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About Lane County leader. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Or.) 1903-1905 | View Entire Issue (June 5, 1903)
’1 [¡TER OF TH E U. S. TREASURY USES PE-RU-NA FOR SUMMER CATARRH. mer Catarrh Afflicts len and W om en , Judson W. Lyons, Register (United State* treasury, in a |roui Washington, 1>. C .,s a y i: nd Peruna to be an excellent lor the catarrhal affections png and sum m er, and those uffer from depression from ^t of the sum m er will find no the equal o f Peruua.” — i W . Lyons, ban is better known in the fl- world than Judson W. Ly- Irmerly ol Augusta,Ga. His ku every piece of money of re- pte makes bis signature one of et familiar ones in the United (cresting le t t e r s From W om en. O LD * ♦ ♦ ♦ 4 1 1 i 11 i i i H 3 W I I I i n H C a«ey a t th e B a t. There was ease in Casey’ s manner as he stepped into his place, There was pride in Casey’ s bearing and a smile on Casey’s face. And when, responding to the cheers, he lightly doffed his hat No stranger in the crowd could doubt ’twaa Caaey at the bat! §? = g Ten thousand eyes were on him as he rubbed his hands with dirt. Ten thousand tongues applauded him as he wiped them on his shirt, Aud, while the writhing pitcher ground the ball into hia hip, Defiance glanced in Casey’a eye, a sneer curled Casey’s lip. Thankful And now the leather-covered sphere came hurtling through the air, And Casey stood a-watching it in haugh ty graudeur there. CJose by the sturdy batsman the ball unheeded sped. “That hain’ t my style!” said Casey. “ Strike one!” the umpire said. |p> supper gradually affected ret ion and made me a miser- lyepeptic, suffering intensely I took several kinds of ns which were present e l by pt physicians but still contin- suffer. But the trial of one I of Peruna convinced me that it Irid me of this trouble, so I con- 1 taking it for several weeks and pn excellent health, having gained nods.” — Miss Camilla Chartier. HON. JUDSON W . LYONS, SUMMER CATARRH. Kate Bohn, 1119 Willoughby Brooklyn, N. Y ., writes: bsn I wrote you 1 was troubled krqiient headache, dizzy, strange [ in the head, sleeplessness, sink- elings, faintness and numbness. |imee 1 had heartburn. My food rise to my throat after every and my bowels were very irregu- and f now you that my indeed. improve so quickly after suffering for five years. I am feeling very good and strong. I thank you so much for Petuna. I shall recommend it to all suffering with the effects of catarrh, and 1 consider it a household blessing. I shall never be without Preuna.” For those phases of catarrh peculiar to summer Peruna will be found effeca- cious. Peruna cures catarrh in all phases and stages. If you do not derive piompt and sat isfactory results from the use of Peruna write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable ad vice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columuus, Ohio. Artificial. Prom the benches black with people there went np a mulled roar, Like the beating of the storm waves on a stem and distant shore. Kill him! Kill the umpire!” shouted some one from the stand. And it’» likely they’d have killed him had not Casey raised his hand. With a «mile of Christian charity great Casey’s visage shone. He stilled the rising tumult and bade the game go on. He signaled to the pitcher, and once more the ball it flew, But Casey still ignored it, and the um pire said, “ Strike twe!” ‘‘ Fraud, fraud!” shout maddened thou sands, and the echo answered “ Fraud!” But one scornful look from Casey, and the audience was awed. They saw his face grow stern and cold, they saw his muscles strain, And they knew that Casey would not let that ball go by again. Rubber is Easily Killed. j-What lovely flowers? Do you There is no reliable method of pre Ithey remind me of you. serving rubber except by keeping it in The smile is gone from Casey’s face, hia I—Why, they are artificial. teeth are clinched with hate. a damp place and awBy from the air. .