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About Dayton herald. (Dayton, Or.) 1885-1909 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1903)
A I Eruptions ’ BREAK A L O O K IN O -O L A M A little g irl «es talking to her tab- Thera to only one way to get rid of pimples and other eruptions. And it ’s simple and easy enough. Cleanse the b io *!, improve the diges- t*?n > • t ‘muh*t« the kidneys, liver and skin, by the same means at the same time. The medicine to take ia Hood's Sarsaparilla This statement is confirmed by the ex perience of thousands whom this medi cin e has ptrmanently cured. Accept no substitute: . A Lucky Follow. Young M illion (sadly)— My roneln George la a mighty lucky fallow— hand- somast chap in town. Friend— Handsome, yaa; bat ha la aa poor as a church mouse. Young M illio n (enviously)— That’s the beauty of IL Ha has a new girl every eeneon, end not one of them makee a turn when be caste her off.— N. Y . Weekly. Mother— You say your husband no longer spends his evenings at the cluhT Daughter— I soon broke him of that. Mother— Bow did yon manage? Ditughtie— Before going to bed pat two easy chairs clo=e together by the fire, and than held a match to a eigar until the room got a faint odor of smoke.— Now York Weakly. I f you seek good luck, break a look ing-glass. I f yon wish extraordinary good fortune, smash a lot of them. Such at least would likely be the ad vice of Miss Henrietta Croaman and the members of her company, and they would speak from an experience found- j ed on fact. For Mias Croaman has thoroughly disproved the old wives’ fable that seven years' bad luck follows tbs breaking of a looking-glass. In tbs three yean that Mlsa Croaman ha« been starring, thirteen mirrors have been broken In her company, but In stead of misfortune and calamity at* tending these mishaps, they seem each time to bring a run of good luck, Strangely enough, the first and the thirteenth mirror were broken In Bos ton. Mlsa Croeman waa about to be gin an engagement at the Tremont Theateg, Boston, three years ago, when one of the city’s street cleaning cars smashed a large looking^!.«, which was part o fthe stags equipment, and which had Just been taken from a transfer wagon and placed near the stage door. When It became known throughout the company that a looking glass had been broken all manner of dire predictions were made. Theatrical folk are superstitious above most hu man kind, and this looking-glass Inci Tbe great majority of nervous dent was sufficient to AU all w ith dis may. The first notable STsnt after the women are so bacanes they are breaking of the glass was tbs appear suffering from some form of female die- ance of a representative from the Bos Mrs. Emma Mitchell, 620 Louisiana ton street-cleaning department, wko paid the fuU value of the damaged street, Indianapolis, Ind., writes: "Peruns hat certainly been a blessing property, which was «40. Thia did not exactly look like had luck, and was In disguise to me, for when I first be viewed In the light of a marvel. for gan taking it fcr troubles peculiar to such promptness and dispatch upon the the sex and a generally wain out sys part of a municipality had never be tern, I had title faith. ••For the past five years I have rare fore been beard of. ly been without pain, but Peruna has Soma time thereafter the company changed all this, and in a very short was playing In a Naw England city tim e. I think I. had only taken tw o whan a gust of wind caught a looking- bottles before I began to recuperate glass that had boon leaned against tbs very quickly, and seven hotties made wall of the theater In readiness to he me w ell. I do not have headache or carried Inside, and smashed It Into backache any more, and have some interest In Ute. I give allcredit w h e n bits. Again great fear assailed Miss It Is doe, end that to to Peruna.” — Grosman's company, but, as before, the Emma Mitchell. consequences were good Instead of By far the greatest number of female evil, for the engagement In thia par troubles are caused directly by catarrh. ticular town proved to be the largest They are catarrh of the organ which In the history of ths local theater. ia affected. These woman despair of Soon the third mirror was broken, and