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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (May 13, 1904)
That Tired Feeling Is a Common Spring Trouble. It'3 a sign that the blood is deficient in vitality, just as pimples and other eruptions are signs that the blood is impure. It's a warning, too, which ouj the hazardous fail to heed. Hood's Sarsaparilla ' and Pills Remove it, give new life, new cour age, strength and animation. They cleanse the blood and clear the ' complexion. , Accept no substitute. T "I felt tired all the time and could not sleep. After taking Hood's Sarsaparilla a while I could sleep well and the tired feelinK had gone. This great medicine has also cared me of scrofula." Mas. C. M. Boot, Oilead, Conn. , Hood's Sarsaparilla promises to cure and keeps the promise. Swabian Humor. ... Max Nordnii was talking recently lo ' an American woman about humor. "Next to the Americans," said Nor ; flau, with a polite smile, "I think that ' the Swablans are the most humorous people in the world. A Swabkin, If he has nothing funny to say, keeps silent Stupidity Is unknown among this race. I "One night In Swabla, in my early j youth, I called on a Swabian maiden. 8he was very pretty. Perhaps I stayed I longer than I should. Suddenly, at ; any rate, the young girl's mother call i cd In a loud voice from upstairs: !; '"Gretchen! Gretchen!' ! "'Yes, mother,' Gretchen answered. :, " 'Gretchen, it Is very cold here. Will you ask that young man to shut the front door from the outside?' " t n How's This? ' We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for ' any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hail's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo. O. 1 We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney tot the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transao ! tlons and financially able to carry out any ob i ligations made by their linn. : Wsst & Tbuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. Waldino, Kiknan Sc Mabvin, Wholesale Drug t gluts. Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act 1 Ing- directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. , Hall's Family Pills are the best. ' Many Hands Make Light Work ,' Tourist (in Utah) Polygamy is no , longer practiced, I am told. . Ex-Mormon (dejectedly) No, and It's a shame..' Only one wife! What good is one wife? Just a trial, that's all. "How so?" Is "Everything is at sixes and 'sevens. Nothing ever done. Buttons off, meals half cooked everything wrong. In the 'good old days we had one wife to sew 'on . buttons, another to darn stockings, janother to boss the servants, another to 'do the shopping, and another to attend Jto the duties of society. A man had pome comfort then." il.L 1 I CI1DEC hVUCDC All lltl cam j Best Count. Bjrup. Tastes Good. Uta In time, Bold br drat? jAN INDESCRIBABLE TORTURE ,fj Because Rheumatism sometimes comes on suddenly it doesn't ,d prove that it is a chance disease or one due to accidental causes. It "takes time for it to develop, and is at work in the system long before Uny symptoms are felf. The blood i3 the first point of attack, and jthe poisonous acids that cause the aches and pains are thea distrib uted through the circulation to different parts of the system, and fettle in joints, muscles and nerves ; and when the system is in this condition it needs only some exciting cause like exposure to night air, lamp, chilly weather, or the cold, bleak winds of winter, to arouse j the slumbering poisons and bring on Rheumatism. The severity jf the attack depends upon the amount of acid in the blood and the i iUantitv of arrirl matter in tVia points and muscles. Some peo Dle are almost helpless from the l first, while others have occa y'aal spells or are uncomforta ble, restless, nervotji and half pick all the time from the gagging aches and pains. Rheu- catism is a disagreeable com panion even in its mildest form. K prows worse as we grow older, ... A V-.-..