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About The Santiam news. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1897-1917 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1903)
Dragged*Doivn Feeling In IV loin» S»r> un refreshing • tarp, desl«x» d.iicy. Il 1» time yon were doing • w thing Tlie kidneys were an.lently called the rein. Ii> y.sir rose they «re teoMing lhe reUse and driving you Into serkais tnwbie Hood's Sarsaparilla Art« with t»>w n»» *i dirvk-1 benefklal »AM •aft *t at• f.^f (urrvctifMi Ai«'1 UMking U*cw utgan«. Ncthiag Doing. “I d-m‘1 think I’ll wager with you," id the bekig, "you liaren‘I the dougb." "that mav be," replied tbe botcher, ••tmt I <‘o ,*t see - ei puttirg up any atakoe Lost m Gmmercial Mu I let in H«r I Irai Query. •'My dear." raw! Mr. Cublege Io bia wife, who • •< danger ua'y III, "Mrs Kl-k»h«w |a doUnataira and wants Io ere you." "ttbat has she g t en?" asked the dying nun an feebly. iMtse the Case. "In rlwmsing a wile, said the scanty- •airad pbilomipher, "one should never judge by apt-earaxicM." "Thai's right," rwjoineil the »•ry y<mng man "The Lomlieet girla uau- ally have the most money." The Will a«4 ttee Way. Grierr-i Mater—Oh, Edgar, yon don't kl. w how it would | lease me if you would only ret tie down and go to ■ ora wilb a will Wayward Brother— Nerar mind, ••» ter; )nst wait till the old man »huttlee of! tl>i» mortal eoil and you'll "• meko to work with a will, if that document doeen'l mil me. A Qeeallea. “Whal do ywi think of the new lavwrderT'* asked Mte. Marram. "Ob, I d n’t know," replied star- b-ard ‘ I think he’s v-ry polite. Did "Either that or very anrcastic. you btear him ask If i‘d have the cream?"—Philadelphia Trees. T Houghtfivl. iKctot—1 think you understand fully tiuw the dlrv'tlun» lor tbeee meduinw« and thio I» I' r your dyapope a. Patient—Why, I haven't dyspepeia, doctor. ¡tortor—Wb, I know, but yoa will Lave It «bao yon have taken lh-ee other medicine».—TlV Bita. Ths I II mii of things yon were ■ woman," said tbe 1« !>elor girl wh.> ass entertaining a caller. "I'd st. -w you my new !«■ k Hut as y'-o'rw a man I'll stow you the •lippers that go with it."—Washington Times TT>» rrsd'-v ■ ! ' • I •:«! • I Fl»»«-1 le « » .» si .«a '•» ..... m - . . a» *■ abia e ta ail na ,i , dii • - • si* i. Its • ■ slurb - « • * - - - . 1 • . «I« »Ibg • • • • «••* i eq «• a r- * »I m- >1« « • •> • • istia I" ns I s < • I « s . Ut IbS SYS lb«-«! , U«»'-- • I.» II » f- nlMs I n IbS -1 • S'V. S'. I »I» I U.S pal - ' 1 •W« -rib > I : ■ f , I • «- «MUI ou Sli s-s. g bs t • I • I |-’ei..rs bs«» So Is ■ b fs.lb In US < s *s , • • • - • • •• I«-suro ssv ' sl U s > lueurs, »«ad Uu list •4 Kst moo.s • A 1 trass • »«-> • F J I li r. Ngr A CO. Toledo, o F a «r 4r (I sis, -a. Us.. « r»» ! r .IS s. s U.S les* Science ivention It bas tx*« noted that vvaeel« may B at dowa «treaui faster than tbe wa ter. The ev plana I ion la that b-tb tbe water aud the floating ub.ect ate being pulled down Ibe blU by gravity, but tbe water i» much tuoi« retarded by frlctk-n Pointing out the n««d of protecting egrets, or «b le berone. an F'.ngl'.ah net nra I l»t calle attention to the p aal Tbla ba» till;ties of egr«t farming. ita bita had at Tunt». been »ur-«-rafully and a» egrv-f pl-imee are w.-rtfa mure tbaa their weight tn gold, the profits from cutting tbe frattxra from tba birds should be large. M'teorul'gy ew •• Its origin to Italy, which, as l*r II C. Bolton notra. pro du-rd every one of tbe fundamental netrumeid» now used tn w «erber ob s«r vat Iona. The hygrometse was In- vent'd about liflri. by Nicolas da Cues; ato m-meter, lb”*, by F.gtiatl* l>ante; tbertn- mefer 18*6. by Galileo raingauge. Kkdf by Carwill; barometer. IA4B. by Torricelli. The new p«at wood of J-raeph H«m lueel i g ■ f Dr<a'ea take* • b'gh p1 i an and Is thirty threw to fifty p« <*»« cheaper than oak. it la «wpeclaHy rec omtaenled for panes parquet B*-ring and -«i. h.a Ths material la pr-d ic.