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About The Hood River glacier. (Hood River, Or.) 1889-1933 | View Entire Issue (June 9, 1894)
Take no Substitute for Royal Baking: Powder. It is Absolutely Pure. All others contain alum or ammonia. i " The Boundaries of Oxford. The custom, which is only observed at rare intervals, of perambulating the boundaries of the city of Oxford, Eng land, was followed this year, and was of more than usual importance owing to the fact that the boundaries had been largely extended since the last occasion, when a tour was" made six years ago. The mayor and other members of the corporation in their robes left the city buildings at 8 o'clock in the morning, preceded by a band and the city mace bearers. ' During the day many amusing inci dents took place, some of which might have proved dangerous. At Wolvercote there was a dispute about the boundary, and a clergyman who opposed the city forces was somewhat roughly handled. At the Cherwell punts were used, and the one containing the mayor, the sheriff and several members of the corporation and the mace bearer, with the mace, was upset in the middle uf the stream. London Letter. ' Profit of 81,425 from Eight Aore. J. O. Russell, who owns a large tract of land about two" and one-half miles north of Traver, has nearly completed harvesting his peach and nectarine crop from eight acres on his ranch. There are about five acres of peaches and three of nectarines. From the peaches he has now harvested 13,000 pounds of dried peaches, which, at thirteen cents a pound, the price now quoted, would net him $1,690. It will cost him $365 to harvest this crop and market it, which will leave him a net profit of $1,425, or $385 per acre. The nectarine crop has done nearly as well, the difference being only in the price of the two fruits. Mr. Russell has hired all his work done, and therefore the expense account is correct and covers everything. Fresno (Cal.) Advance. eakness may be inherited, or it may result from neglect and Care lessness. Thin, weak, " run down " persons need ' Scott's Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver Oil and the most nourishing food known to science. It is palatable and more effective than plain oil. Physicians, the world over, endorse it. . Don't be deceived by Substitutes! Prepared brSoott 4 Bonne, N.Y. All Druggists. Rambler BICYCLES. Swift, Light, Strong, Keliable and Beau tiful. A live agent wanted In every oity and town In Ore- g on, Washington and Idaho, end for oatalogue and terms. FRED T. MERRILL CYCLE CO., 327 Washington St., Portland, Or. ELY'S CREAM BALM la quickly absorbed. Cleanses the Nasal Passages. Allay Fain and Inflammation. Heals the Sores. Protects the Membrane from Additional Cold. liestores the Senses of Taste and Smell. IT WILL CURE. COLD 'N HEAD A particle is applied into each nostril, and is agreeable. Price 60 cents at Druggists or by mail. ELY BROTHERS, 66 Warren street, New York. YOUR SAFETY ; Lies in pui chasing reputable brands of Belting and Hose. II you want the best and full value for monev.ask your dealer for MONARCH and RED STRIP Belting and Maltese Cross, Ridgewoed and Wal labout Hose. You cun rely on these brands. Every length guaranteed. Gutta Percba and Rubber Mfg. Co., Established 1855. Portland, Or. II you are going to have a party, be sure to make the cake with TAKE IT W. PrUNlDER'S. Oregon Blood Purifier. CURES IkKIDNEY LIVER DISEASES. DYSPEPSIA. . PIMPLES.B10TCHE5 AND SKIN UHitAStS JHCAOACHE' C0STIVCNCSS :atarrh WEiT Baking Powder. A 1 Humors of the Cholera Scare. Every serious crisis lias its amusiug side. The cholera phase through which we have been passing has developed some ludicrous situations. A woman got in a Brooklyn street car one day last week and sat down next to a well dressed man. He smelled so of carbolic acid that she hurriedly exchanged her place for one opposite between a man and a woman. One of them, it could not be determined which, was redolent of chloride of lime, the fumes of which are peculiarly sickening to the woman in question. Out of the frying pan into lire, she thought, and before she made a third move she decided to select her neighbor with care. ' A small boy sat in a corner. He was safe, she concluded, and, braving the surprise of the passengers, who could not understand her restlessness, she once more changed her place. A wave v of camphor assailed her nostrils as she seated herself beside the child, but this was endurable, and she kept