recovery. Female trouble is so com as before some good luck befell. Then mon, so prevalent, that they accept it the members of Miss Crosman's com- aa almost inevitable. The greatest ob pany took heart and began to assure themselves that It was Incky for them to smash a looking-glass. I t to a con spicuous fact that every looking-glass Experiments show that a large ocean which' has been broken In Mias Croe- man'e company has bean fallowed by steamer, going at 19 knots an hour, w ill more over a distance of two miles Just before the recent engagem ent In after its engines are stopped and ra Philadelphia, which In point of receipts ver ted, and on authority gives lees was the biggest ever played* by a dra than a m ile or a mile and a half as the matic company In this country at stm- required spate to atop its progress. liar prices, a large pier glass was bro Yea Can Oct Alton's Feet Beet FRES. ken aa It waa bring taken Into tbe W rite Alton 8. Olmsted, Le Roy.M . Y ., lo r a theater. In Albany also, tost winter, boo sample e l A lle n ’s Feet-Ease. I t cures a looking-glass was smashed In the sweating, hot swollen, achine (eet. I t makea n e w o r fle h t shoes easy. A certain cure (or theater, and the engagement In that ooms, ingrowing nails and huutona. A ll d r u f- city to a part of dramatic history, si r i.ts s e llit. 26c. Don’t aeee p i any substitute. the business was the biggest on record end established Albany as a great theatrical city. Then, again. Just before Mias Croe man and her company began their run In Boston not long ago, another mir ror met the fate of Its predecessors, making the thirteenth that had been broken In the company In three years. Sr. R. H. Kllue, Ltd., M l Arch 8«., Philadelphia, Pa. Tbe Boston engagement wae a brilliant W het tbe Steamboat Dees. success, and It was followed by a New One day little Archie, three years of England tour which has become cele brated as the most profitable ever play age, saw a railroad for the first time, ed by any dramatic star In that sec and did not know what to make of it. "O h, tion of the country. Not once has any He ran to ids mother and said: thing that In any way could ba regard mamma, it's a steamboat looking tor ed as bad luck come on the heels of a water.” — Washington Star. MR. E mma M itchell Brown— Hae Smith named hie new "Plao a Cure fc a remedy for coughs, oolds '* and o o n iu m p tio ii. Try IL Pries 26 osate, country cent? Jones— Yes, he calls I t "Snlssled el druggist*. * * - ______ Silvers,” alter that breakfast food be iter Mild Suggestion. made hie fortune o n .-D e tro it free "Charley, deer,” mid young Mrs. Torkins, " w ill yon join our progres sive euchre club?” In C h a in a "E tude Id E M inor” it "Certainly not. I have no time tor ia necessary to road 8,960 eigne in two euchre." " W e ll, I won’t urge you. But I minutes and n half, which to équiva can’t help thinking that if you played lant to about twenty-aix notes a second. the borsee aa well aa I play euchre we’d have a lot of money now) Washington 8<ar. Fesslelae Way. Husband— Drat the luck! There Isn't any gum on this stamp. W ife— Never mind, dear. H ere’s a pin;—Chicago Daily News. __ (ton. Longstreet In Haepttat. __ "8he declared that she could not boar Gen. James Longstreet, the noted Confederate cavalryman, is In Garfield the odor of gasoline.” — 8 t Lonto Star. hospital. W ashing ton for treatment for n severo attack of rheumatism. Auther ef Lettere. " H e ’e sa un fortunate man of tot- Artlftolal Teeth ef Paper. torà.” " W h y , I naver heard he waa A set of artificial teeth made of oom- aa antbor.” “ W all, he waa thè antb- «seed paper baa beta need constantly or of leverai lettore that lost him. • Weekly Tiara» The tlghtfittlng | British uniform to alleged to be the caute of much heart Ventnor has by far the most hours of reel sunshine of any town In the B rit ish isles. A newly married man told ns a tale of woo the other day which happens to "Does yonr typewriter need repairs?” every newly married man. When be asked tbe meandering tinker aa he on- got married his wife gave hint half ¿he clothes cupboard, but in only throe iered ths office. " I t would seem so," replied tbe weeks a ll hie clothes were hanging on nolle driven into tbe wall.