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About Washington County hatchet and Forest Grove times. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1896-1897 | View Entire Issue (July 9, 1896)
W A SH IN G T O N Th. -ElMtrt. M .fn.t-' You th e fre*te»l amount oi good in the ¿Taud at tl»e •*!>*“ • « hJ «»k in g ood’s S arsaparilla Tr*e Blood Purifier. i '» P i l l * » ” A ll dru ijglit», II. to t«k e ,«a «y to operate Cancer Annie May Abbott, the famons "eleo- tric magnet," who*, f.at* of strength created a considerable sensation gome year* ago, is amusing herself now with the strong men of China and Japan. The Japanese wrestlers, whose physical strength is celebrated the world over, were unable to raise Miss Abbott from the floor, while with the tips of her fin gers she neutralized their most strenu ous efforts to lift light objects, such us a cane from a table. The Japanese papers say this is hypnotism, while the Chinese journals accuse her of being in league with the powers of evil. ir the Breast. A. H- Crausby, of 158 Kerr St., phis, Tenu., says that his wife no attention to a small lump which ired in her breast, but it soon tie- a cancer of the worst type, the treatment of physicians, it continued to and grow rapidly, eating two in her breast. The doctors soon pronounced her incurable. A celebrated New York specialist then treat ed her, but she con tinued to grow worse and when informed that both her aunt and grandmother had died from cancer he gave the case up as hopeless. Someone then re commended S.S.S. little hope remained, she it, and an improvement was no- The cancer commenced to heal and she had taken several bottles it entirely, and although sev- have elapsed, not a sign oi has ever returned. Blood Remedy. (guaranteed p u rely vegetable) blood remedy, and never fails Cancer, Eczema, Rheumatism or any other blood disease. books mailed any ad- S w ift Co.. Ga. sss KKMOTK FHOM M E D IC AL HKLP, I onb " cMentisl Is It that yon .h o .lil b. pro- ; ded with Mima reliable Isndly medicine. U nits ter', Stomach Bitter» i< the beat ol Its cm» rem edying thoroughly a» it doe» »uch commou aliment* aa iudieeation, constipation and btllousne»i and attordlns m ( . and «isn-dy help in malarial fa sea, rheumatism and inac tivity of the kidney* The Cuban bonds are made payable ten years after the evacuation of Cuba by the Spanish forces. I shall recommend Piso's Cure for Con sumption far and wide—Mrs. Mulligan, Plum stead, Kent, England. Nov. 8, 1895. I K U T T ’ N SCHOOL F O R BOYS Will commence its sixth year August 4tb. It is a first-class Home School and pre pares hoys for admission to any Univer sity, or Technical School, or tor active business. Full information and catalogue can be had bv addressing IK A G. HO ITT, P h . D.. B u k l ik o a m k , C a l . DEAFNESS CANNOT It K CURED By local application*, a* they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There i* onlv one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitution al remedies. Deafness is caused by au inflamed condition of th** mucous lin ing of Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound of imperfect hearing, ami when it is entirely closed deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to it* normal condition, hearing w ill be destroyed forever, nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We w ill giv e One Hundred Dollars for any case o f Deafness (caused by catarrh) that caii not be cured by H all’s Catarrh Cure. Bend for circulars free. K. J. OHKNKY A CO., Toledo, O. 8old by Druggists, 75c. H a ll’s Fam ily Tills are the best. F I T S . —All fits stopped free by D r. K l in e 's G re a t N e r v e R e s to re r. No tit* after tt e first day’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $-’ 00 trial bottle free to Fit cases, send to Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Philadelphia. Pa. T by G kbmka for breakfast. ixbak “■ BIAS VELVETEEN SKIRT BINDINQ rainproof and sheds water. It —like th e other S. H. & M.’s and ot turn gray like the cheap kinds, pn your travelingand sea side gowns If your dealer will not supply you we will, bifcowiny labels and materials mailed free. pe Dressmaking Made Easy," a new 72 page t Miss Emma M. Hooper, of the Ladies' [Journal, giving valuable points, mailed for L A M. Co., P . O. Boa 59«, N. Y . C ity. AZER AXLE CREASE I THE WORLD. baring qualities are unsurpassed,actually lug two boxes o f any other brand. Free plmsl Oils. < »*T T f f K U B N U I N C . FORH a l K B Y OREGON AND rASMINI row >1 K u ril AN and Dealers generally. ¿NTS WANTED, Ladies or Gentlemen, W town, for one o f the best selling articles [Tied by every man, woman and child, ricks P it u it a r y T o o t h H ru ah w it h tongue* < I«* h 11 i n g \ 11 H «'h m e iit. id by all the leading physicians and Bend 1 5c. for sample. Retails for 25c WILT. A F IN K CO , D Market Street, San Francisco, Cal. IS. WINSLOW’S S 0 s 0 vTnH u'pNQ: FOR C H IL D R E N T E E T H IN G l i l e b j t l l llr n f(1 iti. 85 O a ta a hattla. , Gladness Comes ith a better understanding o l the W transient nature of the many phys ical ills, which vanish before proper ef forts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts— rightly directed. There is comfort in the knowledge, that so many forms of sickness are not due to any actual dis ease, hut simply to a constipated condi tion of the system, which the pleasant family laxative, Syrup of Figs, prompt ly removes. That is why it is the only remedy with millionsof families, and is everywhere esteemed so highly by all who value good health. Its beneficial effects are due to the fact, that it is the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness without debilitating the organs on which it acts. It is therefore all important, in order to get its bene ficial effects, to note when you pur chase, that you have the genuine arti cle, which is manufactured by the Cali fornia F ig Syrup Co. only and sold by all reputable druggists. I f in the enjoyment of good health, and the system is regular, laxatives or other remedies are then not needed. If afflicted with any actual disease, one may be commended to the most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxativO, one should have the best, and with the well-informed everywhere, Syrup of Figs stands highest and is most largely *ed and gives most general satisfaction. COUNTY n A T C IIE T . anra. The Sultan of Turkey has con- tribute«l a particularly fine collection of treasures associated with his prede cessors on the Turkish throne, whose Ton» Linton, who lias just create«! a sovereignty was acknowledged in Hun new cycle record for the hour by geing gary. Side by side with this rich <lis- thirty miles and 214 yards at the Velo play of bygone times is a no 1 «* sh exten- drome de la Heine, in 1‘aris. is an Eng lishman with a record. Many long distance riders have been trying for some time to crowd thirty miles into one hour’s riding, but Linton is the first to accomplish it. A. A. chase was the next nearest, he having ridden twenty-nine miles and ¡UK) yards with in the hour at tin* Wood Greeu track In England on May 19. Liu ton's great effort was paced, of course, ami by the celebrated English Gladiator team. It was timed by A. Moore and E. G ir ard, and was witnessed by such well- known cycling authorities as Leon llamelle. President of the Union Cy clist«*; Paul Bernard. Spoke ami Bad- tiel, besides an army of enthusiasts. FORKHTRY PAVILION. Linton went at his task in a most «le- sive illustration of the chief features terinined manner and began record- in the life «if modern Hungary. More breaking almost at the start. At the than 17«» different pavilions of spacious seventh kilometer he had beaten Bar size are «tevote«! to tl»<* <*xhibitiou of all den’s record, and then fell the records mat Is most representative of the coun of Bouhours and Chase. During all try. and. indeed, of its whole social ami his ride he kept up a furious pace, political life. llis pacemakers could not g<> fast enough to keep out of his way. and he H ig h W o o d s o f T r o p ic a l A m e r ic a . was ready for another hour’s ride Of the High Woods, the dense prime when his first hour was completed. val forests of tropical America, many, Linton's ride all the way up t«> thirty from Humboldt downward, have writ miles was remarkable, and the record ten. and written well; yet mere words can never ade«]uately render their grand, mysterious beauty. The brush, in the hand of genius, might succeed: the pen must inevitably fall. It is of little service to tell of giant stems ris ing to a height of 20U f«*et or more be fore they put forth their strong, inter lacing branches. The bare statement of the fact conveys no idea of tlie mas sive nobility, the columnar dignity and; grace of their trunks. They shoot straight upward in grand and crowded array, the pillars of a «lease roof of dark-green foliage; and from their branches hang festoons of bush rope, in strenuous though Invisible combat, one with the other, to reach the soil, even as the great trees are in similar combat to force their way up Into the sunlight and the air So thickly matted is the roof of branch and leaf, «>f pendu is Interesting. He did his first five lous rope and ivy. that the light is dim. miles