still. Pretty soon a woman opposite leaned over to the boy. "Clarence," she said, "have you got your bag on?" "Yes'm," he replied, and fumbling at his jacket produced a small flannel bag tied by a cord about his neck. It was filled with the camphor that was scenting the neighborhood, and the mother, satis fied, told him to replace it. She evi dently felt that her son's safety was 'as sured and did not realize that the strong drug thus absorbed by the pores of the skin weakens the system, to a degree that renders it the more liable to infec tion. Camphor, chloride of lime and carbolic acid in one car full of passen gers may be taken as a pungent com ment on the prevalence of the cholera scare. Her Point of View in New York Times. The Serpentine Dance of Old Nile. A learned correspondent writes as follows concerning the new dance: "Numerous young ladies and gentle men are claiming the honor of invent ing or first introducing it. They forget that it is only a development of Pharaoh's favorite 'bee dance,' still to be met with on the banks of the Nile. It was brought into prominence about thirty-five years ago by Donato, the one legged dancer at Covent Garden thea ter. The dance wants figure and per sonal beauty first, and arms rather than legs afterward. The exertion of work ing the eighty yards of china silk into graceful folds is about equal to the muscular exercise involved in a per formance with the Indian clubs, and the foot dancing is necessarily confined to a small space, for fear of entanglement. The serpentine dance would probably be classed as Spanish." My correspondent may be right enough as to the date to which the dance goes back. I am no Egyptologist. But he is in error as to the date of Donato, the one legged dancer, who must have ap peared nearer five and twenty years ago than five and thirty. Time goes quickly enough, to be sure, but, speaking from memory, I should have said that Donato was in a Covent Garden pantomime somewhere well down the sixties. Lon don Truth. The Englue Refused to Ittove. Richard Van Horn, of Jackson, Mich., one of the oldest engineers on the Michi gan Central railroad, died lately, and his body was taken to his former home at Marshall, Mich. , It was his last wish to be buried there, and that his old en gine, "Nine Spot," pull the train. A special train was furnished by the com pany to take a number of his friends and companions to the scene' of the burial, and was pulled by old "Nine Spot." As the word was given to start the train the engine would not move. The en gineer reversed the lever and threw her back, but she would not budge an inch. After examining the machinery for some time the engineer found nothing whatever the matter. Then the, old, seemingly heartbroken machine steamed away. The acts of "Nine Spot" caused much comment among railroad men, and the engineer himself is' just a little afraid of her. Philadelphia Ledger. A Mighty Audience. The decision made by the World's fair authorities to provide seats for 125,000 people in the colossal Manu factures building during the dedicatory exercises will awaken some more people to an apprciation of the surprising pro portions of this enterprise. One hundred and twenty-five thousand! The popula tion of a big city might sit down to gether in this auditorium. Half a dozen Illinois cities might attend, or the peo ple of 100 respectable villages could be assembled in it. The auditorium will be twenty-five times as large as the largest now in the city, and fifty or sixty times that of the average Chicago theater. Like several other things which are to appear at Jackson park, it will open some people's eyes to the vastness of the scale on which modern celebrations can be conducted. Chicago News. How to Eat an Orange. It is considered a very healthful thing to eat an orange before breakfast. But who can eat an orange well? One must goto Spain to see that done. The senorita cuts off the rind with her silver knife; then putting her fork into the peeled fruit she detaches every morsel with her pearly teeth and continues to eat the orange with out losing a drop of the juice, and lays down the core with the fork still in it. Mrs. Sherwood's "Art of Entertaining." The Leopard Called For a Drink ' and Got It. HUNTING ADYEXTURES O INDIA. The Leopards Are Sometimes a Little Too Neighborly to Suit English Ideas of Eti quette, but They Seldom Attack Human Beings A Courageous Woman. Many people spend a great part of their lives in India without