— Exchange. to consult a dentist. Towne treading)— Headquarters for three dollar panto. W all, th at’s queer. She— I »pent-two weeks in th at town Browne W hat’s queer about it? last summer and didn’t sea a single at Towne— I always thought three del- tractive thing there. tor pants were designed tor other quar mlrror-amashing, while In every In He— That’s queer. Haven’ t they ter«.— Philadelphia Press. stance there has been a series of Incky nay mirrors ia that village? happenings, until now there ia a strong suspicion that some of the mir Feminine Charity. x Rodrlck— Did you enjoy Mre. Tiker’e rors In Mlsa Crosman’s company have H o—I wonder why Mlsa Ovartjbn to recent ion f been broken purposely. so sensitive about bar age? Van Albret— No. Indeed. Tbe men She— I can’t Imagine. She to cer talked ehop and the women shopping. C o rp o r a tio n s to C o n tro l. tainly old enough to have got over a lit I t la believed that in the near fu Wasn’t Qwtte Sure. tle thing Ilka that long ago.— Chicago ture farms are to be controlled by News. In Missouri re Zeb Bttrix— Be that gal o’ yourn Im greet corporations. provin’ ia her planner playin’ since cently an 8,000-acre farm waa placed In ~ PoKshed Cynic. she begin takin’ leeeons? the hands of a company to be man 81 Oatcake—Goeh, I dnnno. She’s aged, and this company Is now buying Betty— M r. Cyniqne to too polished either improvin’ er elm we’re gittin* surrounding lands to make a gigantic for words, isn’t he? Peggy— Oh, dear, yaa. Everything need tow it , blamed ef I kin toll farm ranch. In North Dakota the which. f he aaye reflects on some one. Dalrymples own a 20,000-acre wheat ranch, which la managed In the same manner as any mercantile establish ment. The general trend outside of agriculture has been toward consoli dation, and the present captains of the farming and ranching tnduefry have already caught the fever, and they, too, wlU perhaps consolidate their Intervale. Whether a unity ef N othing is a source of so much trouble as aa old tore or ulcer, particu- capital w ill be (ucceeeful In carrying r when located upon the lower extrem ities where the cireulation is — h on crop and beef production can only sluggish. A gangrenous eating nicer upon the leg to a frig h tfu l eight, be determined by trials and experl- and aa th e poison burrows deeper and deeper in to the tissue beneath and the •ore continues to spread; one c u t almost wee the flesh m elting away and feel Competition In farming la getting to the strength going out w ith the sickening discharges. Great running sores be more and more Intense The mas and deep offensive ulcere often develop from a sim ple boil, swollen gland, who understands the toll the beet la bruise or pim ple, and are a threatening danger always, because, w hile a ll tha <me who succeeds. Modern farm- such sores are not cancerous, a great m any are, and th is should m ake you era do not trust to luck In sowing suspicious o f a ll chronic, alow-healing nlcere and sores, particularly if can their crops os fresh soil They use the cer runs ia yonr fa m ily . Pace sores are common and cause the greatest Information secured through the ex annoyance because they are so per periment stations, and, as a result, sistent and unsightly and detract so S M C « ON BOTH ANKLES, each kind of soil now receives the crop much from one’s personal appearance. , xbowt ton y a a » ago a beet adapted to Its nature. Crop rota M iddle aged and old people and assail son o m m o b each of my ankles, tion la followed on every well-regulated those whose blood to contaminated sad *»»• tha nlaooa aa« they bo- farm; fertlllxatlon la a part of the an tainted w ith the germs and poison o f £ 2 d M o ia a rtv ito — ran veuw nual Improvement. m alaria or some previous sickness, are X had syoat same than fisoo oo try- th e chief sufferers from chronic sores • * • “• * * * • I e fitoreset Thee. and nlcere. W h ile th e blood remains h l - y tr — ? V a l , *T have noticed,” said the eff-hand an unhealthy, polluted condition heal- aarafi. X ylb rn b a have novor baae philosopher, “that a woman w ill get • in g is impossible, and th e sore w ill g ? ? .