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About Junction City bulletin. (Junction City, Or.) 189?-1901 | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1901)
MM. FSA CAftTK MarriU Street, A mtir)r, tliM, T7;a lottoi ahaulti ourry faith ontfOonvlotion to thoftoartj of olSSlok Women, "1 suffered with Inflammation and falling of tho womb anil other diw agreeable femalo weaknesses, I had bad apetla every two werk tlikt would last f rum eight to leu days and would have to iro to bed. 1 ilw) had head ache and backache moat of the time and auch bearing down palna t rould hardly walk acroa tho room at tiroes, 1 doctored nearly all the time for built two years and seemed to grow worms all thn time until laat September 1 wan obliged to take ray bed, and tha doctor thought an operation waa tha only thing that would help me, but tbla I rcfuaed to hare done, "Then a friend advlned me to try tha Plnkham medicine, which I did, and afUir oalng tho flrt bottle I prgan to Improve. I took In all fire bottle of Lydla 11 Ilnkham'a Wood purifier, four boxes of Lydla K. I'lnkham'a Dry Form Compound, threa boiea of Liver Pill and used three package of Sana lira Wattband I am aa well now aa 1 a?er waa I am mora than thankful every day for my cure." Mm, Fa ask CaktcR, s Merrill Ht. Amesbury, Maaa, La Jim I, frnkhmm MefawJpftj Wtlih Unjuajc. Tho poll taken of Cardiff, Wale, n tha question of whether children in the lxMtrd schools should be taught tho Welsh langitHgo ha resulted in a majority of C7 vote agaimt it, Tha IUI IrMripMa for Malaria Chill at4 Perm tea botUe of Grove's Taateleat thill TouIp. It 1 imply Iron and quinine la a Ualaleea form. No Cure. Ha 1'ay. f rle 60o. Interurban Badinijc, "Your town," tho Ghic.agon, called tho City of Strait, I be lieve." - ' "Yea," replied the Dctroiter, "and your, 1 suppose, might be known M tha City of Crooks." If ton haven't rtilar, balihf movement of lh bool. every dap, Tim re or will be, Kit four powei tin, and I nrll Kurcfl ln tbhan( tlolotit plifile or ltl (Htiann. I dnrou Tit lli-.l VHnlt'tl. tuuH irfpot Hf of asplnf lb nmut elnar feud sleaa l to Uki Ploaaaiit. Palntabi. l'iirnt.Tii0(od. DnOonrt, Mvror Hlckttii. Wikii, ei Url. 0o. Eft Writ for f reo mpl. ami lKnUlrt on hnaltn. At)dru atwltat Ufwr4f iMFMf, CktM BMlTMl, Trt. X KEEP YOUR BLOOD GLEAN It Wat Up (o Nlm. MiUHine If I should fall out of tins watjon, w hat would you do? Dick I'd catch you in my arms. Maiaio (Jet ready. Btapm thm Cough mnd Work Of f Void. Laxative Uroiuo-yiilnlno Tablet euro a cold In one day. .No cure, Ho far. 1'rlc ita cent. Activity. First Tramp Do dog chased you, did her Second Tramp You bet! For a few minutes I had to lead a purely Htrcnuous life! iWEATHERWISE ' AND AifiLfa: WMT PONT YOU WEAR town's CLOTHING IWWARB Of IMITATIONS 100. POR A50Ve TRADE MARK. . . , CATALOCUCJ nil ,3howiro Pull Line of 6arment J and Hat UA.W.TOttLR CO.. BOSTON, MAIS. 1rii(rirlnt. P fgmnCT 'TOWELS CANDY taoi ia Ma,,n' w fmvmu mm- JfUUIItS WlitHt AlltUSfc JAILS. IJi J Itnat :iuuh hviini. Tuul Uutii UM P I ROUEN'S AIR FERRY ODDEST OF BRIDGES. .Tha 'Tout TrHlrdeur," or over head ferry, whU h lia been built and It now In NU(-(-erul oporatlon, over the Ulver Heine, at Hoiien, Frnuce, repre ncni the aolutloii In a novel way of one of Hie tiuiHt Interesting problem In eit KltieerlliK, Thertf I nothing like thl overhead ferry lit uuy other country lit the world, ' Among tho luciin which the engineer ha hitherto employed to mm river niul fliannel ore boat or ordinary fer ric, tvvltig, draw, baculo mid ordinary bridged, tunnel under the bed of chan nel and traveling carrier. The Mwltig, draw and bn ul; bridge tan only b afely ut d over lock, In land cuualH or river, whero a veel cnu bv under pd-fect control In all kind of weather. Ordinary bridge are tnoro HatUfui'tory than tho other, but If they are to cro a river lending to an ImiHjrtunt harbor they, ahould b of a height to permit a whip with tho tall et miiNt to pttM under, Homo mat ore 2t feet alwvo the water. Incline or elevator luuxt Ins lined to reach tho bridge level, and tho leaaoit that there, are no few bridge llk tho Forth lirldgu lit jN-otluid and tho Krooklyn 15rldg I their great coat. Tho objec tion to tunnel I tho great coat and rlxk In building. Many largo tunnel under water lutvo been abandoned, and oveu when built are uot greatly appre ciated by tho general public. Tho overhead ferry ayatein reinedle all tneite drawback. The advantage of .he ytein are: Tho channel to bo croed I left en tirely clear at all hour, without requir ing veeU to make any Npoclal algnala or modify their rato of apeed any moro than they would In the cane of a croas chauuel ferry. No lucrenMo of dlntance or aocent or dentvnt la forctd on the traffic In or- V T?t 4"BaaBaaaV , 'T1 i0tm . 