-d by a Id ng to tbe wet peat eume tdnd '.ng material up to five per erwt of It» total weight then forming into ryllu- M'JRAL REFORM BY KNIFE. dev» under high pressure “nd finally dry ng at a high temperature for four a«rae«s CrsAlled wllk lt«vi*s C«r«4 Vtcl«««»««« 1« Hvmav li«l«a« •vr five days. I«>n<1 n la Just now very much In- An effort to determine from geysers tbe Upper temperature limit of life tevraiec! In two surgical C«ara givln« reaulta In changing the nature uf the has 1«<1 Prof. W. A. Retchall to Con elude that no animals exist tn strictly subjects which promise to render val thermal watrra «.r tbrae heated above □able assistance In pointing the way W degree« or 43 degvera C. (If* de to tha reformation of criminal« Ona gyera or 113 degree« F* - A filameri- of lli'—e patients w»a a b«y of good toua plant, otee of tbo bacteria. »r«a family who had develop,«! brutal In- found at W dagreua C and a few oth at meta which sermed to t>e beyond He gaie hie time to the In- er • tr pie forma wore found at T7 de ' control greeo end txlnw llow tbe protoplaam tatition of ma I loua mischief, delight- ,f the«* organlema '• made to leelot ed in killing <*r wounding »M tie tlx ■ -mgulatlray that nonally dewtro; a terror of lhe neighborhood lu whlcli i life at a little above 40 degrora C. la Ibe lived and promised to grow up a drapers do and criminal. A clever sur not clewr. Ry means of eroas-breeding Mr g<an I--wk him tn band, extnilnad his heail with -are. lor-ltd whst lie c--n Luther Burt nk of Ranta Bras. Hall fornle has dev«loi*d a variety i f •Id'red the «rot of trouble, removed a blackb«rr'.ra which are perfectly white portion of the «kuH'and thus r--ll<-v -1 Tbe eban • • « bright ■• an-iw lu tbe eunebtne, and tbe def -rtnlng pr »sure an transparent that tbe aevda can lx was immediate ITio tad forgot hie previous taste« •roti iixlde the rlpa fruit. The aneda • re said to be unusually «mall, and and batelle and was rest -red to h ■ pa t* a berr ev are as sweet •' d n a tingly rents a normal and lovable imy. the i ruler »a tba finest of tbe biacte varte eomplcts antlthrata of Ida former self. tlra The familiar last-m berry 1» The other wna a soldier who wna In tv 'crii ed »a the great grand par'll! of Jured In a ak1rmt-J> and after h a d • <bo ti-w white «arlety. to wblcb b»» «barge (nr disability tweama a thief Ills prevl us Character !o«n glveo the name of "Iceberg " f ami burglar. The white berries are aa targe ao tbo had bran tinaxceptl- nil l'- hla in lltary record was the lu-vt and the change I aw tons wae naturally attributed to the Injury There has been tone talk tn Eng land lately of endeavoring to shorten to ble head caused by a blow from the the voyage acr as the Atlantic by d<- butt of a musket. When he was taken r«l pit g the hartwir of Galway, on In band by tbe surgeon he had about tbe wrwt roast of Ireland, and ronre-t coma to the end of a career of crime, ng li by swift • aamrrs with St. John's l»elng paralysed on on* side and un- In Newfoundland. Tlie distance fr> m • hla to get about except on mitchr* Galway to Rt. John • Io 1.H10 mt eo. A rlepr< avion In tbe skull auffie'ent to that fr m Liverpool to New York Io bring an abnormal Irxal preeaurt 3.1 Id ml'ea, and from Southampton upon the brain was found and an nper .1 -<»."