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About Junction City bulletin. (Junction City, Or.) 189?-1901 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 31, 1901)
SURE TOTOLLOW If the Blood is impoverished Diseases Which Often Puzzle Doctors are Inevitable. ; JVos. T4 Trlbun, Wibiitt Civ, Jt Phvilclani art often Biissled bv to ailment that does not y Is Id to ths usual remedies, patient are canned much suffering and expense while expert,, nieuti art being triad upon them, when iu many cases the Mat of the dlaorder in in the blood. If thli vlul Hold is impoverished dWease it sure to follow. Itulld op the blood, the diseased part 1 nourished and stiengthened, and health result. This is the elm pie tile tory of what often appears to be a com plicated case. Mr. Ksm Kd wards, the well-known tnercntot of Webster City, low, pnaaed throogh toon an exper j en re. II mvi: "1 have always believed thnt my trouble was doe to the impoverished, rendition of my blood. About lour yars ego my ankle began to swell and call me great paiu. 1 am quite heavy and an 1 was om toy feet constantly 1 soffired intensely. Finally the swell ing became ao bad that 1 oonld uot walk and for a week I wai confined to my chair or IxmI. Three doctor treated mm titlfe AA tIAft al IT A fit s aWitVe "1 first heard of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills (or J'ale People through an ad vertlsement . in a religious paper. .About all months ago 1 begun taking the pills and 1 felt good molts from the first box. I continued taking them aa directed . for nearly five months. I ata now 42 years old and am the picture of health. I am will ing to Ml the world that Dr. Williams' Pink I'ills cured oie and 1 know they will core others if they ars given a thorough trial. "Hardly a day passes that I do not tell some one of the benefits I have re reived from Dr. Williams' I'iuk Tills for Tale I'eople. for think that any one suffering from any disorder of the blood or nnrve should give them a thorough trial.' signed, KZKA KD WARDS. Subscribed an-l sworn to before me this 23rd day of November. 1000. Willis G. Itonner. (Seal) Notary Public At all dragglat or direct front Dr. Williams Medtolne Co., Schenectady, N. y., 60 cents per box; 6 boxes, f 2.60. . i i i i. i For ths Exposition Cutiti New hotels with accommodations for thousands of poeats are building near toe Pan-American exposition grounds at Itoffab). ' i ; .:.. : TU VUHK A IULU lit Dill I' A 1 Take Laxative iiromo Quinine Tab lets. All dri'ggltts refund the money if It falls to cure. K. W. Grove's sig nature Is on each box. 8 So. logic , Bystander Poor follow I One of his wounds is fatal, I believe Policeman So It Is; but the other wan am t, so lie naa an even ouance. Don't Aept a Substitute! When you 'k for fa-rarei. b ture yon rt th -enulus a-rets Csuly Cub ritcf Don't accept fraudulent substitutes, Imitations or coautortvlut Trained librarians Scare. According to Herbert Putnam, con gressional librarian, libraries are grow log all ont of proportion to librarians. He directs atteution to the faot that whereas there are now some 8,000 11 barries in the oonntry, there are not more than 600 or 600 especially trained librarians. Stonm tho Dough and Work Off tho Gold. Laxative Uromo-Qulnine Tablets core a cold in one day. No core, No Pay. Prioe 25 cents. Not Much left. Lady Where is my trunk? Baggage Man I couldn't find any trunk, mora, but I've got the handle with the check on. I Comfbpf ing i Nothing so surely breaka up the enjoy menu of win tar ss attacks of Nothing to turely cure the trouble as ii St. Jacobs Oil j !$cience "' . At - Nearly every class of clouds attains a loftier altitude between tbe hours of four sod eight p. to, than at any other port of the day, whereas between noon and four o'clock they fall a trifle below the average. In tbe L'ultcd states we have, besides tho turkey four other tolrda which are ranked high In the list of the largest birds.' They are the beautiful golden eagle, tbe national bald headed eagle, the great wild swan known specifically as tho w hooper, and the California con dor, whkh Is almost as large as bis Booth American brother. The Ural Mountains are the world's great source of supply for platinum. Ninety-live per cent of tbe total product of that metal comes from the Ural re gion, There haa been a notable in crease In tbe production recently. In