seeing anything of the wild beasts and snakes with which it abounds. My experience was very differ ent, says a writer in Chambers' Journal. I passed only a few years in the country, but I happened to come frequently in contact with its savage denizens, and among other adventures I had several opportunities of viewing leopards in their wild stato. Wo took a houso near Dalhousie, and I was somewhat dismayed on arrival to find how lonely and exposed the situation was. However, the magnificent view from the veranda consoled me, and I quickly set to work to make the bare rooms as habitable as possible. "I fear few of our friends will take the trouble to mount up to this eyrie to visit us," I lamented. But the very next evening we were to have a vis itor we little desired. In an Indian bungalow every bedroom has a small anteroom attached, in which the important function of bathing is per formed. The floor is of cement and un carpeted, to allow of splashing, and around the tub are placed the ghurras, or earthen pots of water, which are required for the bath. The little room has always two doors, one opening on the outer hall, to admit the bheesti, with his supply of wa ter, the other, opening into the bedroom. On the evening in question, just as dusk was falling, I had finished the unpacking THE LADY AND THE LEOPARD, of a box in my bedroom and was moving away, when I fancied I heard a slight sound in the bathroom. I opened the door, and to my horror saw just in front of me the beautiful sleek back of a largo leopard, which was crouching on the floor and drinking out of one of the ghurras. The room was so small that I found myself quite close to the leopard and could in deed have touched the spots on its glossy coat from where I stood. I was too fright ened to move and stood perfectly still; and fortunately for me the outer door by which the creature had entered still stood wido open, and with a single bound it cleared the threshold and disappeared up the hillside. Had the door blown to or been closed from tho outside by a servant, the animal would have had no resource but to seek an exit by the doorway in which I was standing, and the knowledge of my narrow escape made us vory careful ever after about shutting up early in the afternoon. ' ' A few nights later we were awakened by hearing the watchman call out loudly that there was a leopard in the veranda, and we ran to the window in time to see the waving of the branches where the beast had sprung out among the trees. The bearer, who was lying rolled up in his blankets In the same veranda, slept sound ly on meanwhile, unconscious of his prox imity to the stealthy footed creature. These leopards are cowardly creatures and will never attack a human being if they can avoid it. Their special fancy is for little dogs, and they will so haunt the neighborhood of any house where dogs are kept that the greatest care is necessary to prevent the little quadrupeds falling vic tims to the big ones. ' Often in the month of October, when coming home late at night, I have heard the hoarse sort of purring noise they make as they rub their sides, like huge cats, against the trunks of trees. Tho men car rying my dandl (light palanquin) would then step out and talk very loud to keep up their courage, while the mate would flourish his lantern and shout. No leopard would come near so noisy a party, and the only danger on such occasions is of the men taking a panic and dropping the dan di, when the situation would be awkward. This, however, never happened to me, and I was equally fortunate when riding. One evening we were riding quietly home in the short gloaming when a large animal jumped from tho jungle above into the road close in front of us. It ran swift ly along tho road for a short distance and then disappeared. My companion advised that we should hurry a little, as our horses seemed uneasy, so we trotted on, and, when we came to the spot where we had lost sight of the leopard, there it was lying on the outer edge of the narrow mountain road, its eyes blazing like green lamps in the dusk and its body half hidden in the grass and shrubs. I was mounted on a small pony and could not help fearing the wild beast might spring upon us as we had to pass so close to it, but it lay quite still. When we had passed it, I looked anxiously round and saw it rise and walk off calmly Into the underwood. . My com panion assured me the real danger was not from any onslaught on the part of the leop ard, but lest bur