> mllea It Is » Burned that transit atlon was de l-b-d upon, which c-tor-d tvetwem New York and Rt Johns, hts physical powi-ra as weli as h's men n«a ly all by land, rouid tie performed lai and mot al fa »title« Hla dls-drarge vo rapidly that the time from lxmdon waa secured and he has since llve-l to New York would be cut duwn a an Industrious «rd b neat life, with n» ab lv day twlow the preaent fastest evidence of a dl«p -altlon to go wr nj. Naw York Time«. rec-rd». Follies st t oag Ago. Blld-e—No man kmws blmawlf. Many naturalists bellevs that ani Ulbbg— That's true. 1 hare juat mals I-xaewa senses unknown to bu- been reading over Bruna lettera 1 wiote man twluga. • ntethlng not Included In to my «*lle tielore we were marl led — our fiiefo.d range of seeing, bearing, I'bi adelphla l-edgvr. feeling, too I g and onio ling I:.se>ta •I' la ly give evidence of |>oao««o ug In • Quiver of trag« powers of piterpt'-on peculiar to them First Actress—I waa entirely beside selves. Tbe wasp Reiubei. says J yralf with rage. Curler Heard, makes her mot In sai d Keeooii Act raws—You certainly were. banks that are aom'-tlmew a rra In ex W hy, you quiver*! even in tlie pla-ea I tent On leaving she covers It up ao you were upholstered.—Life. carefully that It Is ludletlngutvbat-l» from ibe surrounding surface, and yrt Ml»placed Atta. tie«. on ber return she files direct to It Mie ki««e>i him and rare«eed him. ' without bisl<atton. An -th-r wasp as Bat 'twos not what be deelred, I if po«a «««d of a kind of X ray tense, lie only looked al her and growled— unerrti gly Io atea the b dden eggs of for aha made the poor pug tired. the moron bee undrr a thick layer of ■unbaked clay, and dcp-A.ta her own Haman Nature. ■ gga tn the same cells. Home J-* pie pra< tice what they preach, I it it • a load piped NEWSBOY PICKPOCKETS They preach to oll er» by the yard And practice by the inch. Twa Llttl« > ae«rteweee with Tai with ee Interval of Thirty lrara. 1 hea and New. "One of my earlieot experiences la "When 1 was courting my wife," thia elty.'* •aid a New Yorker of now •aid tbe sad-ta-ed man. "«■ were two thirty odd years' »landing. "was «ritte •ouls with but a single thought." a newsboy who tried to pick my "How alavot you at the pr< sent writ pocket, and among my latest alpe ing?" a ked tha Inquisitive youth. rleneea has been one precisely almi "We still hate but a »ingle thought," lar; tbla last experience showing. I repliwl ttie proprietor of the rad riaage suppose, that I am getting old and "We both think we made looix of so hare come to he regarded as an ourialrae." easy mark again, as I must have been considered when 1 was young and new The lesipe.tsd Happens In tbe town. Why that look ef aurpriae?" askej “The methods employed by the two Blowell, who bad just Bn label relating boys, working thirty years apart, were a remarkable alory. "Don't you be Identically the sama, the boy la each lieve Ilf" case attempting the comparatively "Yeo; that's lhe peculiar part of it," easy p.x-k»t picking task of extracting replied hie friend Naggsby. "1 hap money from the outside change ¡«whet pen to know that it Is true.'* of an overcoat "To do this the boy carries bta news papers, to the casual •ye. held out In front of him quite In tbj ordinal y way; but he actually hold» them wtth the left hand only, carrying the right hand under the paper» otft of sight • nd apparently helping to (tipport them, but wholly free. “I have used Avar's Hair Vigor “Offering bia papers to a customer tor thirty yeara. ft la elegant for thus the newshoy pickpocket advam-ea a hair dressing and for keeping the them closer and cloeer to tba rnsio- hair from splitting at the ends.