4inlhJ r.-rtia Koutx't Aia rannr. dor to crox from one ahore to the other. The eaaeutlal part of the aystcm may lx decrltMd as a horizontal railway vupportcd by a brldgv fpnnnlng the chnnuel and built up at Much a height aa will allow the tallest mnated vcmud frequenting the channel to pa be neath. The plat form of the bridge carries two line of rails, over which a car riage on small wheel roll, the hum of wheels varying with the weight to le -carried. The rollers are connected with a movable frame under the line of rails, which may freely move In a longitudi nal direction quite clone to the plat form and from one end to the other of same. Thus Is provided a rudimentary vehicle which can cross the channel without Interfering In any way with the oHnliig, which Is to remain clear. In order to obvlafe any swinging motion which might lemilt from the pressure of the wind or the forward motlou of the carrier Itself, the rods by which the latter Is suspended are ar ranged In triangles, both In the longltu dlnnl mid transversal directions. There Is thus a little railway for crossing the river, with this difference, that the Imdy of the vehicle, Instead of being above the rails and wheels as usual, is some 140 or ICO feet below these. COULD NOT ESCAPE BLAME. Slanderer Did Not tihit't KeponlbUlty on the I'bonotfrupti, A sewing machjne agent In Germany wanted to slander an employe whom he had quarreled with and discharged. He did not call it slander, but he knew that his eucuiy would, and possibly the courts nlso, and as the penalties for thut offense ore likely to be heavy In tho kaiser's realm he sought out a way In which he could gain the desired end without endangering his own safety, An Inspiration came to him and pur chasing a phonograph roll he went to the vlllnge inn, placed It Into the In strument which was In thd taproom and talked It, full of things about his some time friend. Later in the day the patrons of the Inn came In to have their beer, and, as was their custom, some of them dropped coins Into the phonograph and set it a talking. Tho result was appalling to them. The phonograph told tho most shocking tales about one whom they considered a hitherto much respected and altogether to bo praised If not admired fellow citizen, tales they knew not to bo true. They hurried to tho slandered man, and In the course of time he brought an action against his sag former employer. Tb failrr W!d that he had not Innult'd the plaintiff, but that the phonograph wa the guilty one. The phonograph ws brought Into court and turned on to give It testi mony, but It refused to work. How. ever, the Judge decided that the de fendant wn at least, an active accom plice In the slanders nnd lined him 60 mark. New l'ork Commercial Adver tiser. . : ' I SUCinTVS PAIR (1 MBltIRS PLAY BRIDdC WHIST. ''. ... U.II I I f" Hoclety in New York hn been indict ed by I is me Humor for gambling. ISrldge whist 1a the game of chance now most popular with the fashion ables, and It is clal0n-d that In the course of an evening of bridge some time as much us 10.000 change SKI. MICIIASD UVIX. bands, and such atnall suras as $500 frequently. Mrs. Itlchard Irrln has denied the story that (be will lead a cniHsde against the gsme. and aays that, while she does not play bridge herself, ahe la not opoaed to the game. At a recent whist party In New York one man, a guest, lost something like $400. When the game was over he bade his boatea good night and told her he would send bis chink for the amount the following morning. "It Is our custom," she informed him, "to settle up everything at once. "Can you not pay It now?' He hadn't the mon ey with hi in nor a check, but, aa his hoMtess persisted, he managed to bor row the amount from his friends! LIFE SENTENCE FOR A FEUDIST. John Rhotwell Is a famous Kentucky feudist, and was recently convicted at Wllllafnulmrg of participation In the (,'orl.ln riots, during which the restau rant belonging to the Whites, the oppos ing faction; was blown up with dyna mic, and two persons were killed. 