The Santiam news. (Scio, Linn County, Or.) 1897-1917, February 19, 1904, Image 4

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    Eruptions
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
and Pills
Which thoroughlycleanse the blood,
expelling all humors and building
up the whole system. They cure
Hood’s Sarsaparilla permanently cured J.
G. Hines, Franks, III., of eczema, from which
he had suffered for some time; and Mis*
Alvina Wolter, Box 212, Algona, Wis., of pinr
pies on her face and back and chafed skin on
her body, by which she had been greatly
troubled
There are more testimonials in
favor of Hood’s than can be published.
Hood's Sarsaparilla promises to
Cure and keepr the promise.
Mistake In a Street Car.
Said a man on a street car who had
already given up his seat as he nudged
a familiar friend who still kept his:
“Why don’t you get up and give the
woman a seat?”
She who was standing, glared at
him.
“Sir!” she sold, “I will have you to
know I am a lady!”
“Ah! Beg your pardon, madam,”
he replied politely, “I took you for a
woman!”—Portland Oregonian.
If the Enemy Was Obliging.
“I see that Prof. Langley’s airship is
to be used iu warfare,” remarked ilie
man in the end seat of the open car.
“1 suppose it could tie utilized in
that way,” thoughtfully observed the
man beside him, “if lhe enemy could
lie coaxed to wait around until it fell
upon them.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Cure It a good cough medicine.
It has cured coughs and colds for forty
years. At druggists, 25 cents.
Inherited.
“What’s patrimony, papa?” askeil
little Dm.
“Patrimony, my dear,” replied pa­
pa. “is something inherited from the
father ”
“Why, then,” exclaimed Dan, “mat­
rimony must lie something inherited
from the mother, isn’t it?”
Two of a Kind.
WASHINGTON’S NAME
CAUGHT
On» of the Mo.l Marv.lua. Contriv-
■ ncM in tb» World of Industry.
Dry, moist, scaly tetter, all forma
of eczema or salt rheum, pimples
and other cutaneous eruptions pro­
ceed from humors, either inherited,
or acquired through defective di­
gestion and assimilation.
To treat these eruptions with
drying medicinns is dangerous.
The thing to do is to take
PI so ' b
MACHINE TO BLOW GLA8&
I
Glass has at last been successfully
blowu by machinery and, as has gen­
erally been the ease when mechanical
means supersede band methods, all
feats of hand-blowing have been out­
done.
The secret of the remarkable Inven­
tion Is still hidden, but specimens of
the work done have been shown. The
cylinders are of Immense size, the larg­
est being thirty Inches In diameter and
nineteen feet long.
The new machine is the Invention ot
John A. Lubbers, a glassblower of Al­
legheny, Pa. It has been built at th»
Alexandria, Ind., branch of the Ameri­
can Window Glass Company's plant
The process of blowing window glass
Is simple In theory, but difficult In
practice. On the end of a long tube
a m#ss of molten glass is collected.
This Is then heated In a furnace and
gradually distended by blowing into a
large tube with straight sides.
To accomplish this without the pecu­
liar twisting and manipulation employ­
ed by the human glassblower has puz­
zled many clever Inventors, and th»
Lubbers machine was made successful
only after a great many experiments.
Lubbers has Invented several labor-
saving devices and this latest triumph
Is likely to make him many times a
millionaire when It Is generally in­
stalled.
Skilled mechanics from the Westing­
house factories In Pittsburg have been
working behind barred gates and high
walls for months In the erection aud
Installation of the machines, which no
man other than old and skilled em­
ployes of the company was allowed to
WEINBERGER.
R GUILL
DRESSLER
At the heart of our country the tyrant
has rolled
was leaping,
many a chief, on his passage to
his
dagger
To dye there the point of
fame;
In gore,
And still on its fold
When Washington sprang from the
Shine in letters of gold
watch he was keeping,
The glory and worth of our Washing­
And drove back that tyrant in shame
ton’s name.
from our shore;
The cloud that hung o’er us then parted And so it shall be, while eternity tar­
and rolled
ries,
Its wreaths far away, deeply tinctured
Aud pauses to tread in the footsteps of
with flame;
time;
And high on its fold
The bird of the tempest, whose quick
Was a legend that told
pinion carries
The brightness that circled our Wash­
Our arrows of vengeance, shall hover
ington’s name.
sublime;
Long years have rolled on, and the bud Wherever that flag on the wind shall be
rolled,
still has brightened
Our mountains and fields with its rud- All hearts shall be kindled with anger
and shame,
diest glow;
ART OF BATTING THE BALL.