in 9:42. ten in 10:30 1-5, fifteen in You may travel for days and never 29:33 2-5, twenty in 39:29 2-5, twenty- see the sun save for slanting shafts live in 49:34 3-5. and thirty In 59:4b 1-5. and burnished gold that pierce the in Chase, iu his run at Wood Green, occu terstices of this natural «‘eiliug; or for pied 1:01:46 1-5 In going thirty miles, occasional clearances where some old his record for the hour being twenty- giant of the forest has fallen, crushing nine miles and 300 yards. down all the weaker trees that could not withstand its weight. The atmos H U N G A R Y ’S M ILLE N N IU M . phere is almost Intolerably hot and A Bruve People Celebrate T h e i r dank. The ground is encumbered with 1,000th B irth d ay . a «lense undergrowth of bush, making Just a thousand years ago the fore progress painfully slow, even over an fathers of modern Hungary, who ha«l Indian trail. The silence, too. Is as wandered westward from their origi oppressive as the heat. Just before day nal home In the region of the Altai break, iu the ten minutes or so of half mountains, established themselves In light, the forest will resound with the the country which has since borne their cries of monkeys and the notes of birds. name and laid the foundations of the T im e to Go. Hungarian state. For some months to The late Sir Richard Burton was ex come the Hungarian nation will be en gaged in the appropriate celebration ploring an unknown corner of Afghan o f the 1,000th year of its history. Fetes istan once, and had adopte<l the «11s- and congresses of all kinds are to be .guise of a Mohammedan fakir. He held at all the chief centers o f the coun played his part so well In one village try at intervals throughout the next that the inhabitants formed a very high few months, ami great events o f Hun idea of his sanctity. Naturally, he garian history are to be celebrated by was pluming himself on his success, the er«*«*tion o f many monuments. when the elders came privately to him The chief feature of the commemora one night and begged him to go away tion Is the great Millennial exhibition at once. which was opened nr Budapest recent “ Do not the people like me?” asked ly by tb«* Emperor-King Francis Jo Burton, in great surpris«*. seph. and which forms an elaborately “ Indeed they do.” was the reply; faithful presentment of the gradual “ they were considering whether It development of the Hungarian race would not be a good thing to possess from a state of barbaric simplicity to your tomb, they are so enchanted with the complex civilization of the present your holiness.” Sir Richard made the time. Most of the great historical best of his speed away. buildings are reproduced on an exten Don't let your troubles blind you to sive scale in a rich medley ot different architectural styles — Romanesque, th«* fact that your neighbor’s sympathy Gothic, Renaissance, and their aucces- ir, two thirds curiosity. T H IR TY M ILES AN HOUR. That la th e R e c o r d M a d e by T o m L i n t o n « an K n u l i s h H i c y c li at . R AILRO A D U niqu e Show C O LLIS IO N G iven M ADE A P U B L IC Uses P a in e ’s C e le ry C om p o u n d in His F a m ily , an d S tro n g ly R e c o m m e n d s It. Major-General Birney, who is now, self. it searches ont the hidden causes at the age of 75, practicing law and of debility, neuralgia, rheumatism and doing departmental work in Washing those constantly reourring heudaohsa. ton, in a letter to W ells & Richardson The worn-ont nervous tissues are in vigorated. Paine's oelery compound Company, says: "M y w ife has been taking the is the one successful nerve regulator Paine's celery compound for some time that cures disease without any poasi past, and is so much pleased with it bility of a retnrn of the trouble. Take Paine's oelery oompound this that she wishes me to express to yon her high opinion of its merits. She very day. It won’ t do to postpone get thinks it is the best remody she has ting strong and well nntil you have a I vacation. Do as thousands of others ever tried.” have done to their great joy, taks General Birney’ s hearty acknowledg Paine's celery compound! It w ill in ment of the great and lasting good that vigorate at once your impoverished his fam ily has received from Paine’s . nervous system. oelery compound is repeated, in sub- I f yon really want to get well, read sttnee, in oountless testimonials, w rit the letters recently published from snob ten in the same gratefnl spirit and 1 men as Justice Powers, Congressman sent from every part of the country. Grout, Congressman Meredith of V ir Don’ t sit with folded arms and do ginia, Assistant United States Attorney