4 : At, I- JOHN SHOTWELL, Shotwell was sentenced to the peniten tiary for life, but a motion for a hew trial will tie made. ' Kky Mountains. The highest of all tho clouds are those delicate, white, fibrous, detached mass es of frozen vapor always seem h!gh against the blue sky. The topmost point of the highest of these may be ten miles above the earth. They are called'tirrhus clouds. Altogether there are ten principal types of clouds. The lowest, known as the stratus, are really horizontal sheets of lifted fog, seen on damp days or In very damp local Hies. These clouds are only u few hun dred feet above the earth. Some of the vast bodies of vapor are higher than the tallest of the Alps. They are undoubtedly snow-capped- veritable mountains of ice and snow. It has been discovered that the tem perature on one such summit was 75 degrees below zero. Were it possible for us to ascend in a balloon and penetrate one of these enow-eapped peaks from base to sum mit, we ahould travel first through a layer of dry air and vapor, then through another of dry air, vapor and water, a third of freezing vapor, water and Ice; aud, finally, through the summit, com posed of dry air, vapor and ice, but no water. A Fisherman's Luck. The Drlze of $'-'0,000 In a French lot tery haa been won by an old fisherman, ho Is over CO years of ago. and has not missed a day from fishing for over fifty vears. He can neither read nor write, and allowed his little niece to choose the number of the ticket for hint. 2'rV vat; l DUE TO LOSS OF NERVE. 'ntrcoantfc.b Fright Which Fro ueittljr m Trick frr rmra. "Joe Ktark, the trick cyclist who was killed during a high dive In New York, traveled for a season with Davis' cir cus," said a young man, "I was, with the ehow at the same time, on the buMlncM staff, and 1 got to know Joe very well. I see by the paper that; hi death was due to a mlwalculatlon of over forty feet In the dive, and the i report era are wondering bow in the world he could have made such a blun der. To any one acquainted with per formers of his clafs, however, the thing I no mystery. They are all subject to queer Hpell of panic, that come without any particular reason and un fit tbeut temporarily for business. If a man persist In doing hi act at such a time, the consequence are alto gether a matter of chance, and the ma jority of the accident within my recol lection have been .attributable to that cause. "While I was In the show buslnesa I witnessed several striking Instances of this mysterious loss of nerve, perjiap the most remarkable being that of a little Englishman who did a very sen sational act on the flying trapeze. He had two bar suspended at opposite side of the ring, about forty feet from the ground, and finished his perform ance with the feat that Is called Tchelle, In the slang of the circus. I don't know where the word cornea from, but in doing the turn' the gym nast awing as far as be can on the trapeze, lets go, throws a somersault, and catches the other, the danger de pending on the distance be travels through the air. "The Englishman was a slow-spoken, rather stupid little fellow, who had been brought up hi the ring and was aa nearly destitute of emotion as any lody I ever saw. His habits were ex cellent, like those of moat professional athletes, and be did his work with a mechanical precision that, almost ex cluded the possibility of a mishap. One night his helper got drunk, and I went with him to the little aerial platform from which he took his long awing, for the purpose of holding back the bar while he got ready to launch himself into space. As I was busying myself with the ropes I heard him groan and, looking around, was thunderstruck to see him as white as a sheet and trem bling like a man with ' the ague, 'What's wrong, Fred?' I whispered. 'Oh. Lord,' he said letween his teeth, 'I'm Just In a funk, an awful funk ? I waa so astonished I could hardly credit my senses, but I realized that something would have to be done to prevent a fiasco that would ruin him In tlie business. 'Pretend you've sprained your arm.' I said, 'and leave the rest to me. Now, let's get down quick.' He was so unnerved he could hardly descend the rope ladder, and the audience began to buzz with surprise. I sent him to the dressing-tent and said a few words to the ringmaster, who made a little speech, explaining that Mr. had Injured his arm obliged to omit his usual finale. Later on I found the poor fellow lyln? on hi costume trunk sobbing like a child, but next morning he was all right, and I never knew him to have another seiz ure. Tou may rest assured Joe Stark met his death through Just such an un accountable collapse. It probably took ldm ns he started to make his dive, and pride forbade him to hold back." New Orleans Times-Democrat A Holiday that Will Last a Week. There Is a movement afoot In New England to establish a new holiday VOld Home Week." Our great country has grown wondrously since