mm tho Ural furnished 13,242 pounds. In 185)0 their total output wan only 0.303 pounda. Hut In consequence of the demand for this rare metal, the value has luvreased, together with the quantity. Experiments are being made on tbe Wannsce Railroad between Berlin and Zebh-udorf, Germany, to determine the pmie value of electric propulsion as a substitute for steatn. Tbe train used consists of eight ordinary cars and Is provided with an electric motor-car at each end, the advantage of this ..ar rangement beiug that the reversing of tbe train at tbe terminals of the Jour" ney becomes unnecessary, y Thus far tbe electric power baa proved " to" b about fifteen per cent cheaper than steam-power. According to a recent consular re port from Magdeburg, Germany, tbe production of beet-sugar In tbe world Is now twice aa great as that of cafiTf sugar. This victory of tho beet over the cane Is ascribed to the Influence of the science of chemistry In developing the ludustry of lHet-ugar-maklng. This Influence Is especially exerted In Germany, where more than a thou sand cheuilsts are exclusively employed In the sugar factories. Tbe manufac ture of beet-sugnr has taken a sudden start In Fpaln since she lost her col onies In the war with the United States. In this country east of tbe Rocky Mountains the lowermont type of cloud, the stratus, floats at an average height of 2,700 feet In winter and 3.SO0 feet In summer. Roth in winter and summer tbe basei of cumulus clouds keep t a ineun elevation of 3,000 feet, but the domes sometimes reach a height of nine thousand oi ten thousand feet The nimbus, or storm cloud, varies from 0,000 to 0,200 feet The average height of the cirrus In summer Is thirty-three thousand feet, and in winter thirty one thousand. But this Is occasionally exceeded by three or four miles. In September, 1800, cirrus clouds were seen at an elevation of Aty-Blx thou sand feet or over ten miles. One of the most striking spectacles revealed by telescopes I that of tho Great Nebula In Orion. In the complex ity of Its glowing streams, spirals and strangely shaped masses, Intercepted by yawning black gaps and sprinkled over with stars arranged In suggestive groups and lines. It has few rivals In the heavens. . Tbe impression of aston ishment made by the sight of this nebula Is heightened by knowledge of Its enormous size. Tbe entire solar sys tem would appear as a tiny speck be side It. Yet this tremendous aggrega tion of nebulous clouds and starry swarms has been proved by tho re searches of the late Professor Keelcr of the Lick Observatory to be flying away from the earth and tbe sun at the rate of eleven miles In every second. But m vast Is its distance that one hun dred years reveal no visual effects of the great nebula's swift retreat. If it were near by It would seem to become rapidly smaller. THEFT OF A GREAT RIVER. How the Pnube I Robbed Through the ltireralon of It Tributaries. Geologists have long known that one stream may appropriate the waters of another by gradually encroaching upon Its watershed and diverting its trlbu tarlcs one by one. This kind of theft Is at least frank and open. ,It takes place on the surface, and every one at least every geologist can see what Is going on. Tho river Danube, according to expert authority, Is suffering from a more Insidious form of robbery, by which the Rhine profits, part of the Danube's water being drawn off under ground Into the Rhine valley.' And this may be of great Importance to future dwellers of the Danube, for If It Is not stopped It may end by causing the river below the point of abosrptlon to be come permanently dry. Says M. E. A. Mattel, writing on this subject In La .Geographic (Tarls): "In a recent geological work Prof. Albrecht Penck has called atten tion to tho subterranean drainage of a part of the waters of the Danube by which, curiously enough, the Rhine basin profits. Between Donauschlngen (Rrlon) and Tuttllnger (Wurtemburg) r ttt fissures in tbe limestone formation draw off tbe waters of tbe Danube underground a phenomenon observed as long ago as 1710 by F. W. Breulnger. This writer suggested that tbe water thus drawn off reappeared In the springs of Aach, a little town near Lake Constance ... , and bis hy pothesis was verified by Kuop in 1877 by tbe use of flourescein. Still more recently the writer tells us,, other instances of subterranean ."capture" have