horses should take fright and bolt with us along the narrow path in the uncertain light. Shooting parties were frequently organ ized, but they were not often successful, owing to the dense jungle that covered the slopes and the Impossibility of following the quarry even when sighted. The best chance was for a solitary sportsman to spend a night in a tree, but the leopards, though so bold in seeking their prey under safe circumstances, were extremely cau tious when danger was at hand and would generally leave the bait untouched near which their unseen enemy lurked. Traps, too, were placed on a low spur toward' Bukloh, which they were known to fre quent, but very few were caught that year. Fined For Kissing His Wife. An old law of Paris forbids kissing in publlo places. A cabman who saw his wife only once a week gave her his weekly kiss in front of a restaurant the other day. Both were arrested. The cabman was fined $5. He gallantly paid the fine, remark ing that the kiss was worth it Qneen Isabella's Dream. fFrom the Catalan of Verdagner.t Girded I sat with garden green Nigh famed Alliainbra'a fairy towers. That lately held the lingarene, . But now, my Ferdinand. are ours. Broidering a robe I seemed to sit ' " Where bright a silvery fountain stirred. And where a branch enshadowed it I marked the flutter of a bird. . He flitted downward to my feet. And oped his beak and sang to me. And soothing was his song and sweet As honey of the rosemary. Then softly from my drooping hand He drew the jewel of my heart. Pledge of the troth of Ferdinand And marvel of Granada's art. O carol blithe In dale and dell. And lilt where'er thy heart is fain. But to the hand of Isabel Restore the jewel thou hast ta'en. Into the deep of heaven he flics. And with his flight my heart takeB wing; Flashing thy fires from azure skies, . How brilliant didst thou seem, my ring! While land endured, by dell and steep I tracked the fleeting, air borne prey. But sadly sat me down to weep Where ocean's billow barred my way. And straiod my vision where afar Melted the splendor fugitive. Like the last glitter of the star That mora proclaims, nor may outlive. Far where the western waters surged The bright thing sank, and out of them, O miracle! like sylphs emerged An isle for every vanished gem. The splendors of my ring returned In flower and herb and fruit and tree. Where ruby wed will) emerald burned. Clasped by the sapphire of the sea. Radiant with blossoms garlanded. That wondrous bird came winging on, . And brightly had enwreathed my head. But with my grief my dream was gone. Sailor, in thee the bird 1 know That spoiled me first, t hen nobly crowned; God's envoy art thou, sent to show How hidden India may be found. Take, Colon, take my gold, and change My gems for galleys stanch and fleet; For bluebells I the wood will range, And deck my hair with meadow sweet. R. Garuett in Loudon Illustrated News. CROSSING THE ATLANTIC Usually Involves seasickness. When the waves play pitch and toss with you, strong indeed must be the stomach that can stand it without revolting. Tourists, commercial travelers. yachtsmen, mariners, all testify that Hostetter's Btomacii Kilters is the nest remedy lor tne nau sea experienced in rough weather on the water. Nervous and weakly travelers by land oten suf fer from something akin to this, and And in the Bitters Its surest remedy. No disorder of the stomach, liver or bowels is so obstinate that it mynot be overcome by the prompt and thnr ough remedy. Equally efficacious is it forchills and lever, money ana rneumatio troume ana nervousness. Emigrants to the frontier should provide themselves with this fine medicinal safeguard against the effects of vicissitudes of climate, hardship, exj osure and fatigue. The Young Doctor Just think; six of my pa tients recovered this week. The Old Doctor It's your own fault, my boy. You spend too much time at the club. An Article of True Merit. "Brown't Bronchial Troches " are everywhere popular as a cure for throat diseases and coughs, and this popularity is based upon real merit. Sold only in boxes. , . , Great works are performed not by strength, but by perseverance. DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CUBED By local applications, as they canuot reach the diseased portiou of tne ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is caused by an in- named condition oi tne mucous lining oi tne eustachian tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imierieet hear ing, and