**— mer. wltb an appearance simply of Im J. A. Gruenenfelder,Grantfork, III. portunlug him to buy. until be gets the papers close to tbe nisu'a coat Hair-splitting splits and over tbe change pocket. Coder friendships. If the nair- tbe papers thus advanced he pu:a forth qu k. out of sight, hla .Ight splitting is done on your hand, wltb which to rifle the pocket. own head, it loses friends If you leave It unprotected, though for you, for every hair of be may lose a chance by bungling him ■elf. and ao give you a chance your head is a friend. “This last boy that tried me waa a Ayer’s Hair Vigor in novice and a bungler, wbo did Just advance will prevent the that; and I felt tbe pressure of bls Ungers on the coat plainly before he splitting. If the splitting got Into the pocket at all; and I turn- has begun, it will stop it. «! on him. but not angrily, nor evrn It aa • belli AU Wsspaaa threateningly, but wltb a sort of re proaehful and regretful exclamation. Beside» being chagrined for myaelf at being plcketl out aa easy It really v.-emed a I’lty uut youngster Hair Splits ah .,1114 deylbemtely aet out. at wvwrj to ha»a dona, on tha wrong road, to follow a way that, la the na tura of things, could lead to one end only .and I am sure that tbe boy knew bow I felt -I don't mean that he figured it all out ao exactly aa I bave tried to tail It to you. but be certa aly Jul know tn a general sort of a way lie start ed ba- k with a shamed face, and al tbe same time with a scared s--rt of look, as though tee thought I might get after him. after all, but when be realised that I waa Just aoft hearted •nd sorry, and •no t going to d>> • aything about almut It. why. though I stood and gsied at him for a moment, be. after bls first nromemary look of abamefacedness and alarm. Ignored me completely, and simply went on offrr lag bls papers tu tbe passer» by aa though I had never existed ''He bad bad a gixvd ahate ng up. from bts failure with me and my die co very of blns, and what Witte ble wonder after that about bow II was going to come out. but be was rattled fur a moment only. He was a novice but he was coming oa that. "The moral of all thia is while tbe great bulk of the newsboys • rw Independent, »elf reliant, capa' Is little e’apa who are strictly oo the level, there are ameng them, more a tbe pity, m-me who will pick a po>-ket If they get a chance, and when you meet a boy who Insists npon work la g bls papers up Hoae against you. over your outside rbange pocket, why of him you want to fight shy New York Bun. CLEARED OF SWARM OF RATS a*nb»*l Out b» bulphnr. They Tehe to the Wnt«r an-t hmes. When tbe Vnlled Rtati-e military transport Rberman arr.vid at Maml-v rreetitiy she wna as Is the ease of most other ships that nrrlve from or touch Hong Kong on the way to Ma nils, detained fur Inspection to see If •he bad any rats on heard. When th • b g transport dr q prd nnc!.or In .Ma nlla bay, therefore, the official rat In •peelor went on tv-ard In ».-e whal was d Ing tn tbe way of rodanta. If tbe Manila .American la to be brllrve.1 In leas than fifteen minutes he hur riedly left ibe ship and going ashore rrporitd that there «»• - n board the Rberman. aci-ordmg Io the patent rat «num rvt .r tn use nt Mania, no fewer than UfO.irxi rata The Rhrrman waa luimel a'ely or dered to the quarant.ne station st M < rtvri.e, as ■>> ablp ou which tbe da ease carry Ing rodants are fount Is al lowed to dock al Manila until they are exterminated Accordingly the Kher man ateatnel hack to Marlvees When she arrived there her batches had t>w n opened and enough sulphur carried beb-w to kill mllll -ns of rats As Soon as the an- h r was dropped th sulphur Brew were started in tha lin'd • nd In a few minutes tbe work of the furnew became apparent. Out of tbe batches there poured auch a atreeni of rata •• wae never before •ram In the Orient Flrat by the bun drecta and th<n by the thousands they appeared at the hatches and th- n Ira ed Into the water. Ev<ry one tr «1 to swim ashore, but the distance was far too great for any rat to swim ami soon tbe great black line of pa Idling rodents liegan to tbln out. R me < f them reach'd a point a I-out Son yards < ff the ship but none got any farther. After the fumes bad l-ern w ru ng for almut an hour tbe rats st.q p« l sp- peartng An Inspectlou of the ship was msde and not a rat dlac>vered The Rberman then reentered Mau. a and discharged ber cargo New To.