been noted by which part of the waters one river are di verted Into .tho drainage basla of an other. Now It Is remarked by Profes sor Pcnck that unless this loss of Dan ube water Is stopped in some way It will go on Increasing gradually until It will fake the whole of the river's sup ply, leaving the lower river bed quite dry, ss It is left occasionally now, ac cording to Quenstedt, : In years of drouth. Then tbe gradual deepening of the Danulie valley will end at the point of absorption. Below Monringen will extend a dry valley while above a "blind valley" will be drained by a sub terranean river. This Is not a fl'gbt of the Imagination, for tbe same thing has happened to the river Folba In Istrla and the Itecca, near Trieste. The au thor adds that these and other cases, notably In Dalmatla, show what threat ens the Danube valley unless man In tervenes. The length of time that elapses before the reappeorance of the water at Aach (sixty hours) shows that It must make a long circuit, or that It encounters great ohxtaclcs under ground. It Is noted by M. M artel that Professor Penck's book goes far to con firm a theory advauced by himself that subterranean circulation of water Is HONOR THE SOLDIER' DEAD. I Kew York WtlJ Bml)d m Flttla Moan j -tnevt tt lpr cd Beroe New York is to have snotber monu-' ment It will be a magnificent shaft, tbe corner stone of which has just been laid to tbe memory of the soldier dead of the State. It will be located six blocks west of Mount Tom, at SOtb street The design accepted deports froin the usual shaft form and is really a "Temple or ranie." 'ine tae, or granite. Is surmounted by a capped columnar structure of white Vermont marble. The monument will rise nine- ' ty-six feet above tbe platform and the platform Is five feet above tbe ground. The columns are thirty-six feet, high and the dl'vieter of the structure over the column Is thirty-four feet Bonds for the construction of tbe monument for which New York City pays, were authorized In 1803,' but nothing was ac tually done until 1807, when in tbe fall of that year the ' architects were chos- M 2, MS I ; Bljj lei lor ths Pn-American. One of the sttractions of tbe Oregon exhibit st tbe Pan-American exposi tion will be a log 80 feet long and 13 fet in diameter. This is tbe biggest log tbe railroads : could conveniently transport. To accornmodste the 80 foot log, with the diameter of 13 feet, in tfio forenry bollding at the exposi tion, it will be secersary to pot extra braces under that part of "the floor of tbe forestry building. Ths Nicaragua Csiul, When built, will prove the. Jink between jrlritjr and niatir ofle. it will provs tl-i!ig to humanity in reieral,iiiiT9V iii( the coudium of'Ute nation, aa Ho tet ter huxiirtt b l'itter df that of the ittdi vidua.1. Nothing to equal tbi remedy baa ever been dtm-overed for all ailment of the tom-h, liver, bowels and kidnera. It will quickly clean- tba bl(Mxl and fiarteti the spttie. hee that our Private Rev enue bump cover the neck of the bottle. Tea Huge Dynamos. In the central station of the Niagara Falls Power Company there are 10 huge dynamos in operation, each one of which generates 6,000 electrical borne power. Thus under tbe roof of this magnificent building Is a total de velopment of 60.000 horse power, which is said to be the largest amount of electricity generated Kinder a single roof in tbe world. KEW TOKK'S SOLDI Kits M0HCMK5T. en. Tbe cost of the monument will be about f 190,000. - TIia nrosnn i 1ta tf fhtt Vaatar Vrtrlr gradually taking the place of surface I monuInt the fourtb whlch ha, en urniufu, in iimefiioce regions. iue Literary Digest. FEAR IN POWERS OF DARKNESS. agreed upon." First was chosen tbe plaza at Mb avnue and 50th street at the main entrance to Central Park, where the Metropolitan Club, called tbe Millionaires', would bare been on one band and the late home of Cornelius Vanderbllt on the other. But tbe judg ment of those who selected this site was overturned, and then It was de- Panic LlabU la th fcllent Wstcbe Not . Felt la Daylight. The thougbtlesa friend cries In toast ing you: "Ilere'a happy days." I re sent It In daytime a man may make himself happy or mUerable; but In tbe cJde(. to bu,1(1 tbe monument at the uara watcues or ine nigui, wuen atone with bis conscience and his devil then Is the time when be wants help. The ' toast should be: "Here's happy