when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restated to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nitru cases out or ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any casn of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for cir culars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. SMf 8 Id by druggists; 75 cents. v WELCOME WOBOS TO WOMEN. Many times women call on their family phy sicians, suffering, aa they imagine, one from dvsneDSia. another from heart disease, another from liver or kidney disease, another with pain here or there, and in this way they all present to their easy-going doctor, separate diseases, for which he pre scribes, assuming tbem to be such, when, in reality, they are all only sumatoms caused by some womb disorder. The suffering pa tient gets no better, but probably worse, by reason of the delay, wrong treatment and consequent complications. A proper medi cine, like Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, directed to the cause would have promptly cured the disease. Mrs. Harry Tappan, of Reynolds, Jefferson Co., Neb., writes: "For two years I was a sufferer. A part of this time had to be carried from my bed. Was racked with pain, had hysteria, was very nervous, no ppetite and completely discouraged. A few bottles of 'Favorite Prescription' effected a perfect cure." Sold by all dealers in medicines. elsta. It oures Incipient Consumption, and i the best Cough and Croup Cure. FOR SORENESS OR STIFFNESS FROM GOLD, USB ST. I AGO BS OIL. IT RELAXES, SOOTHES, HEALS, CURES. "A FAIR FACE MAY PROVE A FOUL BAR GAIN." MARRY A PLAIN GIRL IF SHE USES APOLIO I niinm Astoria, Or. I can state with pleasure that by the use of MOOKh'H KKVEALi-U I.IIKrll REMEDY my hu 'band was relieved irom an old case ef RHEUMATISM and my U U II LU youngest boy cured entirely of INFLAMMATORY RHEUMATISM when-the best ioctor I could get did him no good. Yours in RUSSELL SAGE. No one knows better than this well known financier the full value of a curative. He is not easily imposed upon once, and never twice. This is his testimony after twenty years' use of Allcock's Porous Piasters: "506 Fifth Avenue, New York City, December 20, 1890.) " For the last twenty years I have been using Alicock's Porous Piasters. They have repeatedly cured me of rheumatic pains and pains in my side and back. Whenever I have a cold, one on my chest and one on my back speedily relieve me. " My family are never without them Russell Sack." Brakdreth's Pills improve the diges tion. . Laziness is not positively a crime, but they look and act wonderfully alike. BOYS AND GIRLS OF AMERICA. Why is it that to-day in America we sten from our institutions of learning to be denied an honest opportunity of earning a living? Is it possiDie we nave no neia tor our intelligent ei lorts? Must we go down to our giaves ending an unsuccessful life? Araour parents and in structors to blame? We must unite in our de termination not to tall the victims of foreign nirates and Ameiicm traitors. A small hnoK. dedicated to the boys and girls of America, enti tled "Of What is Uncle Sam Thinking?" pictures faithfully what we are contending with. , You will never regret ordering a cony through your stationer or sending 25 cents for same by return mail to the author and publisher. COKLIES m bKnin, lourtn noor of Sherlock wocK.Tturd and Oak streets, Portland, Or. A clean mouth and an honest hand will lake a man through any land. Guard yourself for summer malaria, tired feeling, by using now Oregon Blood Purifier. Use Bnamellne Stove Polish ; bo dust no smell. Try Gkrmka for breakfast. Both the method and results 'when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is 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 aod have made it the most popular remedy known. . ' Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50o 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. I)o not accept any Substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO . CAL, LOUISVILLE, Ki. NEW YORK, H.Y. FALCON Bee Supplies, The best on the market. We are Northwestern Agents. PORTLAND SEED CO., . 171 Second Street, - Portland, Or. Dr. Williams' Indian Pile Ointment will cure Blind, Bleeding and Itchlnar Piles. It absorbs the tumors, allavs me licning ai once, acts as a poul tice, gives instant relief. Dr. Will. iams' Indian Pile Ointment Is prepared iur x-iies aim ironing ui me private parts. Every box is warranted. By drug gists, bv mail on receint of nriee. 