the Civil War, aud in the rush to people the wil derness families have been broken up and scattered. Sons, daughters, sisters and brothers have left their native towns nnd gone thousands of miles away to legln life for themselves. Hardly a family in the older States but has given loved ones to the ravenous West, and New England has given more than all So now It is thought that one week In each year should be set apart for family reunions a week in autumn, perhaps when harvest Is done and the children of New England can come together under the old roofs, meet their old playmates and live their old Uvea. All through the Western States people are becoming Interested In the new holiday, and last year one of the New England governors Issued a proclamation setting aside an "Old Home Week." The home-coming was general enough to warrant the belief that the holiday can be made a perma nent one. '. ' ; Counted Against Him. Ta Did I understand you to say that the gentleman who called on you last evening and to whom you Introduced me was a professjonal chess player? Daughter Yes, pa; he has the repu tation of belug a great expert at the game. . ' . Ta Then I must positively forbid his coming to see you any more; I cannot encourage you receiving attention from one of a class of men who take so long to make a move. Hoston Courier. Emulation may be all right In Its way, but has a peculiar way of getting In the way of other people. , 1 ' Drilled ta Slay, "My!" exclaimed the young man, who had called to take her out in hi cutter. "Fur cap and jacket! You're dressed to kill." "Not exactly," she replied. "Merelyto sleigh." TO CCBB A COLD IX OSK DAT Tako L.ib'It Hmmo Quinine Tablet. All Srogglat ref'i'"! the mnoejr it It falla to cure. C. W.arore'i altrnatore iaoneach boa. 2ie. Peanut King Employs 600 Men. F. W. Mills as a "peanut king" has had an interesting career. II began life as a peanut vender on a train. When only 12 years old he liad con tracts with several railroad running out of Chicago for the exclusive right to sell peanuts on the trains. Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow's Booth In Syrup the best remedy to use tor their children daring the teething period. Epworth League Rates, A cool, delightful tripcan be made to San Francisco and return by steamer for only $20 by taking advant age of the O. li. & K. offer. That rate includes meals and berth. Dur ing July and August the ocean is smooth and the trip is very beneficial, to health, as it give perfect reat under the most pleasant conditions. Agents of the O. K. & N. anywhere will tell all about how to make the trip, or write A. L. Craig, general, passenger agent, Portland. America Beating Germany. The lead pencil industry in Germany is at present suffering from American competition. It is alleged that our success in this branch of industry "is mostly due to the perfection of the machinery. . "The A. B. C. of Photography" by Fayette J. Clute ia one of the best text books for amateurs ever published. Price 25 cents by mail. Camera Craft Pub. Co., 330 Sutter St.,San Francisco. New Jercyi Densest Population. raterson has the most populous city ward in the state of New Jersey It is the Third ward, with 23,780 peo ple. Newark has the next largest, with 23,359. Elizabeth haa a ward with only 6,378 population. CASTOR I A Tot Infanta and Children. The Kind Yen Kara Alwajs Esujtt Bears the Signature of The great rise in value of . late waa that sheet of 100 two cent Pan-American stamps, in which the accidental inversion of the picture in the center increased the market value of each stamp from two cents to $20. SOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carte r;s Little Livep Pills. Mutt Bear Signature of ' 5ee Fac-Simlla Wrapper Bciow. Tarr aaall and easy to take aa aaga& FOR HEADACHE. FOR CIZZIXESS. FOR EIU8USKES. FOR TCr.PID LIVER. FOR CGXSTIFATIOH. ' FOR SALLOW SKIM. FCRTilECCKPLEXlCl ICARTES ITTLE PILLS. tSOmtj I Purely TeetaldevCw JJ3UWMI I B&ffU"1 CURE SICK HEADACHE. JOHN POOLE, Portland, Oregon, foot of Morrison Strb Can give you the beat bargains in Buggies, Flows. Boilers and Engines, Windmills and Pntnps and General Machinery. See as before buying is best time to er Catarrh, Bronchitis and Consumption. uor remeoj is guaranietia, i P.O. Box 973. W. H. SMITH I GO., Buffalo, N. Y. Springtime Resolutions TAKE TUK Iteeloy Giipo Eura relief fiora liquor, opium and tobaooo hablo. Bend lor particular to Keelsy InfMhdo Moved to 420 Wllltama lilSlllUlB, Ave., East Kid. h. P. X. C. a, xa-iaoi. WHEN writing ta. adverttiara pUaaa mentl an this paper. AB