— w* * a]r h * ^ - * * . • “ golf drees whan aha has no Intention to continue to grow and Spread in spite of Z n T ^ r iit play goU.’’ washce and salves or an y superficial o r to v ta * I t to my aiaa^yaar-al« eon tor ' T l a t ’a to,” agreed the man w ith the surface treatment, fo r th e sore to b a t P y *» H _» T foh< stekw aa a I Incandescent whiskers. th e outward sign of some coustitn- “And,” continued the off hand phil tional disorder, a bad condition o f and aaa now raaidine a t Me. «14 osopher, “eke w ill get a ballgown when th e blood and system which local n ia taa ath Skraot. she cares nothing about ddnclng, and remedies cannot cure. A blood p urifier — o tty r « o . a tennis dress when she wouldn’t play t h i n g t o d ^ R h «he7 bilo (Kh^EStore>ito lost properties, quicken the circula tennis for fear she w ill freckle, and a bathing enlt when she haa So thought tion and invigorate th e constitution, and S. 8 . S. is ju st snch a remedy. of going Into the water, and a riding 8 . 8 . 8 . reaches these old chronic sates through the blood. I t goes to habit when the very thought of climb th e very root of the trouble sad counteracts sad removes from the blood a ll lug os • hone gives her the chllla. the im parities and poisons, sad gradually builds n p th e entire system and Bating Ulcers, a “Y ^ ,” Interrupted the man with the Incandescent whiskers, “hot when she gets a wedding draws she means busl-_ nees. Ever notice that E’—Judge. p urifier and tonic combined sad a sal and ulcers. I f you h a ves slaw-heslia w rite tu about it, and oar physiciaas •N ” T he Blood sad Itg Diseases ” fn It la every one’s secret hope that when the time comes for him to hand his baggage over to Dwsth to he check ed. he w ill not be afraid. An elderly man very much dislikes to have a flippant young woman call him papa. they do not understand that it is ca tarrh which Ta the source of their I l l ness. In female oom plaint, ninety- nine cases out of one hundred are noth ing but catarrh. Parana cures catarrh wherever located. Chronic i&valida .who have lan guished for years on sick bads with soma lorm of female disease begin to improv« at ones after beginning Dr. Hartman's treatment. Among the many prominent women who recommend Peruns are: Belva Lockwood, oi Washington, D. C .; Mrs. Ool. Hamilton, of Columbus, Ohio; Mrs. F. E. Warren, wife of 0 . S. Sen ator Warren, of Wyoming. I f you do not derive prompt and sat isfactory results from the nee of Peruna, write at ones to D r. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and ha w ill ba pleased to give you hie valuable adviee gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, AOfRffOJV M A O H K m r o o . (Suecemon to John Poole) Feet of Morrison Street, Portland, Oregee The E ll Gasoline Engtns—A child can run It. Valves end all working parts covered up. 2 h. p-> eras: 4 h. p.. »20»; 4 h . p , p i t “ Pot In a 11«- ila Uaaollne and then go lo •leap.’’ . W rite tor Illustrated catalogue and lor prion on anything you need In the machinery line. PORTLAND ACADEMY • A Hraetro t AMI CLASSICAL SCHOOL FOR BOYS JU ttC «lS Long Hair “ About a year ago my hair waa earning out very fast, so I bought a bottle of Ayer’s Hair Vigor. I t stopped the falling and mads my hair grow very rapidly, until now It is 4S inches in length.**— Mrs. A. Boydston, Atchison, Kins. There's another hunger than that of the stomach. H a ir hunger, for instance. H u ngry hair needs food, needs nair vigor— A y r ’s, T h is is w hy we say that A y e r’s H s ir Vigor always restores color, and makes the hair grow long and heavy. tiisetsMe. u ts ^ m LICEon POULTRY / S E V Ä -Ä T Ä “ I saffbred th e to r u i ros s f th e d s a u te d w lth proirudloc pilaa brouebt oa by ss— s t pa «lon « U h «b lch I «as affllctoS for tw*a«y yoars. I rae aerota jo u r CASCARETS ta the to « a ot N a w a ll I a , and aarar loaad a a jih ia e to aqual «hau. T o -d a j I am enUiely fraa frsm pilaa and (aol liha a a a « maa. O ■ . K a in , 1411 Janaa St-, Sioux City, Ia. f ••Uncle Ben”— the good-natured bach elor brother of the fam ily—had been smoking silently while the other men were swapping stories. A t last he took his pipe out of his mouth and drawled: “You married men think you know It all. But your experiences pale In contrast to mine with that kid nephew In the other room. “I rashly offered to stay with him the ether