Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (May 6, 1898)
till in the Store. tw I am still in the Store at Yaquina, with a FULL LINE OF GOODS, AND THE SAME WILL BE SOLD AT A HEAL BARGAIN. hese Goods mnst be sold in the next THIRTY DAYS. Come With your money ana get what you are in Need of. PETER TELLEIFSOlSr V, -WtifrW Without Tmw Along a vty P 1 CiM DIFFERENT PtOIKkS -Sfc. ALU CAUBERS IvfJJJ, ' 'i4t FR0M 82 T 5 T"EY ARE THf- " l-f?a)RiTE- mm liwWlFM WHCfE.VeR AMMUNITION. USEDBT W$PffflffiM . Nashville And Roseburg, 1898. The attention of the Christian Endeavorers of the world is being directed to Nashville now as it was a year ago to San Francisco, and one of the greatest meetings in the history of this great movement is assured. Oregon Endeavorers are looking especially towards Rose, burg at this time where their annu al state convention will be held May ith to 1 2 th, preparations are being made in that lively burg for the reception and care of all the del egates who may find it possible to attend. Such a reception is prom ised as has never before been attemp ted by any entertaining city in Ore gon. The program as outlined is one of the best they have ever been able to offer, and as no limit is placed on the number who may attend a successful meeting is already-assured. THE COUNTRY EDITOR. sWlKCf!ESTERREPEATING ARMS 6 GSSm Railroad Engineer Totifie to Benefits Received From ' Dr. Miles' Remedies. FURNITURE V WW AV'V v-uT.rtJiUT pjrTffir,3 : We HAVE A LARGE STOCK OF FUSWTUSE. STOVES, ' AND HOUSE FURNISHINGS, "TT'inrr.B Is no Din-o responsible pcsltlou i oil c:i: ihti.m tbiitof aratlroadcagta eur. ()ahls!ito:wiy nerves, clear train, rlaLi. cya and perfect ee'f command, do ;..:r.ci Hit tafetj-nf tlx- train s.nd the lives . it;; i)Liraenger3. Dr. MiW Nervine and t'M? remedies arc especially adapted to ci"i!::j:(Uonorvi'sstoacly, the brain clear ni'! 1'io mental faculties unimpaired. Kiis.'aeer F. W. McCoy, formerly of 1323 ilronwar, Council IJJuffs, but now residing it.3;'JI Humboldt -St., Denver, teritc3 that he Tuff', jcl "or years lrom coiisUpMion, can3 v.ir sicl:, nervous and billoras bendac.lies and vaa fully restored to health by Dr. Miles' Nerve. Liver Pills. I heartily recommend He Is Eulogized in Congress by Con gressman Clark of Missouri. Congressman Champ Clark, of Mis souri, in a recent speech on the Loud postal reform service bill, in the nation al house of representatives at Washing ton, embodied in his remarks this eulo gy on the country editor : "lam unal terably opposed to anything that will injure the country editor, curtail his profits, circumscribe his usefulness, or place an additional thorn in his path way. The rural editor, God bless him ! is the most persistent of teachers. Like charity, as described by St. Faulin the thirteenth chapter of the first Corinth iaus, "he suffereth long and is kind." He is the pack horse of every com munity, the promoter of every laudable enterprise, the worst underpaie laborer in the vineyard. Counting his space as his capital, he gives more to charity, his means considered, than any other mem ber oi society. IIo is a power in politic, a pillar in the church, a leader, in the crusade for better morals. He is pre eminently the friend of humanity. Line upon line, paragraph upon para graph, day by day, he is embalming in cold type the facts from which the He rodotus, the Tacitus, the Sismondi, or the Macaulay of the future will write the history of our times. (Applause.) He joyously announces our advent into this world, briefly records our upris ings and downsittings, and sorrowfully chronicles our exit from this vale of tears. He is the greatest and most ingenious of manufacturers, for while other man ufacturers produce only perishable stuffs, he manufactures immortal statesmen out of raw, sometimes very raw, materi al. He s To our virtues ever kind And to our faults a little blind. We are all more or less, generally more, his handiwork ; and it does not become the creature to injure, the busi ness of his creator. Working night and day during the campaign often without money and without price, when the election is over and the victory is won. and the loaves and the fishes, now vul garly called "pie," are to be distributed, by some strange Jupxu of the human memory, he is generally forgotten. , Dr. Miles' Remedies." rr. Miles' Eomcdtcs'P lit sH by all ilrrs-fejN jwiontt, Brat ix.tuu &n$mecSls3i xMi.Mis or money re-np cfoornrn Dr. tu'ieu. BouK os ci.'s-; of the heart am'.) Health Coffins. Caskets and Burial Suoplies: rSAJS OLD SONQ REVISED. Call and See my slock. j FASH & G AAR. Toledo, Ore. Illustrated 9r "5 Edited by ALBERT SHAW YATES & YATES, LAWYERS CORVALLIS, OREGON OTTO O. KROOSTAD, llcg. Pharmacist. DRUGS. BOOKS Etc. Tcledo, - Oregon You'd scarce expect one of my age in merchandising to engage, and hope to get a paying trade without the local paper's aid. And yet I did that very thin;; I opened up a store last spring, this month the sheriff took my stock, and sold it from the auction block. Don't view me with a scornful eye, but simply say as I pass by, there goes a man who seems to think be has no use for printers ink. There is a truth as broad as earth and business men should know its worth; 'tis simply this: lhe public buys its goods from those who advertise COnMUNICATED. Nortons, May 3d 1868. Dear Editor: I have noticed in your valuable paper somt com plaints about the setting of fires on the hills and range. Now I am a believer in clearing u the country and getting it seeded to 'iss so the people can keep stock an d not be compelled to work out in the summer to get flour to live on through the winter. I will give my expeiience in this county ex. tending over a period of about 2d years. Some say it is against the law to set fires, but I think that it is every man's duty to burn all he can and kill out all of this worth less young