive cure lor all those nalnfnl. deri.
cate complaints and complicated troubles and
weaknesses common among our wives, mothers
and daughters.
The effect 1b immediate and lasting. Two or
three doses of Dr. Pardee's Remedy taken daily
keeps the blood cool, the liver and kidneys act
ive, and will entirelv eradicate frnra thn svHtum
all traces of Bcrofula, Salt Rheum, or any other
form of blood disease.
No medicine ever Introduced In this country
has met with such ready sale, nor given such
universal satisfaction whenever used as that of
Dr. Pardee's Kemedy.
This remedy has been used in the hospitals
throughout the old world for the nast twent.v.
live years as a specific for the above diseases,
and It has and will cure when all other so-called
remedies fail.
Send for Damnhlet of testimonials from thosA
Who have been cured by its use. Druggists sells
ii ai si.uu per oottie. Try it and be convinced.
For sale by
MACK & CO..
9 and II Front St., San Francisco,.
lilllihS WHtKF ALL F1KF FflllS.
voiiKn eyrup. Tastes uooo. use
in lima sold by druggists.
MfSBlT
1-24
tJseil! -