- At . re . . . . . uu u ajuenuy 5imensme joints Jmn the muscles out of shape tnd Creaks down the fiervnua ind breaks down the nervous jiyitea.' A disease thatorigin-ot-j ia the blood, as Rheumatism cd ; vmuui uc cureu wun ex- fXz -1 remedies like liniments and plasters ; such things scatter the rrive them to some other part'of the body, but do not touch gsA C sase or improve the condition of the blood. The thin acid ' blood must be restored to its normal fzi js" aS Purit7 and strength, so that all poi fL J I fN sonous substances maybe carried out 0!w5: ' k. , of the system, and no medicine accom- ) I k7 plishesthisinsoshortatimeasS.S.S.t a" IZtf 1 which not only neutralizes . the acid , 1 and counteracts the poisons, but builds - ' ' up the general health at the same time. V rue for our vr uu - di : j -i f!!l5uanT8Pecul formation or advice, our physicians will furnish t tr..ut charge. JTiT SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA. OA Growing Stock by Electriolty. The possibilities of electricity have never yet been fully demonstrated. Its beneficial effect upon growing plants in the way of hastening development has been proved to an extent, and now the mysterious fluid Is being tried on animals at the University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor. It has been demon strated that rabbits enclosed in a pen about which run a number of electrically-charged wires reach maturity in two-thirds the time taken by those kept under normal conditions. The electrically-treated animals were in all respects healthy and their flesh has been found to be unusually tender. It is thought possible that the same treat ment may be applied to, beef cattle, making a 2-year-old steer as large as one 3 years old under present condi tion, besides producing a superior quality of beef. An Obituary Mixed. Edward L. Adams, representing the United States as Consul General at Stockholm, Sweden, was for several years editor of the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle. While occupying thai position he wrote an obituary notice ol a neighbor's child, whose trousers had caught fire durlne a Fourth of Julv cel. ebrntlon, bumtag the little feiluw tw bndly that he died In consequence. Mr, Adams ended bis article with the state ment that the sympathies of friends would go out to the bereaved Darents His shock next day may possibly be imagined when the types made him soy that "the sympathies o' a large circle of friends will go out to the burned pants. PITH Permanently t:nrai. wntit.n. namn. r 1 1 0 afterflrstday'suBeorDr.Kllne'sUreatNerva tTu 3 -SI, ii Tee niDotneand treatise. Dr. It. H. Kline, Ltd. .US Arch St.. Philadelphia, Pa. Age of Decemion. Miss Elderleigh If I had my life to live over again Miss Springer (interrupting) Why, I thought that's what you were doing. Miss Elderleigh What do you mean? Miss springer Mr. lluggins said you low mm you were last month. APHORISMS. We may mend our faults as easily as cover them. Dllwyn. Nothing is so great an Instance of ill-manners as flattery. Fielding. No man is so insignificant as to be sure his example can do no hurt Lord Clarendon. A propensity to hope and Joy is real riches; one to fear and sorrow, real poverty. Hume. There is no dispute managed with out passion; and yet there is scarce a dispute worth a passion. Sherlock. Gaiety is not a proof that the heart is at ease, for often in the midst of laughter the heart is sad. De Genlis. Only they who are gossiped about gossip. Intelligent people talk of things; Ignorant people of their neigh bors. Colton. If we did but know how little some people enjoy the great thlnes thev possess there would not be much envy In the world. Young. Contentment Is a pearl of great price. and whoever procures it at the ex pense of ten thousand desires, makes a wise and happy purchase. Balguy. BHETJMATIBM IN ELBOWS, WBI8T3 AND KNEES. TJrbana, Ohio, Aug. SB, 1003. Iiaat winter I had a severe attaok of Rheumatism. It started in tha right elbow, and from there to my wrists; the rlg-ht wriat was the worse. It beoaroe swollen and extremely painful. My loft knee Joint waa the next plaoe to be at taoked. It beoame swollen and of course painful. The next point to be affeoted -waa the hip and ankle, which Brave ms jnuoh trouble. I waa barely able to get bout for some time. I waa under treat jnent of a physioian for awhilo, but (ret 1 n8' ? J-, and after - -. 7. . 4tuw a waa entirely relieved of the Rheumatism. All swelling; SAiaVpSa - B. 8. S. an excellent remedy ?? - ?a,"ell""t?mdyforRheume! In the blood. " 408 Bloomn.14 T. FLYING REPTILES OF OLD. Of Great Size, They Were Once More Common Than Birds. We are apt to think of reptiles as creeping and crawling things, forget ting that there was a time when flying reptiles were more common than birds. These reptiles, the pterodactyls, or fly ing dragons, not only flew, but some of thein reached a size much greater than that of any bird, for the largest birds do not fly. The South American condor sometimes measures as much as ten and one-half feet from tip to tip of outstretched wings, and it is quite possible that the finest examples of the albatross may measure a little, more. But the great pterodactyls which flew about the sea that in the days of old