And the bolt that he wielded so proudly
If e’er they are told
Bresnahan, the Gl.nt.’ Beet Hitter.
his lightened,
They are careless and cold.
Gives Pointe on the Game.
With a flash as intense, in the face of In the glory that circles our Washing­
the foe:
ton’s name.
Confidence and good eye are the prin­
cipal things a baseball player must On the land and the sea the wide banner —James Gates Percival.
see.
Patents have not yet been granted
on certain parts of the machines and
therefore the secrecy.
So confident Is the company of th»
merits of the machine that It 1» pre­
paring to spend thousands of dollar»
In Its Installation in all of the forty-
one plants controlled by It In various
parts of the country.
It Is expected that the device will
ilo away with hand blowers altogether.
So confident are the men that this will
bo the case that many are getting out
of the business, The better class of
blowers earn from $450 to $000 a
mouth.—New York World.
“ I had a bad cough for six
weeks and could find no relief
until I tried Ayer’s Cherry Pecto­
ral. Only one-fourth of tne bottle
cured me.”
L. Hawn, Newington, Ont.
Neglected colds always
lead to something serious.
They run into chronic
bronchitis, pneumonia,
asthma, or consumption.
Don’t wait, but take
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
just as soon as your cough
begins. A few doses will
cure you then.
©
Three eliee: 2S<.. Re., II.
Alt druttlete.
Consult four doctor. If lii Bay, take It,
then do at he anya. If he tells you not
to take It, then don’t take It. He knows.
Ixtave it with him. W« are willing.
J. U. AY EK CO., Lowell, Matt.
•‘The world of
medicine recognizes
Grip as epidemic
catarrh.”—
Medical Talk.
COWGILL
A HORA t ZCJG o 3S':;
La grippe is epidemic catarrh. It
spares no class or nationality, The
cultured and the ignorant, the aristo-
j crat and the pauper, the masses and
the classes are alike subject to la-
grippe, None are exempt — all are
liable.
Have you the grip? Or, rather,
has the grip got you? Grip is well
French term, la
named. The original
_
grippe, has been shortened by the busy
American to read “grip.” Without
intending to do so a new word has been
coined that exactly describes the case.
As if some hideous giant with awful
Grip had clutched us in its fatal clasp.
Men, women, children, whole towns
and cities are caught in the baneful
grip of a terrible monster.
The following letters speak forthem-
selvesas to the efficacy of Peruna in
eases of la grippe or its after effects.
After Effects of La Grippe Eradicated
by Pe-ru-na.
Mrs. Fred Weinberger, Westerlo, Al­
bany county, N. Y., writes:
“Several years ago I had an attack
of la grippe which left my nerves in a
prostrated condition.
Then I had
another attack of la grippe which left
me worse. I had tried three good phy­
sicians but all in vain. I gave Peruna
a trial. In a short time I was feeling
better and now I am as well as any­
one.”—Mrs. Fred Weinberger.
Hon. James R. (iuill of Omaha.
Hon. James R. Guill is one of the
oldeslt and moBt esteemed men of Oma­
ha, Neb. He has done much to make
it what it is, serving on public boards
possess If he wishes to become a good
BATTLE OF PRINCETON.
relics. From one of these it is supposed
batter, together with the ability to
judge from the location of the oppos­ Fierce Butchery by British Bayonets lhe father of his country took the design
for
the original American flag. On the
ing fielders where they -xpect the man
Fittingly Avenged.