-k Tlmca A Hanging tlellrwait. A banging overbeaJ electric rail road for Ixindon. similar to that la use In Elberfeld. Germany. Is pro Jected by a group of German. AnieH can and English financiers A parlla tnentary con eras Ion wilt be a«ke<l to ■ wing the single track required over the Thanice from Its south end fi»r eight mllea An Opinion “Do you think that betting wrong r “ft depends on elreumatancea,'* • wered the town oracle. “If you can't afford to lo«e. It'a wrong. If you can Il's merely alUy."- Washington Mtar. e-eeeeeee IONI IS I Hi MASS. Mr*. F. Wright, of Oclwcia, Iowa, is another one of the million women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Negciobk Compound. A Young New Y ork 1 udy Telia V nun of » \\ ouderful l urei — _ *• My tn juble with the ¡ I ar.) VA VU.1 the d - t - uJ I grew I.» fast f>r my strength I sur-red dreadfully from luflammat • n and dva-t.-red rontiwually. but g -t no he.p. I auffer-ed from terrible dragging VO aal. -na ” ’ ■> the ni al awful J > »1 • down la the aide and pains in the boclx, and tlie n> «I •*• main« heads. «» No one kn. ws whal I endured, often I waa a a to lhe «-. mxoh. and every little while I would bw too «irk tu go to w ra fur threw or f ur dar a . I work ia a large alore, and I eutqvae Stand ing -*n my feel all day ma*>e me w rae "Al the auggevt: n of a friend of tar r.- tirar» fl-gan 1-- latee l.ydlA I.. I'lnkhivm'» Vegetable tow round, and it la simply w- mlerful trit i -Iter after tlie first tu r three •■med u the ig . a weight waa taken off my shoulder»; I n- liuu- d its use until n<>w I can truth fully sav I am entirely cured. Young {Iris who are always paying d-» t >r's ills without getting any helps« I did. ought t your " • ■ >>e It coala an mrl-'h le«* »nd It 1« «rire to cure them. — Y'o'ira trulv. Aust vu-a TaVU1 . 1'4 Rt Ann'» A»e New York Ctlv »«ron'*•<• r r o »-• -f «Vow wile* «rw«« »•-- »••••• -•«••• a« »--«•<•* I IH't • " ’ ' ? a 1 I A- *•- LAUitò Sx» Htill'iiis, Hurlile«, lloi.ll. "t l'u.. * ' ft *• . -- f -t ea i 1 :« at»') JW • o V- a«» uta I \ . . t . I . . . »*• ». FuTt;«n*l <>r. Fattens QUICK! Cftttit <n<1 H<»<« for markrt Htmrtrn« fattening one lnuith, Hstvca l-e«d. FATTEST CATTLE. "! f»4 J •“ •» d tair«*s1 . if th# fat <•» ait.c J «»wr bk4 f -r U * * r ■ r I »ofikiaitfr PrufiBlan M« m A I wkrll worth th« I * uukl not be with- »3 SO owl it • Farbrr. H. ¡J. ~ ST r-! •« l-ORTI.ANtr «agl» e<».. l-«rllai>il Coast A g*tits. Or.. [\eeley Alcohol. Cpium, Tobacco Using at Write for Li WT MATED There la surely no country half a wor d away la which the Occidental traveler expects ao much delight and little adventure aa la Japan. rrcrBtl, Erm«t Fea well baa related a tale of terrible adaen- ture experienced In Japan y •» Englishwoman but a few days after her arrival tHie was staying at a little country village among the bills, and bad gone eut Io the morning to gather flowers Th« path ran a.-ruaa ttee uplands, where there la a wild and lonely stretch of country eitebd Ing fur several mllew. a lui the bra ut y »f eotue wild Bowers growing In tha tall grass led terr to leave the trail unthinkingly, and press farther and farther Into the waving tangle fibs was a abort woman, and ft reached atmve her head “If I bad I men a foot taller.” She said, lu telling her story, “I should have laughed aud bran out tn a mln Ute or two; but those few Inches bur rd me alive. "Almoat Instantly I felt al-k as you do at the t-eglnutng of an aarthquake. for although I muat bare been quit« near the path, yet with the grass all round above my head there was no knowing