reached from the Gulf of Mexico to the Rocky Mountains, meas ure as much as twenty feet, the width of an average city lot, across their wings. Most of us have seen an eagle flying, and we can appreciate the size of this ancient dragon by remembering that it was nearly three times the size of an eagle. It was not, however, three times as heavy, for the body of this strnnge reptile was so small and its skeleton so wonHorf-jiiy u-i entire animal is thought to have weigh ed not more than twenty-five pounds, or only about as much as a large con dor. One of the largest bones of the wing, two feet long and two inches through, was, as Prof. Willlston tells us, no thicker than a sheet of blotting paper, and the great head, with a beak over three feet long, was equally light This great toothless beak is believed to have been used for snapping up fishes; and we can imagine this huge creature sailing swiftly over the sea, now and then swooping down to pick up a fish as deftly, for all its size, as a real swallow. But what did Ornithostoma this la the animal's name do with his wings and beak when he made an occasional visit to the landT One would think they must have been very much in his way, and that the animal was as awk ward on the shore as he was graceful in the air. And how did he start to fly? With such enormous wings, we think Ornithostoma must have dwell on cliffs about the sea and launched off them as the gannets do from Bird Rock. This great flying reptile lived some six million years ago; the sea over which it flew long ago disap peared, and the mud into which its bones sank became chalk, and from the formation of these great chalk beds the time at which Ornithostoma existed is called the Cretaceous Pe riod. St. Nicholas. A REMARKABLE INVENTION. A log saw operated by compressed air is a recent invention of vast im portance to the timber Industry. The appliance consists of a pneumatic en gine nnd frame, and is adapted for op eiatlng drag saws on cordwood and heavy timber nnd for general use In log camps, displacing the hand-power SAWINO WITH COMFRF88ED AIR. equipment now generally used. Com pressed nir to operate the engine and ww -can be obtained by using a steam, belt, gasoline or electric-driven com pressor or by an ordinary locomotive olr pump attached to the boiler of any logging or portable engine. The pneumatic engine, which is de scribed in a recent issue of Compress ed Air, is capable of making from 125 to 150 strokes a minute, depending on the pressure of air used. At sixty pounds' pressure it will develop 2, horse power. The engine weighs only fifty pounds, lelng constructed almost entirely of brnss and steel tubing. A Graphic Imagination. Nathan's teacher believed in reduc ing poetry to diagram and visible out line. Therefore, says the Boston Her ald, she told the class to make a rough Illustration of the poem, "The Old Oaken Bucket." Nathan's Illustration consisted of a large circle, three buckets and a bunch of dots. "Nathan," said the teacher, "I don't understand this. What's the circle?" "That's the well," replied Nathan. "And why have you three buckets?" "One is the old oaken bucket, one is the Iron-bound bucket, and the other is the moss-covered bucket which bung in the well." "And what are all those little dots?" "Those are the loved spots which my Infancy knew." Far-seeing Providence. Jaggles The liking for terraDln is aid to be an acquired taste. Waggles That's another of th wise provisions of nature. Terrapin now cost 1100 a doien. Town Topics. Avers You know the medicine that makes pure, rich blood Ayer's Sarsaparilla. Your mother, grandmother, all your folks, used it. They trusted Sarsaparilla it. Their doctors trusted it. Your doctor trusts it. Then trust it yourself. There is health and strength in it. "I suffered tsrrlbljr from Indlfteitlon and thin blood. 1 found no relief until I took Ayer's Samaparlllu. four bottles perma nently cured me." xukb. x. xv. nAKT, inc. mico, w. x. 81.00 a bottle. J. C. ITHIt CO.. I.owflll. Mum. Aimm gel firm. for Rich Blood Avers Pills ore gently laxative. They greatly aid the Sarsaparilla. Si.eet Little Imp. The other day at a rural railway station a colored mother who waa , watting for her child exclaimed, as the youngster was handed to her from the train: , "Lnwd bless his honey-sweetnass! j Ain't he de blackest, sweetest little Satan dat ever you did see?" Atlanta , Constitution. For forty year's Flso's Cure for Con-. Sumption has cured coughs and colds. At druggists. Price 25 cents. In Chicago. Mrs. Porkchops That Mrs. Grain pit is trying to introduce some new fangled ideas in society. Porkchops