-Y es; I know; but it requires j exposure to the air and dry atmos And he beats with cruel violence hia bat upon the plate. examination to detect it. phere will kill the best of rubber in | time. Oil of any kind is its deadly And now the pitcher holds the ball, and now he let* it go. nagple Conference. enemy. And now the air is shattered by the force ly, Harker,” began Van Albert, of Caaey’a blow. pile insists that I attend the sew- T h ere Is m ore Catarrn in t n u section of m e vie with her tonight. What is country than all oth er dipeasea put together, Oh, somewhere in this favored land the and u n til the laat few years w as supposed to be 1 thing to wear? sun is shining bright, incurable. For a great m an y years doctors pro ear muffs,” advised the ex- nounced It a local disease, ____ and p prescribed local The band is playing somewhere, and _____________________ r e s _____________ rem edies, and by constantly failin g to cu c a r re e i friend. ■omewhere hearts are light, w ith local treatm en t, pronounced it incurable. with Science h as p roven catarrh to be a constitu And somewhere men are singing, some tional disease, and tharefora requires constitu where children shout. Valuable House. tional treatm en t. H a ll's Catarrh Cure, m an -Suggs go $3,000 for his house, ufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co., Toled o, O hio, But there in no joy in Mud villa— mighty Casey has “ struck out!” is the o n ly constitu tio n al cure on the m arket. is—So? I didn’ t know he It is tak e n in te rn ally in doses Irom 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly o n the Wood [any, real estate. The H ea rt B ow ed D ow n. and m u cou s surfaces o f the system . T h ey offer y he didn’ t. This was in a poker one h u n dred dollars for any case it fails to The heart bowed down by weight of woe, cure. Send for circulars and testim onials. A d «hen he held a full house against To weakest hopes will cling. dress, F. J. C H E N E Y A CO., Toled o, a To thought and impulse while they flow, isr fellow’ s three of a kind. Bold by D ruggists, 75c. That can no comfort bring. H a ll’s F am ily P ills are the best. To those exciting scenes will blend. A Fortune In a Clock. O’er pleasure’s pathway thrown; The Production of Silk. |ian in Vienna possessetid as an 8ilk is known to be the secretion of But memory is the only friend lom an old clock made early in the That grief can call its own. nth century. He thought it t.as | two glands of the silk worm alongaide of the digestiré canal. These glands, J about $10. One day a stranger The mind will. In Its worst despair, Still ponder o’er the past— fand offered him $400 for it. The which consist of tubes in numerous coils, terminate in the spinning wart On moments of delight that were suspected that if it wag worth and open in a common orifice from Too beautiful to last; t might be worth more, so he in- Wed the matter. He soon received which the secretion of the consistency To long departed years extend. Its visions with them flown; of honoy, issues forth, promptly harden r of $4,000 for it, and finally For memory is the only friend lit to the Kensington museum, ing into a thread on exposure to air. That grief can call its own. n, for $20,000. —Alfred Bunn. A s Others See Us. One of the Staying Sort, “ I wonder if my face will change, ONE OF NATURE’ S DREDGES. fibubs— We’ ve got a new girl at too, when I am your age?” asked the sweet girl graduate in a tone redolent G r e a t L a v * S t r e a m . A t t e n d i n g a n pass. K r n p tio n o f M o n t P e le e . fcklots— Hah! I t’ s easy enough to with insinuation. “ Undoubtedly, dear,” replied the Since the disaster at Martinique (new girl, but can