ground floor of the house is a diniug hall
at the bat to bit the ball. The man
The Revolutionary battle of Princeton twenty-eight by seventeen feet in length,
who stands close to tbe plate while at was fought on Jan. 3, 1777. After cap­ i also a tluy breakfast room. The diniug
the bat and bears In mind that every turing the British forces at Trenton, i hall contains a huge open fireplace and
pitcher, no matter who he Is or what Dec. 26, 1776, Washington found him­ oaken beams form its ceiling. On the
bls reputation may be, must put tbs self confronted by the British army, un­ first floor above are the drawing room
Cornwallis con­ aud two bedrooms. The next floor is
Sure Sign.
ball over tbe rubber, can, with prac­ der Gen. Cornwallis.
his forces at Princeton Jan. 2 occupied by one big bedroom with an ad­
“I think the count is in love with
tice, become a good and, I may say, a centrated
and marched with nearly his entire army
me,” said the first heiress.
dangerous hitter, even If he has not against Trenton. At nightfall the British joining dressing room, and, still above,
The INTERNAL REMEDY
“What makes you think so?” i:
tbe natural ability of some of tbe encamped on the west bank of the Assan- there are three attic bedrooms.
No Case Exists it Will Not Cure
quired the other.
great batter of the past and present, pink, a small fordable stream, which was
“He asked me today how much
ONE PICTURE OF WASHINGTON.
says Roger Bresnahan tn th» Illus­ crossed by a bridge held by the Ameri­
Effective Way to Clean Bottle.
was worth.”—Philadelphia Press.
cans. Cornwallis postponed his attack
trated Sporting News.
A
Water
bottle
that
has
become
On» very bad fault many young until the next day. Finding himself op­
stained and dirty should have a few tea
by an army superior in discipline
players have Is tbe habit of pulling posed
4/Ï
leaves and a tablespoonful of vinegar
aud in numbers and cut off from retreat
it-
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
away from the plate, as ft is called, by the Delaware, which was tilled with
put into it and should then be well
Q Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
when a ball looks as though It might Ice, Washington determined to make a
|lO
in time. Sold by druggists.
shaken. Rinse out thoroughly with
CM
possibly bit the batter. How many night march around the British army and
CONSUMPTION
clear water. If the bottle be stained it
times have you seen a man step back attack Princeton, which was held by
will be well to let the tea leaves and
from a curved ball which a second three regiments of infantry and five
vinegar remain in it <or some hours,
after "cut the plate" and was called a troops of dragoons. A large quantity of
and it may be necessary to use a bottle
supplies
and
munitions
were
stored
there,
Btrike, much to his dlscomforture?
brush.
them
Washington
after
destroying
and
The remedy for this, I think, Is a sim­
Brunswick, where
intended
to
march
to
B
tatt of O hio , city or T oledo , {
ple one. which can be mastered by the British magazines were defended by
L ucas C ounty .
|
Poor man! He can’t help it
any young man possessing the neces only a few soldiers, The rear guard
F rank J. C heney makes oath that he is the
senior parter of the firm of F. J. C heney & Co., He gets bilious.
He needs a
sary confidence: It Is simply to step of the British army was at Maidenhead,
doing business in the City of Toledo, County
forward and meet the ball before It about half way between Trenton and
and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay good liver pill—Ayer’s Pills.
the sum oi ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each
crosses the plate. Iu this way the ball Princeton. Washington determined to
and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured They act directly on the liver,
Is always In front of the batter, and he attack the troops at Maidenhead first by
by the use of H all ’ s C atarrh C ure .
FRANK J. CHENEY
making
a
detour
through
the
Quaker
cure biliousness.
Is, so to speak, on top of It before It
8worn to before me and subscribed in my
road,
which
joined
the
main
road
within
breaks.
presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886.
miles of Princeton. As the road
Want your moustache or beard
4
I
A. W. GLEASON,
Many pitchers have a puzzling drop two
was in bad condition, the Americans did
r
I
Notary Public
a beautiful brown or rich black ? Use
ball which looks easy and fades away not reach the bridge at Stony Brook,
Hall
’
s
Catarrh
Cure
is
taaen
Internally
and
acts
from the bat when you strike at It. about three miles from Princeton, until
directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of
On the oilier haud, many of the best ■unrise. Here they took a short cut
From the portrait by James Peale, Uie system. Send for testimonials, free.