alder and fir that is cov ering the ground thicker every year and is only fit for wild cat and beat dens. In your lasl issue Mr. A. L. Chitwood, a well meaning man of my acquaintance, tells of sowing several dollars worth ot grass seed this spring and that the fires bad burned it all up and he is out his money and his seed. Now I would not give a man the salt tor his grub to sow grass seed this time of the year, for before it get 11 start the ferns will smother it out. The only way to raise grass is to burn the ground in the summer and sow the seed, and it will come up and take root and stand the ferns the next spring, providing you have some sheep or goats to feed on it instead of cattle, and when the fern gets too thick run a fire over it in the Jspring when the ground is damp and it wont hurt the grass roots and it will grow rapidly and you will have a clean pasture. This is the way we do up here and we have more open ground and more grass than any other place in the county. Now if every rancher in the countv will set more fires every summer and get his worth less brush killed off we will soon have the finest stock range in the ' west. Pro Bono Publico. "If only me magatini can be taken, we would surest the Rr.VlFAV OF REVIEWS, as emeriti more ground than any other magazine." Board of Library Commissioner! of New Hampshire, 1S96. 'JHIS magazine is, In Its contributed and departmental features, what Its readers, who Include the most noted names of the E'nglish-speaking world, are pleased to call "absolutely up to dal:e," "thoroughly abreast of the times," " Invaluable,',1 and " Indispensable." It Is profusely Illustrated with timely portraits, views, and cartoom. Its original articles are of immediate Interest, by the best authorities on their respect ive subjects. The Editor's " Progress of the World " gives a clear, rightly proportioned view of the history of the human race during the curr ent month. The " Leading Articles of the Month " present the I mportant parts of the best magazine a.t..;es that have been written In every part of the world. The newest and most Important books are carefully reviewed. Indexes, chronolcglcal records, and other departments complete the certainty that the reader of the Review of Rlviews will miss nothing of great significance that is said or written or done ' throughout the world. Send 10 CnU In Sump lor Specimen Copy I III I Si: THE RFVJTV OF RFvTEVS CO., 13 Astof Plate, New York. Sii.jca.r-i,?3c.t Tilfimentfn).JiJ)Oi Yev.S2.5D. Sr1 Z. M. DERRICK, County Surveyor. Solicits all work in his line. Cor rect work and reasonable prices. P. O Address, Eddy vile, Oregon. BEAVER CREEK WOODEXWARE CO., Ona, Lincoln County, Oregon. Manufacturers of all kinds ol Wooden ware. Prices givan on applicatian. J F. SWOPE, Attorn ey-at-Law, Notary Public. Collections promptly attended to; Loans negotiated. Will practice in all the courts of the state. Office in the Y. H. M. Co. 's building on Hill I street, Toledo, Oregon. Many old soldiers now feel the effects af the hard service they en dured during the war. Mr. Geo. S. Anderson, of Rossville, York county, Penn. who saw the hardest kind of service at the front, is now frequently troubled with rheuma tism. "I had a severe attack lately," he says, " and procured a bottle of Chamberlain's Pain Balm. It did me so much good that I would like to know what you would charge me for one dozen bottles." Mr. Anderson wanted it both for his own use and to supply it to bis friends and neighbors, as every family should have a bottle of it in their home, not only for rheuma tism, but for lame back, sprains, swellings, cuts, bruises and burns' for whice it is unequaled. For sale by O. O. Krogstad, Druggist J..S5.. .. t C.C.I tlnwflfl With I (tarnref ft. c-nr." oi liri.'itin farcer 1.?: k'tiM s I ul.ii mum V Notice. 280 acres of land at a bargain The place is at Beaver Creek, Lin coin county, about 8 miles from Yaquina city and about mile from Ona postomce. About 80 acres of bottom land and about acres cleared land. There is also a small house and a barn on the place. Several other tracts of land can be bad a low figure by ad dressing, Pkter Tellbfson, Yaquina Ore Tlie month of April, 1898. has taken its place in American history by the side of the memorable Aprils of '61 and '65. April indeed has been an eventful month, this year, and nowhere have its dramatic in cidents been more ably set forth than in the editorial departments of the American Monthly Review of Reviews for May. The diplomatic, financial, political, and military phases of the Cuban situation are exhaustively reviewed in the the illustrated "Progress of the world" and "Record of Current Events" down to the outbreak of hostilities between United States and Spain, while "The War Question in Car toons" and "Leading Articles of the Month" throw important side lights on the discussion. Tall Timothy was on his farm, among the tall trees of the Waldo hills, when the news of his nomin ation reached him, which might be construed as a great surprise to his excellency, and, no doubt made him feel like Cincinnatus of old, who was at his plow when notified that he had been chosen dictator of Rome. But there was at least one material point of difference: We have no account that old Cin re fused a land office which paid $3,000 a year for a dictatorship that paid only $1,500. The extra touch to disinterested patriotism was re served for our modern "Cincinnatus of the West." Mayor Pennoyer, however, cut his salary in two af ter he got it, but Mr. Geer cuts his in two before he gets it. Verily, there is nothing like sound patriotism, except it be well, we had just as well say "sound money." The Peoples Republic. Ifo-To-Bao for Fifty Centi. Guaranteed tobacco habit euro, make weak men atroug, bljod pure, ioc II. AU druaKmUi rTETJEALOIA earwl or Dr. Miles' Pan Piua. "Oh coat adoae. ' At all dnifgkcu.