you keep her? pbube— The doctor thinks so. He elderly female, “ and you ought to be rnoet people, especially those of scien she weighs nine pounds at thankful for the loss of a generous por tific and Venturesome spirit, have taken lion of your cheek.” a new Interest In volcanoes. Old cra -Philadelphia Preea. ters. whose tricks are still unknown, and craters that have Just taught men to beware of them, have been studied with unusual eare. Interesting expe riences have been common. Hardly one of the recent papers on volcanoes Is without some tale o f adventure In which the human side appeals even more strongly than the scientific. George Carroll Curtis In a paper en titled "Looking Into the Caribbean For Infants and ChildreiL l~I.AllH Wi».l7.iq»IHi»|ilÜ i Craters.” published In the Century « S ? - Magazine, narrates an adventure he had on Mont Pelee. He says: As we were passing on onr return over the rugged, lava-like mud-flows three sharp peals of thunder rang through the valley. Rolling up ever gelalte PreparatioiforAs- the mounts!« tag» was a great brown, lilating foe Food andRegula- convolutlng cloud. It ascended In 5 the S bunchs and Bowels of dark, rounded masses, stately yet with great speed, thousands and tbouaands 'M a n r s ; - ( h i i d k l n of twisting, worming globules, brain- shaped, cauliflower-topped, dark almost ea Digestion.Cheerfuf- te blackness. sandRest.Conlains neilher As It shot direct from the crater, ».Morphine nor Mineral. this menacing shape spread out and charged toward us down the mountain >T N A l l C O T I C . side. Running would. I realized, be useless I • '« A - . a M j u R o n The eruption and Its nearness held me W - in wonder and dread, so that I did not call to my companions below, but -Urn! . waited until they had labored half way up the slope; then I shouted down. g p * - "Look at the mountain!” and scram bled to the highest point on the flat above. As I gained It In hard breath Iperfpcl Remedy forConstipa- and looked back, a black thing Jumped lon, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea from behind a bend In tbe canon. porms .Convulsions .Feverish- With a heavy, earthy roar, a plung ss and Loss or SLEEP. ing wall of blackish stuff hurled Itself with fearful speed against the side of Uc Su*ile Signature o f the ravine, bounded to the opposite slope and tore It down. It lashed and tore away the earth like paper. YORK. saw the banks melt away ss In a nightmare. Sand, pebbles and masses of rock flew Into the air before the re sistless onslaught, and fell Into the raging flood and were borne away like tXACT COPY O r W R A P P E R . chaff We conld feel the shock o f the ponderous mass plowing through the G ASTORIA ¡The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over T h ir ty Years GASTORIA as when a train at high speed grinds the rails. Looking down In w on der, awe, perhaps fright, not one o f us had spoken a word. In twenty minutes the alxty-foot channel o f the main stream was dug four feet below the mouth o f a trib utary. w hich, oosing in silent, molasses- like surges, dropped in a mud-fall Into the river. W e watched for half an hour, by which time the stream bad decreased a third, and the erosion of Its banka was nearly ended. Already, however, the catastrophe had dredged the channel to a depth o f ten feet and bad carried off this vast load Into the sea! And when In the gathering darkness we reached the coalesced mouths of the tw o rivers, the Seche and the Blanche, the hot ash-beds there, lying over the dead of the Guerin Sugar Works, were sending out such heavy volumes of ■team that our sloop had left her moor ing and w as standing well offshore. REIERSOH MACHINERY OO . grou nd, F A V O R IT E S Camilla Chartier, 6 West |ton St., Baltimore, Md., irrote you for advice, lleasure in inform ing Tvement is very great (id not expect