nothing toward getting rid of poor John C. Capers, Congressman Wilbur health. Drive out all impurities from of New York, Congressman Bell, your blood; build up the vigor of the Lieut. M cAllister, Congressman Nail body with Paine’ s celery oompound— and many others who are fully as oare- the one remedy that has kept all its ful’ of what they recommend. Th* promises in the past. perusal of a few of these personally The tired nerves and brain need jnst signed, hearty testimonials of Pains'* the sort of nourishment that this great oelery compound w ill give any one a dear idea of what this wonderful rem invigorator is able to supply. Now is the time when Paine’ s oelery edy is doing in every state in tb* oompound, aided by the favorable in | Union, and in every oity and village. It is making people well. fluences of the season, fairly o tdoes it 'VMUliMi EXH IBITIO N. a t C o l u m b u s , O hi o. — E n g i n e s U n d e r Stcuni Das h I n t o E a c h O t h er , The population of the world averages 109 women to every 100 men. Eight- ninths of the sudden deaths are those • M ? s. LIVER PILLS of m a le s .__________ _______ • r a th e One T h in g to u«e. Only One fo r a D os e. The joints endure much use because Sold by Pruggleta at 2 5 c . • b©* Bampl.'s mailed fr e e . Addrcs» they are constantly lubricated by an oil Dr. Uotanko Klcd. Co. Phil*. I'm. secreted by glands specially adapted to that purpose. _____________ " estimated that it takes two Mrs. May brick's mother says in a or the water from the G ulf of 1 to travol from Florida to the New Orleans letter that she w ill work for her daughter's release until she dies. kf Norway. MAJOR-GENERAL BIRNEY. Full Head of FOR PE0P1.E THAT ARE SICK or ‘ ‘ J u s t D o n ’ t Feel W e l l , ” Si IX Prices of ail commodities have been reduced except tobacco. paooooooooo©oo*ooo«ooooo*oooooooooaoo®o*©**®*g 250,000 11 Battle A x ” is up to date. L o w Price; H igh Grade; Delicious Flavor. For 10 cents you get Ta Os Given Away thi9 year in valuable articles to smokers of Blackwell’s Genuine D urham Tobacco »B est You will find one coupon in side each z-ouucc bag, and two coupons inside each «-ounce bsg. Buyabsg, resdthecoupon obaccoMade| a- 1 see howu>^nnn-; — J At Columbus, Ohio, twenty-five thou sand people saw two monster locomotives deliberately put in terrific collision. The collision was arranged by the Hocking Valley Railroad Company as a means ot drawing people to their new park. The machines were old-fashioned and worn out Neither bad been used for some time and both were early candidates for the scrap pile A *m* " expense put them in safe condition for the purpose A spe cial side trsck a mile long had been pre pared and the loeomotivea, with four old freight cars attached to each and tinder rail steam, were atarted, one from each end. It is estimated that they were going at the rate of fifty miles an hour when they met The crash waa heard for miles. The two monsters were of about equal weight and when they atruck they monnt- ed up in tb* air fully twenty-five feet. almost twice as much “ Battle A x " as you do of any other high The freight ear* piled up »n a wreck an der then* and the wreck of the engines fell hack upon them, u hissing. smoking mass. (- Dummy brakemen and engineers had | lK*en placed on the trains to make it all the more realistic, and many woim-n faint ed. supposing they were real men and megm y y y ver7 remarnaDie ana certaiR could not get «iff. As the clouds of dust j Y / V / C J |\x i I N J rnlief given woman by MOORE’S and steam obscured the wreck there was V v ^ R E V E A L E D R E M E D Y ha« given a tremendous shout, then, when the es it the name of Woman’■ Friend. It is I ’ “"l / —\ uniformly sncce«#* caping steam subsided the people clam ful in relieving the backaches, headaches HH C. J 1 and w e a k n e « « bered over the wreckage and every loon# which burden and shorten a woman’s life. Thousand* of piece of iron that could be found was women testify for it. It will give health and strength carried away as a relic. Kinetoscopic and and make life a pleanme. For sale by all druggists. yt I eidoloscopic views of the wreck were Ilf h u m o n P n n u awn kamnim taken by experts. Chief Clerk Thornaa I ’eck. of the general ticket agent’a office S U R E C U R E f o r P IL E S waa the victim of the only accident. A bolt from the wrecked engine flew about U o . » — a « h « i r i 4 p c e iii- t * « . . • • « .• , * .. . , ire« 100 yarda to where he was standing and, M ». U r y u t e U t r M l i . I 'i. lis - . f * - striking him on the leg, breaking it in two placet. i N. P. V. U. No. 667.-8. F. N. V He. 78* grade plug.