night." All men of Imagination are capable of fear. The mot dangerous fear is panic. Tbe soldier who Is caught off his guard may be In a state of panic for minutes or hours, but when recovered Is as brave aa a lion. 5 ' I witnessed a strange scene on tbe Manhattan Reach Railroad several years ago. Trains loaded to the guards were run In sections from Sbeepshead Bay to Ray Ridge. Darkness bad set in. The first section stopped without warning near Parkville, and passengers In the rear car thought the engine fol lowing was about to crash Into them. The panic lasted several seconds. It was all pervading. It seemed as If there were strange beings in the air spreading an uncontrollable fear among men and women. There was one simul taneous movement, aa If the electric force In nature had shocked the entire crowd Into mechanical action, this ac tion leading to a headlong rush forward over the backs of chairs and vain efforts to leap through open windows., A man who had faced death a hun dred times, who had lived with the riff raff of humanity without once losing his nerve In the slightest degree, who bad Just returned from three years' wandering In the wildest regions of Canada, sat near the front of the car. The panic struck him. He leaped to bis feet and gasped with a palsy of fright Ills companion, who had escaped the contagion, said: "Why, George." It brought him to his senses, and In an other moment he was quieting the crowd by telling It that the engine was standing still. As he resumed his seat he remarked: "I didn't know I could be scared; I feel like a contemptible coward." New York Tress. i northern end of Riverside drive, only a few hundred feet from Grant's monu ment This choice, too, was short-lived, and It gave way to Mount Tom, a huge rock two miles down the drive, near 83d street This site reigned for a while and then finally was chosen tbe present site. TRAVELS AS A TRAMP. Hamlet's Grave. Everywhere the vandals are; but, on the whole says Jacob A. Ulls In the Century, I rather think that Elslnore has turned the tables on them. Hamlet being dead, there had to be a Hamlet's grave, of course. The English tourists demanded it, and in due course of time there appeared & mound on the bluff, marked with a plain granite shaft that bore the name of the melancholy Dane. The relic-hunters chipped It to pieces In one brief season. The hotel-keepers provided another, and it went the same way. When last I stood at Hamlet's grave I beheld It a mighty heap of stones and slag, several cart-loads, My friend, one of thesolld citizens of the town," nodded knowingly at my look of amazement. "We caught up with them at last," he said. "We just have ear ugh carted out from the glass-works every year to fill up the holes they made tbe sea son before; then let them go ahead. Want to go and look at Ophelia's spring?" 1 of Daughter of a Well-to-Do Pennsyl vania Farmer oo a Western To nr. , Somewhere In the West tramping In man's clothes, is the accomplished and highly educated daughter of a Penn ; sj lvauia farmer who is In comforta ble clrcumstsnjes. Susan Shelly -is the name of this eccen tric young woman, and her borne is at York Springs, not far from Harris burg Some time ago she suddenly left home, and tbe next her parents heard of ber Bhe was In a West ern , town, leading the life of a tramp and wearing men's apparel. This Infor mation came from the girl herself, and the young woman added that she had done nothing of 8Csa sbei.lv. wh,ch her parent8 need feel ashamed. Mr, Shelly Is wlll- I ing and able to furnish his daughter funds for comfortable traveling. This Is the girl's second tramping excursion. On a previous occasion she started out In feminine dress, but could not get along welL and so came borne. Then she took to studying the geography and topography of the West and when she felt herself well enough Informed along this line she . suddenly disappeared. Miss Shelly has always been of a cheer ful disposition, and there is no known reason for her extraordinary conduct fit Br atx at Ohio, crrv or Toledo, ( Lvca I'Mvtnr. i Fkakk J. HENtv makes oth that he ts tba aentor perter ot tbe Arm of F. J. Hdiit A Co.. doing buninett in the City oi Toledo, Ccntiiv nl Mte aforetald, and tnt eaid firm will pay tne aunt oi ONK HUNDRED DOL.LAKH for and every cue of Catarrh that cannot be cured by tbe -ue of Haix'a Ctah Cckb. FRANK J. CHENEY fiworn