50 centa and $1.00 WILLIAMS MANUFACTURING CO., Proprietors, Cleveland, Ohio. TREATED FREE Positiv ly Cured with Vegetable Remedial Have cured theusan ds of eases. Cure cases pro. oounced hopeless by best physicians. From nrstdose symptomB disappear; in ten days atleast two-thlrdi tit symptoms removed. Bend ior iree doom testimo nials of miraculous cures. Ten days' treatment free by mall. If you order trial, send lOo. In stampi or pay postage. Dr. H.H.OnisN8oss,Atlanta,U If you order trial return this advertisement to ue I "W. i. EOUGI.AS 83 STIOE nr CTi"4" tuniuiu wum, costing irom GFHTJINFAti: f 4 1 $3. best value for the money ; sKSVal" the world. Name and price itampea on the Douom. Every ... w ui i uuli-u. X UKC HO SUDSU- tutc. See local papers for full lines for ladies and gen- giving iii structlona now 10 or derby mail. Postage free. You can gt the best har fains of aftilprn whn miaTi ahn S.P.Ji. TJ. No. 6478. P. N. U. No. 624 gratuude, Mrs. N. v. Steele, told by Tour Uruggul I nil fs Hill 1- I Mrs, Eliza E. EULS Fenner, N. Y. Agonizing Headaches Hood's Sarsaparilla Accomplishes ; Desired Results. "Dear Sirs: I gladly testify to the efficacy and curative powers of Hood's SarBaparilla and cheerfully state that It has done wonders for mi. For years I have been a great sufferer Irom agonizing headaches and Distress In the Stomach after eating and ai other times, accompanied by our stomach. 1 was very bad with indigestion also. I noticed in different papers mention of Hood'ssCuro. the cures Hood's Sarsaparilla had wrought and thought I would try it. It has Accomplished tho Desired Results. The pain and distress in tho stomach and tho severe headache spells have been overcomo as well as my indigestion." Ei.iza E. Hills, Fcu er, New York. Get Only HOOD'S. Hood's Pills are purely vegetable, pe- lect.y harmless, always reliable, and efficient. .. FRUIT PRESERVED ! LABOR SAVED ! Antifermenti PRESERVES FRUIT WITHOUT HEAT. Antifermentine PRESERVES Cider, Milk, Butter, Catsup, Pickles, Etc , And does it SUCCESSFULLY by preventing fer mentation. The use of this wondeifiil p eserv ative assures success in canning and preserving fruits and vegetables of all kinds. NO M(ULD on top of fruit. Saves time and labor, and U in every way a decided success ANTIFERMENTINE Is sold by all druggists and groc?r8, and Is guar' anteed to do what we say it will, , 8NKLI., HEITSUC & WOODABD, Portland, Or. THE ERICKSON PATENT SQUIRREL BOMS Is sure death to Oround Squirrels, Pocket Gophers, Rabbits and all ani mals that burrow in the ground. Sim ple, sate aud certain. Price 3 per 100 bonkbs: boxed for shipment. Sample cartridges, with directions for using, sentree on application For sale by SHiULDS EXTERMI NATOR CO., Moscow, Idaho. i Standard system of the world. Highest awards at World's Fair, Chicago, for perfect-titling gar ments. Learn to cut and make yourowngnr ments At Home. You csu Make and Save Money. We teach Cutting, Fluistiing and Dressmaking complete. A child can learn Jackson's New French System . and Jackson's Franco-Prussian Tailor System AT-HOME BY MAIL. Our school is open day aud evening. Every lady should know it. D esi makers are imperfect without our sys ems. No fitting; no alterations : no trying on. l'erfect Fitting Patterns cut to measure 50c. Semi 2o stamp and we will send How to Take Meaure ments.etc. It you want perfect-fitting garments, send to us for Pa- terns and learn our .ysMn. Special rates for block pattern" by the dozen to Dressmakers. We are general Wesieru agents. Local agents wanted. ' JACKSON'S TAILORING INSTITUTE, 607 Sutter St., San Francisco, Cal. K Bladder, Urinary and Liver Diseases Dropsy Gravel and Diabetes are cured by HUNT'S REMEDY THE BEST KIDNEY AND LIVER MEDICINE. HUNT'S REiYlEDY Cures Bright'! Disease, Retention or Non-retention of Urine. Pains In the Back- Ilrid or Side. i HUNT'S REMEDY Gnres Intemperance, Nervous Diseasel, Genera Debility, Female Weakness and Exce&es. HUNT'S REMEDY Cures Biliousness. Headache, Jaundice. Sour HUNT'S REMEDY 4C I 8 AT ONCE on the Kidney, f.lvsr and Boweli, restoring them to a healthy ac tion, and CUKES when all other medicines fail. Hundreds have been saved who have been given Dp to die by friends and physicians. ...r ... Willi n OLMaKi ' flmmn.ttNi Mnnl. who have weak lungs or Asth- ma, anoma nse nso'suareior Consumption. It has cored thousands, it has not injur ed one. It Is not bad to take. It Is the best oough syrup. Boiueyerywnere. sac. 4 K 1 1