What's the matter with her now? Mrs. Porkchops Why, she says it's no longer good form to take stran gers to see the abbatolr. Puck. Mothers will find Mrs. Winslows's Soothing Byrup the best remedy to use for their children during the teething period.. Essence of Orange Leaves. One of the remarkable industries of Paraguay is the preparation of the es sence of orange leaves. More than 150 years ago the Jesuit priests, who then ruled that secluded country, Imported orange seeds and planted groves, which have now become Immense forests, filled with small establishments for ex tracting tbe essence, which is exported to France and the United States for use in soap and perfumery making. It is also employed by the natives in Paraguay as a healing ointment and a .hair tonic. w... . r icwner, ujiu iins ocen made under his personal supervision for over SO years. Allow no one ACloVO yo,uIa Counterfeits, Imitations and i.oaltwWhiM,areut Experiment. nd endanger thw. licaltn of Children Experience against Experiment. c What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil. Parei- nnt?,iVr,?PliaudS,otllln?'rSyruP8 Ifc is feasant. It 2 wi,.1,leilier Pium Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its aire is its fruarantco. It destroys Worms and allays rcverishness. It cures Diarrluca and Wind C,iCi-w "eves Teeth nff Troubles, cures Constipation R?mlilt,ilcncyt lfc, ass ntes the Food, regulates the hTn?"41,"0018' 1'ealthyand natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mothor'u l The Kind You Haire Always Bought .Dears me In Use For THt CtNT.UH MIIMW, Tt mmS MITCHEUL., first Htrostt, UUWIS 200 xicaxo mo aignature oi VaMRiOM. Urnuha I - 8RATTUB hpokam; A Christian Work. Chicago wealthy men are to rescue from the slums of that city the good people who, by force of circumstances, are compelled tp live amid degrading surroundings. Land will be bought for them and farms equipped and the debt will be repaid by installments on easy terms. John Lambert is at the head of the movement. It Is intended that the movement will extend to every Ameri can city of consequence. It is thought by its workings that 1,000,000 persons will be transferred from the misery, drunkenness and temptations of con gested sections to the pure air and in vigorating and wholesome life on the farm. A' girl signing herself "Fifine" writes as follows: For fifteen years I have done my duty by my friends. When engagements were announced I got up bose nnd handkerchief showers, decorated for the .wedding, and gave more costly presents than I could af ford. When their babies came I gave again. I am getting tired of it, and ask you to inaugurate a Fay Back shower. I want some of the things paid back, and a new style of Fuy Back parties would compensate me for what I have given." An Easy Way to Do It. Mineral, Idaho, April 11. Mr. D. S. Colson of this place has something to say which will be of interest to many men Mr. Colson claims to have found a simple way to get rid of pains in the back, Sciatica or Rheumatism. He has cured himself and so claims per sonal experience in proof of his method. Mr. Colson says: "I had awful pains in my hip. They got so bad at last that I could hadly walk. I tried several things but got no relief till I began to use Dodd's Kidney Pills and I had taken but a few of these pills till the pain left me entirely. "Dodd's Kidney Pills certainly did me lots of good and I consider them a great medicine." The remedy that cured Mr. Colson is the same that has been making such sensational cures of Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Dropsy and Rheumatism all over the country. The name of the medicine is Dodd's Kidney Pills. Swearing Spoils Horses. A well-known owner of nice horses, not at all a sentimental person, re cently made an order forbidding his employes to talk In loud tones or to swear in the stable. "I have never yet seen a good mannered horse," he says, "that was being sworn at all the time. It hurts the feelings of a sensitive horse, nnd I'll keep my word good to discharge any man In "'my employ if I catch him swearing with in the hearing of any horse in this stable." signature Over 30 Years. MuniMV aTRttT. HIW VORK OITT. -BEE LINE" BUGGIES Are not manufacturers regular construction, but Our Own Special Construction Put up with full knowledge of the re quirements of this rough western coun try. Made to stand np, and will stand up, better than any buggy sold at any thing like the price. If you want a good buggy at a moderate price, try our " Bee Lino." You can't beat It. We have the "Bee Line" Itoad Wagons. & STAVER CO. PORTUAND, ORCCIOIN DOI8B