to before me and aubacribed lu my preaence, this iih day of December, A. O. Uw. 1-7 1 A. W. GLEA80N, IZIS Xotarv Public Ball's Catarrh Cure U taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mneoaa surfaces of tbe system. Send for testimonials, free. F. J.CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O. Bold by dnrngims, 7oc Bail's Family fills ars tba beat. T Prevent tlotd-Ups. John W. Hough, an engineer on the Monon road, has patented a device to prevent train bold-c pa. Tbe plan la operated by a secret button in easy touch of tbe engineer, and so located that he can, without being observed, and nnder cover ot the train robber's revolver, touch "the button which will start several whistles blowing, turn on all the lights and fire off any number of guns from the baggage car. Tbia atciiatar Is on every boa of the fenains Laxative BrcmoQuicine Taweu v.. .v... - m ,m mnM atavr Chinese Employed in Mexico. Two bnndred Chineae ate now em ployed in tLe mines of Zacatecas, Mex ico, and are giving such satisfaction that more will be sent tor. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infal lible medecine for ou$hs ami colds. N. W. Samcix, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, I'M). , . .-. : Visitors to the White House. ' A boat 900 persons a day on an aver age visit the . White Honse the year around. Tbe number rises sometimes to 1,500 to 2,000. and the hoars for visitors are not many, being from 10 A. M. to 2 P. M. In spite of this con stant tread the beautiful old gold fig ured capet in the east room looks as ell as when it was pot down, be fare Mr 8. Cleveland let the mansion for her new borne in Princeton. Ballet Dancer at TO. A member of the ballet of the Berlin Opera House has Just retired from ac tive service at the age of 70 years. She had been a member of the corps since 1833. To forestall unseemly Jests about this aged lady's participation In a pro fession whose members have frequent ly been exposed to such Injury, it is well to add that since 186S she has acted Boleiy as an Instructor. During her term of office almost nil the present corps de ballet has been subject to her PROMOTES GOOD DIGESTION. Garfield T?a Is tbe brat remedy for all derangements ot stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels: it Cures Chronle Constipation. Adds That Arc Death to Cholera. Tbe acid of lemons and oranges is tatal to tbe cholera bacillus. Even if placed upon tbe rinds of the fruit the germs will not survive longer than a day. February Ladies' Home Journal. Immigration Into Canada. ' Immigration returna show that 24,000 people settled in Canada in tbe last six months. CASTOR I A For Infanta and Children. Tba Kind Yea HaYa Always Erht A man has the final eonsolation knowing that a woman undertaker will not lay him out. What could ba t torpedo is of grpat value in war, owing Against Submarine Boat. Subinariue boats and torpedoes for use In warfare do not bww to be held In favor by M. De Lanessan, the French Minister of Marine, in spite of the gen erally supposed predilection of the French for such measure of harbor de fense. M. Ie Lanessan is quoted as saying that neltber submarine boat nor worse thon to be dead, and have a wo man lay you out? , Nothing will ever take tbe place of the turkey for a family feast, for the reason that nothing else holds so much "'stufllng." to their limited range of action. No girl has the right to Impose uron the guests at her party by singing, un less she has earned permission by serv ing as many as six kinds of refresh- inents. Bears the Signature of To Purchase Revolutionary Relic A movement is on foot la New York to have the citv trarcbase Faunae's i tavern, the sole revolutionary relio in tbe down town district It was tnero that Washington bade farewell to bis officers on December 4, 1783 an event the llith anniversary of which was recently celebrated in the historioal edifice. ' "' '-'' ' ' Mothers will fiid Mrs. Winslow'a Sooth ing Syrup tbe best remedy to use for tbei.tr Children during the teething period. Borneo and Labuan Postage Stamps In Demand. The value of the stamps sold in Bor neo and Labuan during 1809 was 20, 000, but the postage paid on letters sent from those two colonies never ex ceeds the sum oi 800 a year. Tbe stamps representing the remainder, 19,200, may be presumed to have found their way into albums all over the world. ,