^nFT^CTB^F^RUGGiaTO^R^^JlALL^COyJJABHUA^N^r
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
boxmen are now using a rise ball while Gen. Mercer took possession of painted from life for David C. Claypool Sold by druggists,
7oc.
of
Philadelphia,
editor
of
the
Daily
Ad
­
the
bridge
at
the
main
road.
The
Amer
­
Hall
’
s
Family
Pills
ar*
the
best.
plthced with a side arm motion. A
batter bas a much better chance to kill ican army began this movement under vertiser, the journal chosen by Washing­
Holds Ancient Insurance Policy.
either of these balls by stepping Into cover of night, and by leaving a few ton to publish his farewell address. In
Charles M. Booth of Englewood, N.
them to the limit of the batter's box men to keep their camp fires along the this picture Washington is represented
bank of the Assanpink going, kept the in the uniform of commander in-chief.
in they approach the plate. The same British in ignorance of the movement The form is welt drawn, the face serene J., who has just celebrated his 100th
anniversary, says he is the
lice and all vermin that
liing applies to balls either on the In- uutil daylight. At daybreak the British and dignified the costume truly rendered. ! birthday
infest horses cattle, poul­
)d t ho)(ler o( a iif8 i,leUrance policy
try, etc. Lousy hens will
Hide or tlie outside of the plate.
force* at Princeton, under Col. Mawhood, At the death of Mr. Claypool it was
not lay; nor chicks grow.
It Is much easier to hit the ball by began their movement toward Trenton, purchased, with the original manuscript in the United States. He was insured
running In on It. By meeting tbe ball when they came upon the American of the address (which Mr. Claypool by in 1843 in a company just organized
early it can be sent In the direction forces under Gen. Mercer at the bridge. Washington’s permission had retained), and still in existence.
live upon the blood which
of the left field. Th| old theory that A sharp fire was opened on the enemy, by James Lenox, and is in the collec­ PITA Permanently euren. no fits or nervousness
should go to sustain life
The tion founded by him in the city of New II I U after firstday’suseofDr.Kline’sGreat Nerv*
If you wish to strike a ball toward the which was vigorously returned.
A vitality PRUSSIAN
York.
British
then
charged
with
the
bayonet,
a
Restorer. Send for Free S2 trial bottle and treatise.
LICE POWDER kills
right Held you must strike at it after weapon of which the Americans were
the lice, thus it SAVES
Dr. H. U. Kline, Ltd- W? Arch fit.. Philadelphia, Pa.
FEED as extra rations
It has crossed tbe plate is pretty well destitute. After a short struggle, in
must be given on account
So Many More to Cut Down.
of vermin. 25c and 50c
Stubborn.
exploded. By stepping In and meeting which Gen. Mercer was mortally wound
dealers. By mail 40c A 75c
¡the ball In front of you It 1» Just as I ed the British put this division of the
“Yo* nebbah had eny experence
PRUSSIAN REMEDY CO.
ST. PAUL, MINN.
wives, did yo*, bruddah?” asked
! easy, If not easier, to drive It toward American army to flight. The enemy
68 page Hand Book Free
peeked Remus.
; right field as It Is to pull It Into left were soon checked, however, by the
FÜKTLAND SEED CO,, Portland. 0*7,
American regular*, under the command
“No, sah,” replied Sam, “but
field.
Coast Agent*.
of Washington, who distinguished him
raised mules.”—Chicago News.
S'.ie—If there’s any one I detest more
than another it’s a man who is forever
talking shop.
He—Yes, he’s almost as tiresome as
the woman who is constantly talking
■hopping.—Cassell’s London Journal.
Bad Coughs
BY THE GRIP.
RELEASED BY PE-RU-NA.
a number of times. He endorses Pe­
runa in the following words:
“I am 08 years old, am hale and
hearty, and Peruna has helped me at­
tain it. Two years ago I had la grippe
—my life was despaired of. Peruna
saved me.”—J. R. Guill.
A Relative of Abraham Lincoln.