to ¡-» ♦ ♦ H I I M » 4 + 4 (Successors to John Boole) Foot of Morrison S tre et, Portland, Oregon W ith us for 8aw M ill an d S hin gle M ill Ma- W in d M ill an d Kains T u m p , Etc. chin ery. « ream* regular price $9«), now |6o. ream Separators, 8 ------ “"i— B uggy sh afts f.i.50. Spring wagona I have used Ayer’ s Hair Vigor for over thirty years. It has kept my scalp free from dandruff and hat prevented my hair from turn ing gray.” — Mrs. F. A. Soule, Billings, Mont. There is this peculiar thing about Ayer’s Hair Vigor — it is a hair food, not a dye. Your hair does not suddenly turn black, look dead and life le ss . But gradually the old color comes back,— all the rich, dark color it used to have. The hairstops falling,too. I I .N ■ M ilt . Over one million dollars in pensions secured b y us f o r o u r c l ie n t s d u r in g t h e six y e a r s la s t past. O v e r JO y e a r s s u c c e s s fu l exoerieiiO Ji. P e r s o n a l a n d p r o m p t a t t e n t i o n t o a ll c l a i m s e n tr u s te d to u s. I f y o u r a t t o r n e y h a s b e e n d i s b a r re d y o u e s n a p p o i n t us t o a c t in y o u r c la im s . F ees fix e d by la w a n d c o n t i n g e n t u p o n s u c ce s s . Taber St W h itm a n C o .. ob -*0 W arder B ld g., W a s h in g t o n , D . C. c cixsxix*. «axsxixsp «xsX* ! AGENTS W ANTED I; Everywhere. Write now. All SranWa. TEN YEARS WITH GYPSIES. I f your d ru ggist cann ot supply you , sen d us ona dollar _____ and i we H w ill express you a bottle. Be sure and js ;iv v e th e name - ---------------------- --------------- ffic i o f your nearest ex press o office. A d d r e ss, J . C . A Y E R CO , Low ell, M ass. R om ance o f an E iflia h Lad W ho L iv e d A m o n g t h e R o m in l e a . A child romance, almost Incredible In these days, Is presented In the restora tion to his friends o f the youth Francis Joseph Holton, of Manor street. W ool wich common, after having been lost for ten years. The police found him a few days ago sleeping on a Drury Lane doorstep, says the London Mall. Taken to the Bow street police court, he stated that he bad run away from a caravan of gypsies, with whom, so far am he could remember, he had lived all his life. At any rate, he knew nothing whatever o f his parents. From the police station he was taken to tbe Catholic home in Westminster bridge road. The paragraphs in the newspapers reporting the boy’ s appearance at Bow street caught the attention of Mrs, Creed, of tt Southbrook street. Shep herd’s Bush. She went to her lodger. Mrs. Mead, exclaiming: “ You have often said your little brother, aged 5. was lost ten years ago. Here's a case o f a boy 15 who has escaped from gypsies. You ought to follow this up.” The result was that the boy was Identified by a small birthmark ou bis face and a scar on the top o f his head, the result o f a fall before be left borne. Sister and father and friends agreed that he was the boy who had suddenly disappeared on March 31, 1892. When Interviewed at his father’s home in Manor street. W oolwich, the lad spoke clearly and readily o f his sojourn of nearly eleven years with the gypsies. But as to his parents and his childhood his mind is an utter blank. "There were seven o f us In the cara van.” said the lad, "the buaband and wife, three daughters, a son and my self. W e traveled up and down the country, making and selling brushes here, snaring hares and rsbblts there, going Into Kent for the bop-picking and fruit-gathering seasons, pitching onr van on commons and by tbe r.iad- slde la lonely parts, visiting large towns like Birmingham and Manches ter. and I had a hard time o f It always. “ No. the gypsies' fare does not con sist, as people seem to think, of rump steaks and hosts o f good things. They gave me a rough time. My food was generally bread and cheese and water all the week, and