night while all you folks went out, and actually tbe things that kid did la the hour I wee with him would make a list a mile long, more C A T H A R T IC fnacoTiglri IO-TO-BAC - r u a b o th far Xaatera callwna. Prim ary and U ram m er grades Inriudrd- A hall for girls, with Has a Normal Kindergarten Training Class In connection w ith its Academic department. Separate residence. Two year conree Model Kindergarten Mori- dee practice work. For details address ELEANOR tE B B E T T S , Principal^ The readers ot thia paper will he pleased to th at there ia at leeat one dreaded dlaeaae at eeience haa been able to cure la a ll 1U S ara stave., and th at laoatarrh. H a ll ’a Catarrh Cure ta the only positive cure known to tha medical fraternity. Catarrh being a eonatitutional dis ease, requires a oonatTtutional treatment. Mali's Catarrh Cure ie taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucone anrfaoee o< tha system, thereby destroying tha founda tion of tha disease, and giving tha patient strength by building up the c o m titu tio n and assisting nature in doing its work. Tha pro prietors have so much fa ith In its euratlv, powers, th a t they offer One Hundred D o llar, for any case th at it falls to cure. Sand fo r list af teatimonlals. Addroas ». J C H E N E T A CO., Toledo, O •old bv druggists, 7So. Ila tl'a F am llv PUla are the heat. The completion of the extensive pert works at CoatnacoaIcoa, on the gulf, and Salina Crus on the Pacific side, connected by a well-equipped railroad across the narrow* Isthmus of Tehuan tepec, promises to provide a short routs for shipments to Pacific coast ports and ths fa r East that wlU be an Im portant factor long before the quee- tlon of aa Isthmian canal la aettled, says Modern Mexico. The co-operation of the Mexican government In the building of this transcontinental line la a satisfactory guaranty that the ex tensive undertaking wlU be carried to a successful end. The location of a connection between tbe great oceans is a question that does not affect to any great degree shipping between North Atlantic and Southern Pacific porta, but whan the earing In time between Atlantic and gulf points and Central and North American coast cities and In shipments to Asia are considered, tbe advantages of the northern routs are striking. From Panama to Salina Crus the dis tance Is 1,803 miles, which Is a clear saving for freight to northern ports shipped via Tehuantepec. Tbe saving sdll be made upon all shipments to Central American ports, varying In Importance from 4M miles to Junta Aranas, Coots Rica, to 1,008 miles to San Joao do Gautemala. From Salina Crus to San Francisco the distance Is only 2,170 »tiles, and shipments to ths Orient w lR save over 1,000 miles by the use of the Mexican rail transfer to the Pacific la preference to going through a Panama canal I t is a fact not generally known that from New Orleans to San Francisco by ths Mexican Isthmus It Is 100 miles Shorter than by the line of ths Southern Pa cific Railway. With such shipping facilities as It is Intended to establish the Mexican short cut across the back bone of the continent wlU doubtless dlvqrt much commerce frota sll-rall lines. I t w ill from the start furnish aa attractive route for the growing export cotton trade of the Southern American States to ths Orient, and It w ill at ones become a powerful fac tor in ths development of Mexico's rich west coast WHtvfor L lust rated C rculazia Tefaaccb Using JV The Record Avalanche. The largest avalanche ever measured fell in tbe Italian Alpe in 1886. I t contained 26,000 tons of enow. CASTORIA T h e K i n d Y o n R a v e A lw a y s B o u g h t has b o r n e t h e s ig n a t u r e o f G has. H . F le t c h e r , a n d h a s b e e n m a d e u n d e r b in p e rs o n a l s u p e rv is io n f o r o v e r 8 0 y e a rs . A llo w n o o n e t o d e c e iv e y o u in th is . C o u n te rfe its , Im it a t io n s a n d •• J u s t-a s -g o o d ” a r e b u t E x p e r im e n ts , a n d e n d a n g e r t h e What is CASTORIA C a n to ris is a h a rm le s s s u b s titu te f o r C a s to r O i l , P are g o r ic , D ro p s a n d S o o th in g B y rn p s . I t ia P le a s a n t. I t c o n ta in s n e ith e r O p iu m , m o r p h in e n o r o t h e r N a rc o