what would happen I might bo going right away at that very moment. aod ttee poralhllklra came Ilk« a shock I bat love I lost my brad at once. I could not think, on I kepi moving one way, then another Hut merely pushing through this tall, tough grass Is very tiring work, oven If you ere oa sloping ground »»I cue JuJge where you will come out, and when It 1« level all round, the heart 1» taken out of you from the feeling that every step la protiably burying you deeyxr It waa like being drowned " It waa not until eunoot. after a whole day In the biasing «un. without f.Kwt or waler, constantly wandering, ronatantiy pushing and tearing at sterna so stiff and serrated that they quickly make the hand« bleed that aha walked suddenly out on to open ground and fell fainting In a heap When she recovered, stars were shilling. and ■he waa alone on an unknown mono talnalde. Hhe slept from exhaustion. ■ nd th* next day followed a wind ng mountain torrent over rocky land, her •hoes and then her atocklnga worn from her feet, only to And. at aun down, that It had led tier to a narrow gorge, without one Inch of foothold or •bore, The stream dashed through in a torrent that hopelessly barr»<l th« way Light headed with terror, hunger and weariness, aha crouched for ■ time lu despair. Then • h- suddenly wadii! In to the stream and Blood until after dawn eitet deep lu water, while a rain »form pelted upon her from above Whim or Instinct, »be believed that by the cool rush and sting of tlie water her reason and strength were pre served. The next day »lie retraced her weary way along the watercourse back to the heights; thence. Bling anew the p<vlnt to which »he inu»t direct her steps, »he suceee»fully msde her way tuick to civilisation. When at length •he rec let Into the hut of • kindly Japanese woman, »he had t*en four days loet without food, aud had walk e<| until her feet were no torn and Inflamed It was thought «he mu«t have them amputated. hilt »he fortunately regained her health uncrippled. FOR TWENTY YEARS MAJOR MARS SUFFERED FROM CATARRH OF THE KIDNEYS «< lj'7 DANGEROUS KIDNEY DISEASES CURED Pc ru-na Crrat ng • in the Lure of uhr nk. Aliments of the kidney ». Major T. H Mare, ol tlx Br»t Wle- ron.in cavalry reg m«nl, wr lew from 14JS Dunning street. Chicago, III., tlx following latter: ••f or year. I suffered with catarrh of the kidney s.ontra.teJ In the army. Medicine did not I elp me an. until a vomrade who had been helped by I'e- runa sdvl-ed me to try It. I bought • me st once, end soon fuunJ ble-sed relict. I kept taking it four nxe-tlha. and am now well snd otrong and feel better than I have done t >r the past twenty year», thanks to Pcrana " T H. Mar«. At the appearance of tlx first symp tom of kidney tri able, Teruna should be taken. This remedy strikes at once tlx very roots ol the disease. Il al once relieves the catarrhal kidneys ol lb« stagnant blood, preventing the oe cape of »«ruin from lhe blood. Teruna •timulatea the kidneya to excrete from the bloo-l tbo accumulating poison, and Uius prevent» tile conVIII»1- - ns a In. b are •ure to follow it tbe poisons are allowed to remala I tglve« great ri. -r to the hrart'o ac lion and di <wt »« ay« tern. both of which apt to rapidly I l> I a die- I e una curse raiairh <>t the kidney! •Imply because it cures catarrh wl er ster located. If )ou do not derive prompt an i sat isfai tury resulta from the uro of Toru na, write at once to I'r Hartman, giv ing a full »mtatement of your iara ami he will I« plrasrol to g ve you bia valu able advice gratia. A l<!rest l>r. Hartman, President of The Hartman ftaoila'inm, Columbus, tibio. Woman's II«.t I'rlaad. Tallen-•—Woman is woman's l<«t friend, alter all. Tatrfce—I g'ioM You're right. "Certainly I'm right. Even when •lie is getting married d ean't a man gire her away and Ilia maid of honor etand up tur her?"