a share o f hare or rabbit or other flesh food on Sundays Their living was but little better than mine. “They never spoke any Romany— nothing but English. It was hard work most o f the time, and my share was poor food and a thrashing when I did not work hard enough for them. We all worked at the hop-picking, but tbe man took all the money. At last I saw nothing to keep me with them, so 1 wahabert my opportunity and got quietly away. “ I have often been round this way with the gypsy caravan. Sometimes we came quite near my home. I used to come to these very barracks over here and beg some bread, little think ing I was close to my father’ s home." N o t H e r O n ly RAMBLER. OLDSNOBILE. WAVERLY * TOLEDO • AutotcoHki, S500 up. RAMBLER, IMPERIAL. MONARCH. CRESCENT It BARNES Bicycles. )20 and upwards. L MOTORCYCLES. Send for catalogues. * Their Boasts. F R E D T . M E R R IL L C Y C L E CO. Portland, Oregon. Firet Boy— My father's going to have a horseless carriage. Second Ditto— H uh! That’ e noth ing! We’ ve had a coallese furnace at our houee all winter.” — Boston Tran script. it Tacoma T . B r e a k in R a w S h o a l , A lw ays sh ake in A llens F oot-k ase, a powder. I t cures c h ilb la in s, d am p , sw eatin g, achin g, sw ollen feet. Cures C orns en d B un ions. At a ll d ruggists end shoe stores, 2f>c. D on ’t accept an y substitute. S em ple m ailed F U E L . Addrees A lle n 8 . OLmstead, Ie R o y , N . V 3) DR. C. BEE WO WONDERFUL HOME TREATMENT Couldn’t Bunco Him. Grocer— I ’ ll give you 5 cents a bead lor that load of cabbage, Uncle Josh. Uncle Josh— I ain’ t got no picter uv me makin’ enny sich dicker ez that. ] I kin git 7 cents deown tew th ’ segar facktry, b’ goah! “ T h e K le a n , K o o l K it c h e n K in d ’ ' o f s t o v e * | m a k e n o sm o k e , s m e ll, s o o t , a sh es, o r e x c e s s iv e | h e a t . A lw a y s l o o k fo r t r a d e m a rk . Trolleys Beat Steam Roads. Tbe statement is made that in Mae* sachusetts last year (cur times as many passengers were carried by electric cars as on tba steam roads, says the Iron Age. Of course that was due chiefly to the deDse city traffic, hut still the city street car systems were pretty complete seven years ago. The trolley passenger business, however, has doubled since that time, while the steam passenger business has actually declined. Seattle ¿XfXDC« O®®® ®®®® ®®®® (sxsxsxa) •) j j i | T h is w on derfu l C hi nese d o c to r is ca lled great b ecause he cures p eop le w ith ou t opera tion that are g iv en up to die. H e cu res with those w on d erfu l Chi nese herbs, roots, buds, b arks and v egeta b les that are entirely un k n ow n to m ed ica l sci en ce in this c o u n tr y . T h rou g h th e use o f those h a rm less re m e d ie s this Famous d o c to r know s ih e a ctio n ol o v e r 600 d ifferen t rem edies, w hich he s u c ce s s fu lly uses In differen t diseases. He ttuaraniees to cu re cata rrh, asthm a, lung, throat, rh eu m a tism , nervousness, stom a ch , liv er, k id n e y s, e t c .; has h u n d red » o f testim on ials. C h a rg es m oderate. Call and see him . P atients o u t o f the c it y w rite ior b la n k s and circu la rs. S en d 4 ce n ts in stam ps. C O N S U L T A T IO N F R K K . ADDRESS THE C.GEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE GO. 1J2>, Third S t .. Portland, Oregon. g r ir M e u u o u paper. V ^ E I T C F ,rm *n en O , C utM s o fit, o r d w t o u i m s F la w i l U r l i n l lor'« n . o f i ' r k)ia«',QrflW t H i m Aartonr. S«nd for F K B E 8 ‘i-O O tru l b o t ti..n d ttm t *• Ua.B. U.KLINB.LM. taiA rch au.P uiU d.lobi^i’w Fallowing a Prescription. Larry— How did Murphy break his arm? Denny— Following the doctor’ s pre scription. Larry— Phwat? Denny— Y is; it blew out av th’ win dow, and Murphy w iot either it. For forty year’s Pirn's Cure for Con sumption