tic s u b s ta n c e . I t s a g e Is it s g u a r a n te e . I t d e s tro y » W o r m s a n d a lla y s F e v e ris h n e s s . I t c u re s D ia r r h o e a a n d W in d C o lic . I t re lie v e s T e e th in g T ro u b le s , c u re s C o n s tip a tio n a n d F la tu le n c y . I t a s s im ila te s t h e F o o d , re g u la te s t h e S to m a c h a n d B o w e ls , g iv in g h e a lth y a n d n a t u r a l sle e p . T h e C h ild r e n 's P a n a cea T h e M o t h e r ’ s F r ie n d . B e a n th e Signature o f •wear on that. “Polled enough hair from my head and whiskers to stuff a sofa pillow. ^ -“Decorated the wall paper as high as he could reach with the poker. “Broke a vaee by sitting down on IL “Swallowed several buttons and a lot e f thread. “Emptied his mother’s work-basket things Into the fireplace. ~ ’Punched tbe head of the cat into a cop, and waa scratched badly In the attempt. “Knocked the bead off a One wax doll belonging to his sister by trying to drive a tack with IL "Fell off the sofa and howled. "Broke three panes of window glass with my cane. “ Fell lute the coal scuttle and spoil ed hla white drees. “Set fire to the carpet while I was out of tbe room bunting up something to amuse ’ him. “Crawled under the sofa and' re fused to come ont until 1 gave him candy. “Get twisted In the legs of a th e ir; they had to be broken to get him out. “Poured water into hla mother's slip per» “Finally when be saw hla mother coming, he ran to the door, tumbled off the eteps, cut his nose and tore a hole In bis drees. "Pretty swift record. Isn’t It? Still, tbe kid'll come out all right. He's tbe proper stuff."—Chicago Becord- HeraId. In d ia n a K n o w n O nw ard. An Oklahoma man one* told an In dian that a draperats white man waa after hla acalp. He amlled and ebook kla head. “A few daya later," con tinues the narrator, “ wo wort talking to the white man, when the Indian came np to the group. He bad spot ted the stranger and knew him by eight Without raying a word to him he walked np within arm’s reach and struck the white-man In the face w.th a rough, heavy glove. He paused for a few second» and hit him again. ’UghE he exclaimed aa he wheeled around and walked away. The white man looked at the Indian In amuse m ent but made no show of resent ment. Later In tbe day, when we ask ed the Indian why he didn't follow np the Ineult with blows, he told us the white man was a coward. In explaining bow he knew It he aa!d the man’s ’ja w dropped* when he struck him In the face the teebnd time with tbe glove, and that thia, with the Indian, was an nnfaillng,,»lgn of cowardice."— Kaneea City Journal, In f. Hteam or horw power. W e kandlr the K elly A T a n n e y h lll Co.'« machinery, and full 11 nee uf re pair« carried In fit or k. W e also furolnh aaaollae enffliiM to run tbia machinery. Our machinoB are faeter, atronger and eaater to operate than any other machine on the m arket. Thoneand« are In awe* eeeeful operation. H K IK H rtO N M A C H IN K R Y CO., General Ayenta, foot of Morrison tttraet, Portland, Ore. »end lor Free Illustrated Catolo*. The Mower w ith the "DRAW CUT.“ drawing" the cutting her from a p olat ahead, earning the wheel, to preMhard- er on the ground, and giving increased power for hard cutting. I t is no “ puah ru t," "pushing" the bar from beelnd, when the more euttfug, the more tendency for tha wheel! to lift from the ground. Bee the point f The "D raw C ut” Cham pion keep« the wheels on tha ground and Is the moat yowsrful eutter In tha Held, lias many convenient features. Send for handsome catalogue and cal endar. Mailed free. HBTCHELL. LEWIS fi STAVE« 00.. Flnf sad Tartar Ste.. FartUad. Ongsa. *OPALlHfc A ll F alse. In Use For Over 3 0 Years. Correspondent— You saw what the papers said about you this morning, I presnma? r -Retired Millionaire (president of a great corporation!— No; I don't know what they said about m«. but you may say for me, air, that there wasn't a word of truth In It.—Chicago Tribune. (I so la K bea Says. "Do difference between de man dat’s dgerin’ on perpetual motloo," said Uncle Eben. “an’ de man dat’s work- in’ a system to beat de races la dat de perpetual motion man dldn' hab no money la de fua* place."— Washington ite r. U> by dnaggtaea.____ M l