—Yonxara Blate«- man HEADACHE -,r For br«>n« h « trou’ »« try I' - >'s Cure for t'cnuih-i ■ c It I« « r.... I rough meli- ine A i d r g, ,-i «. i «.-',< enta. Sign U asn'l Irighl. He—I wonder why Mtse Elderly never married? bhe— <>h, I sipp-ra aha waa born in the wrong time of the mo><n. lie—The wrong time of tlx m.-on? Mie—Y«s, there wasn't any uisu in it. Contemporary. Mar told a joke to 1 Io one -lay, "uh, mt' that ■ o-U. ' «ahi Flo. "Oh, la it. really, dear'' «ani May, "Of coarse, you ought to know " —i'hila.lelpbia Tress. Helurann Nlit«.liliw kJ«». »1C* I VOH» Tu Joint ptHlt K Io*< at Mrolxx M.. P-»lle*l. <>'«(•«. I*»'vo»v Hsesvr«. Amarene, -elf l«*tinq. v«up..««« etu«n|. Puller, 1-« Xur««i- «er vlih te> Serve« hui-kry« raw mill nou-ry, Ku fi.«« «nd Ruttar« flland vnriu'i «*,tm« ii<ln«v Writ« n« eb«u tn want aiqUuug In machinery lias. frog» Ara Not I !•'>«•. The French court of cassation, the A.1 tHUBM A.«t> ClMMi Al -NM** • dMMBr— higbeet tribunal in Frame, solemnly kMmt H* KU AWV ulWl 1 Arto »are ”?•’ Jn rii« ba><lk t^r I taxiwtf» ... !«•<«■* i't mia /? decided tl at frog» are n<>l fiahee. The l.ifiRiiiiBf gfikiaaiiul-h!- ' À ' Ä ?'■»<»*:» Aith PthTLAHD. Or <vvs 'incerim! B»blng prbllagaa in rer- the fliCtiAIllk *n<l *uprr> * «AU '4 A « A/*f'll Alighted To » Moon. ^ephone rtv»«i^3f b«*4a>» I» <»H» «»Í Ih* »M'-Al tain at ream» and aent through three »C lb» I" a - ■- <-•< « !OA<< Jv. ' I a I It bad taken cou-ldvrable |terwuaalon courts before the questlo« was Dually Au« •>|t|rv«A to Induce the old lady to trust heraelf decided. FOFILANP ACADtMY. FOUTLANB. OF EGON In an automobile; but finally she cun- seuletl because, saya tbe Automobile Magaslne. she was anxious to reach lhe bedside of ber sick graudehlld lu •’BtHli Mt, Wife and tuyarlf h«*r br*« a village some twenty tulle« sway • •Ing < A"i AKETS •: t th. t arc tu* beat Tbe owuer of the big autom iblle. ■ e-1 . .ti« «« ba»» •»•r 1?» it r h- 1 ui »•ed wm fratmr w th hea-Ut f.r for who waa touring through leiug Island, »bet lr ><1 • n r <»f y r : < A **< A b L I had been very kind at»ut It. He »1.1 rc. »1*1 t: «... • • i*mr4iaiAly W a »« ’ • fr- . n ’ < a>- treta chanced Io be near tbe station when C has Mil «• Mt« 1’kUtiuff *5At« A lXp*. a i Co I viMburg. F b the old lady fouud »be had tulsm-d her her train, ami when he orerheerd C andy lamentations he tualated that ■ha cathartic III» route should accompany bltu Th* world today ia ftill of laawrot sufferers front that most loathsome through that particular one of the half diseaw. Contagious Blood Poiaoa People know iu a general way that it is -losen Ixing Island villages named a Ui'i disease, but if all its horror* could be brought lx-fore them they liainptuli where tbe sick grandchild would shun it as they do the Leprosy. Not only the pens- n who cx-nbav ta it lay •uflets but the awful taint is transmitted to children and the fearful antra They atarted at last, and everything •nd eruptions weak eyea, Catarrh and ether rvidem e« . ( ¡ . n.l bl-irxl weut well until. In attempting to pa«a show throe little inn - enta ate Buffeting the awful < on .«queue- . > I - otne PtMMnt P b IBUA * f et l Tafite (i-w'd rw a wagon which occupied moat of Ibe body a sin So highly contagious IX this form of blood |-->t- n that one may (loud. N«««« NiA*««n Weaken or «»r M» road, the flying automobile went uuri be contaminated bv >r*u<lling the clothlug or other article* in ut.c by a ... CURK CONSTIPATION « pectedly Into lhe ditch, aud rather vio per« n afflicted with this miserable disease Thete i* danger even iu drink •aeeiiwt I...41 < ea»e«ey . thrawf- »«Mawei haw T»«k uf lently deposited Ila occupants In an ing from the same v< «xl ot eatiug out of the same tal-lcware