has' cured coughs and colds. At druggists. Price 25 cents. D rillin g m a ch in e ry . O ver fo r ty differen t sty les o f m a ch in es fo r W a ter, Gas and M ineral P rospect ing. S team or h orse pow er. W e h andle the K e lly A- T a n n e y h lll C o.’ s m a ch in ery , and fu ll lines o f re- ; pairs ca rried in stock . W e a lso fu rn ish gasolin e en gines to run this m ICblnery, Our m a ch in es a re j faster, stron ger and easier .o operate than a n y o th e r J m a ch in e on th e m a rk et. Thousands are In sne- i c ssful operation . H B IK K S O N M A ( H I N E H Y iC O ., G en era l A g en ts, foot o f M orrison s tr e e t, j P ortla n d , Ore. S end lor F ree Illustra ted Catolog. Have a Purpose. The man without a purpose is like a 1 ship without a rudder—a waif, a noth ing a no-man. Have a purpose in life, and, having it, throw such strength of mind and muscle into your work as God has given you. WITH NERVES ______________________________ _ P. N . U . jw No. 2 3 — 1 0 0 3 . H E N w i lt i n g to a d v e r tise r s pleaa e m e n tio n t h i s p a p e r. UNSTRUNG AND THAT ACHE HEADS W IS E W O M E N BROMO - S E L T Z E R TARE TRIAL BOTTLE lO CENTS. L oos. T h . w idow Slinond* bad appeared be fore Squire Benson with one complaint after another. Thlz time ihe accused one o f her neighbors o f stealing two duck*. “ I missed them from the duck pond yesterday,” she said, plaintively, “ an’ this morning, square, I'm Jest as sure ns I'm standing here Mint I saw them lu Harr'et Untw's yard. They had a different look from her own ducks.” “ O, nonsense!" said the squire. “ Mrs. W Shaw Is as honest as the sun, and you know It! Why, I’ ve got half a dozen dneka In my yard this minute that arc exaetljr like youral” "W ell, square.” said the widow, lugubriously, “ these two aren't the first nor the only ones I've missed th is 1 summer, but you know I never was one to make complaint* till I'm sure o f my | grouDd.” — Youth’s Companion. ..S c a r c e ly a D a y .. r a m e s b n t w e a re c a ll e d u p o n t o p e r fo r m pom e d i ff ic u l t d e n t a l o p e r a t io n t h a t i* th e d i r e c t r e s u lt o f n e g le c t in g t h e te e tn . W e c a n n o t u r g e t o o m r o n g ly t h e b e n e fit a n d e c o n o m y o f c o n s u lt i n g a den tin e at t h e v e r y flra tH ign o f t«x.th t r o u b le . At th e Btart t h e s e t r o u b le s a r e c o r r e c t e d q u ic k ly a n d at s m a ll <■ »at. « Mir m et h o d s a te p a in le s s a n d o u r w o r k g u a r a n t e e d B o th ’ p h o n e s : C r e g o n S o u t h -t-iyi; C o lu m b ia :* «. O ften e v e n in g » t ill k. S u n d a y * ir o n i V to U . Ur. 1' i*. IS E E R O S . , Dentists. rn. 3». 21 m , m , 2U..LI, h i , 8. A Cor. T h ird Mid W ash in gton sU . P O R T L A N D . n K K O IIX . THE FAIRBANKS-MORSE ENGINES A R B O P B R A T E D O N GAS, GASOLINE, DISTILLATE OR CRUDE OIL Houle I . (Shortened. By making Galway. Ireland, thg em- barking point and sailing 1.81C miles direct to St. John's. N. F , and using railroads thence to New York. British shippers expect to cut one day from the time o f classing the Atlantic, *e- cording to a report made by United States Consul Mahin, at Nottingham, England. A m e r i c a n s In P a l e s t i n e . Jerusalem la greatly now with Americans. crowded There Is a woman In town promf.es to make woman o f 50 like women o f 30. We wish a would come along able to make o f 30 look like men o f 30. Just who look man men Remember that a great many good things cost more than they are worth. I j | 1 ; Gnu Be sinned in ven unii. o second nom im eli Can Be stopped in o second noi Running N lone y Earner N leney sever sunne Economicoi sue Ever Reccy First lid Start Its. 310 l i r t i t Strut 13S S i. U s ásgalas St PORTLAN D. OR. B AX r K A X c i n r o , C A f.. I.O B A N f . M . K I , C A L .