Mr. Silas S. Lincoln, who resides at
913 I. Street, N. W., Washington, D.
C., has the honor of being third cousin
to Abraham Lincoln. He writes:
“1 had la grippe five times before us­
ing your medicine. Four years ago I
began the use of Peruna, since which
time I have not been troubled with
that disease. I can now do as much
work at my desk as I ever could in my
life. I have gained more than ten
pounds in weight.”—S. 8. Lincoln.
Pe-ru-na Not Only Cured l.a Grippe
but Beneiitted the Whole System.
Miss Alice M. Dressier, 1313 N. Bry­
ant Ave., Minneapolis, Minn., writes:
“Last spring I suffered from la grippe
and was partially cured but the bad af­
ter effects remained through the sum­
mer and somehow I did not get Btrong
as I was before. One of my college
friends who was visiting me asked me
to try Peruna and I did so and found
it all and more than I expected. It
not only cured me of the catarrh but
restored me to perfect health, built up
the entire system and brought a happy
feeling of buoyancy which I had not
known for years.”—Alice M. Dressier.
An Actress’ Testimonial.
Miss Jean Cowgill, Griswold Opera
House, Troy, N. Y., is the leading lady
with the Aubrey Stock Co. She writes
the following:
“During the past winter of 1901, I
suffered for several weeks from a severe
attacx of la gripe, which left a serious
catarrhal condition of the throat and
head.
“Some one suggested Peruna. As a
last resort, after wasting much time
and money on physicians, I tried the
remedy faithfully, and in a few weeks
was as well as ever.”—Jean Cowgill.
A Southern Judge Cu.'ed.
Judge Horatio J. Goss. Hartwell,
Ga., writes:
“Some five or six years ago I had a
severe spell of la grippe, which left me
with systemic catarrh. A friend ad­
vised me to try your Peruna which I
did, and was immediately benefitted
and cured. The third bottle com­
pleted the cure.”—H. J. Goss.
If you do not derive prompt and sat­
isfactory results from the use of Peru-
na, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giv­
ing a full statement of your case and
he will be pleased to give you his valu­
able advice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of
The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus,
Ohio.
Perrin’s Pile Specific
Estab­
lished
1867
WELL DRILLING
MACHINERY.
PORTABLE «ml drill any depth»
by »team or horse power.
43 DIFFERENT STYLES.
We challenge competition.
Send for Free Illustrated Catalogue
REIERSON MACHINERY CO.
Toot Morrison St., Portland, Ore.
si
Cross?
BUCKINGHAM’S DYE
KILLS
LICE!
cost mor*—yield mor
save all experimenting—
save disappointments. 48
years the Standard Seeds.
Sold bv all dealers.
Seed Annual postpaid free,
to al! applicants.
D. M. FERRY A CO
Detroit. Mich
■elf by hi* personal daring. The British
then opened with their artillery and at­
tempted to capture two pie res of cannon.
Col. Mawhood fought desperately, and
by the aid of his bayonets forced hi«
way to the main road nnd retreated to­
ward Trenton. The Fifty-fifth British
regiment was completely routed, and a
"Say, mam----- ”
, portion of the Fortieth regiment took
refuge in Nassau Hall, where it aurren
"Wlint Is it. Tommy?"
! dered on the approach of the Americans.
“Ifdey'd had Arbor Day when George
I Not more than thirty Americans were Washington was er kid, he'd had a cinch,
| killed or wounded in this battle, while wouldn't he?”
I
i the British loat two hundred killed and
Washington
as
Dictator.
wounded, and two hundred and thirty
Dec. 27, 1770, George Washington was
j prisoners.
made Dictator in the Vuited States. It
is a remarkable—and not a very well ob­
HI8 ANCESTRAL HOME.
served—passage in American history.