as inauy pure adjoining Arid. «■ I ■ Mt lata M I w-.tuen have I -and to their a-t v Recovering from the shock, although Contagious lllood Poison is ao somewhat con fused from tbe rather powerful and penetrating that unusual method of alighting, the old within a short time after the lady asked of tbe chagrined chauffeur: first little *>tc appeal* the whole “la tbla a a a Hampton V system is infected and every “No. tna am." be managed to gasp; drop of bl<x>d iu the body ia tainted with the poison and tha "this la an accident ” “O dear'" said the old lady. **TbeU • kin is soon covered with a re<l rash, ulcers break out in the mouth and I hadn't oughler bare got out here, throat, swelling* appear in the groin*, the hair and eyebrow* fall out. and unless the ravages of the disease are checked at thia stage, more bad IT violent aud dangerous avmpt -ttia appear in the form of deep au l i.(Tensive Had Luas Track of lhe t'se-*. •ore*, copper colored ap t lies, terrible pains in bone* and luuulcx, and •1 jir" Tha yuung woman wbo. when asked general breaking down of the system If abe bad read Borneo and Juliet, re 8 S. S is a *|- ifi for Contagious Blood Poison and the only remedy plied that abe bad never read Juliet, that antidotes thi. p< culiar virus and makes a radical and complete < ure of but abe thought Romeo was lovely, tbe disease Men ury aud Potash hold It in check oo long aa the ayxteiu ta waa of the same temperament as a under their mfluen.e. but when the medicine is left off the puison bteaksout village postmaster wbo knew or pro- •gain as bad or Worse than ever Besides, tbe use of these mineral* bring tended to know aonietiilug of all ilia on Kheuinativm and at-mach trouble* of the worst kind, and frequeutly pro dobigs of 'ti^ world, great and small < USE- duce bleeding and apong;ncs* of tbe gum* and decay of tbe lei th S S 3. Nome wags krom a neighboring town cure« Blood ‘ ‘ Poison ill all stage* and evM reach«« down to hereditary taints d/(OPAL/NE- who strolled Into the postoffire one day and remove* all trace* of the jxiiaon and • ro B£Aur/fr thought they would bare some sp-rt save* the victim from tbe pitiable con»e with tha wlae man. B VO UK' ffO^ES qucn-e*of this monster acourge. A*long "I auppowe It'a pretty dead up here, a* a drop of the virus i* leit iu the blood h JM ZOA» r/Ä//Sn//VG Mr I'ratt." said one it is liable to break out. ami there is 'langer F fAA'.ÍS “Well, not so dead aa you think I of tran«mitting the di:.«a.*e to nthera. r¿ ooKs rrc guess there ain't much goes ou that S S S. ia guaranteed purely Vegetable and we don’t hear about, even If It dou t tan be taken without any injurious eff< ta to braltb, and an eiperimce of nearly fifty year* prove-, fwyond doubt that itcureaContagi- .ua Ilh-o! Poiaoa happen right here” Write for our Hon e Frealitient Book," "Why. you propio don't know tbe Completely an I perniant ntly L ■ ^>i/PAßL^ * war • over.” esld another, falling t»a k *hi-.h describe« fully tbe ditlrrant stages and aympt--ma of the cliaesae. r ■ DK/rS ou tlie atock phrase. At?7 SCfiArCK THC SWIFTIHCiriC CO., ATLAMTA, «4. “Oh you can’t work that d <1ge ,.a me,” replied the postmaster, looking /MS/sr kav : kg shrewdly over his sp* tachs ' I gm-ea I fullered the negotiations with Kitch ener In tbe papers" “Rut tbe.-e are some things that aren't In tbe paper»" avid another youth. “I don't believe yuu know P. N. U %• JI when Rhak«peare died." •'Well, no." said the postmaster. "I didn't know that be was dead, but I bran! last week be was pretty low. C UtCULAJIS PORTLAND ACADEMY The Innocent Suffer With The Guilty xucaicta < , <* >>\ J*' BLOOD POISON IS NO RESPECTER OF PERSONS V ] l onaumpthiw of trow In Germany In Germany the annual con u.npilon of Iron per capita la I'M joints and pr-aluctl n -'1 ■ aW