Home of Washington's Ancestor* Still Students know he was honored above
Htaml« nt Branbnry, England.
other men at different times in his life;
The home of George Washington’* an- but that the Congress of this country
i ceators still stands at Banbury tn the should ever clothe any man with the
• Eugllsh county of Northamptonshire powers and attributes of Dictator—a-* if
, About eighty mile* from Ix>ndon. Th* it were a South American State—seems
old-fashioned manor house now form* a incredible. Yet that is what Congress
______________________________________ ,
_______
did years ago. True, the authority was
to run only six months; but a less patri
otic man, so warranted, might have made
himself Dictator for life. King or what
ever he liked.—Chicago Evening I’ost.
V'
The Kind You Have Always Bought has homo the signa«
ture ot Clias. II. Fletcher, and has been made under his
personal Hupervision for over 30 years. Allow no ono
to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
•• Just-as-good ” are but Experiment*. ami endanger the
health of Children—Experience against Experiment*
What is CASTORIA
Caxtoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare.
gori<-. Drops anil Noothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its aire is Its guarantee. It destroys Worms
anil allays Feverishness. It cures IMarrliiva and Wind
Colle. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach anil Bowels, giving healthy ami natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea- The Mother’s Friend.
The Kind You Haye Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
For Over 30 Years.
>«Rnrr, vv Muanav amerr.
ncw
ron« eirr.
None for H»r.
many homes of tl>» English gentry. Is
well arranged aud comfortable.
It la
Good company and good discours»
j built mostly of atone and has a atone
roof and square porch of etone Imbedded ar» th» very sinew» of virtu».—Isaak
Walton.
Gvotn too expensive.
It is a significant fact that with the
phenominal increase in the price of
coffins has come a marked decrease of
mortality among local Chinese. The
natives just cannot afford to die at the
present undertaking rates, and that’s
all there is to it.—Shanghai Times.
The Wonderful Cream Separator
ON RAINY DAYS WEAR
1OWEJ?$ Waterproof
OILED
CLOTHING
BLACK or YELLOW.
IT MAXES EVERY DAY COVKT
does its work in 30 minutes and leaves less
than 1 per cent butter fat. The price is ridicu­
lously low, according to size. |2.«5 to >•> each,
and when vou have one you would not part
therewith lor fifty times its cost
JUST BEND THIS NOTICE
with 5c stamp* for postage to the John A. Sal
zer seed Co., 1 a Crosse, w is., and get their big
catalog, fully describing this remarkable Cream
Separator, and hu dreds of other tools ami
farm seeds used by the farmer. [P. C. L.)
fa.AhrA
I
?
I
§
P. N. U.
No. 8-1904.
HEN wrltin< to advertl.er* plea.,
mention thia paper.
The Happiest Man.
“Mars Tom should lie de happiest
man in de roun' worl’l”
“Think so?”
“I sho’ does.
He spend three-
fourths er hi» time huntin’, en de
yuther fo’th eatin’what he hunt!”—
Mrs. Atlanta Contitntion.
"Really, Mr». O’Toole.” said
Naybor, "you should send little Keill.
to the kindergarten.
"Phwat kolnd av a thing is that?”
demanded the contractor'» wife.
"Kindergarten? Oh. that'» simply
W A«H I NOTONS Al'CFBTBAL HOME.
German for----- ”
part of what Is known as ths Sulgrars
"Enough said, ma'am. 01'11 bov no
estate.
Dutch In molne, thank ye kolndly,
The house, while small compared with ma'am."—Philadelphia Ledger.
11« which are eotae UktereeUag antique
Mother» will find Mrs. Winslow’s Sootbin*
Syrup the best remedy to use for their children
the toothing Reason.
■ mOMfîTT...... ~..................
Pain’s Master
Every nook and corner
of this and other coun­
tries bus seen embla­
zoned the words
This means the American business man.
If anyone has surpassed him in history,
we .i. n t know who it is. R.S0IV. to
enter business now. Write today for
our catalogue
We educate you prac­
tically for business and assist you to se­
cure a position when competent. The
expense is small.
THE FLOWER
OF AGES
>
BEHNKE - WALKER
BUSINESS COLLEGE
Portimi
-...................... —————
A •
JACOBS
Thousands have been cured of
every form of pain and chiefly
|
•MMMMMMMMMMMMMMeMMOMMW
Price 25c. and 5Oc.
Oregon
•o