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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (June 7, 1907)
Feed Your Nerves Upon rich, para, nourishing blood by taking Hood'i Barsaparilla, and you will b free from those spells ot de pair, those sleepless nights and anzloaa days, those gloomy, deathlike feelings, those sudden starts at mere nothings, those dyspeptlo symptoms and blinding headaches. Hood's Sarsaparllla baa dona thia lor many others It will core yon. Hood's Sarsaparilla In usual liquid form or In chocolated tablets known aa Sarsatabs. 100 doses $U Waalaar If the Hoicro. "I hear yon have been getting married, Ardup. Still billing and cooing?'' "Cooing only, Roxley. The er billing will "corns on the first day of the month. CASTOR I A Por Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature T Limerinc variety Some years ago Mons. Paul Vlllars, London correspondent of the Journal des Debats, went to Limerick on tha occasion of a great Nationalist meet ing. On arriving at the hotel he asked for room In the front of the house, A servant took him to a small dark room looking on to an Inper courtyard. Mon sieur Vlllars to the window and satis fied himself that there was a mistake.' This Is not the front of the house," said he. "Ob, yes,' sir," the servant said. "It'i the back of the front' TfcN YEARS OF PAIN. Unable to Do Even Housework Be cause of Kidney Troubles. Mrs. Margaret Emmerich, of Clin ton St., Napoleon, O., Says: "For fif teen years I was a great sufferer from kidney troubles. My back pained me terri bly. Every turn or V uivTg uiuovu Dual u, 4 shooting pains. - My w eyesight was poor, before me, and I had aizzy spews, f or ten years I could not do housework, and for two years did not get out of the house. The kidney Secretions were irregular, and doctors were not helping me. Doan's Kidney Pills brought me quick relief and finally cured me. They saved my life." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. 5 BAD BJLOOB flHE SOURCE OF JUX DISEASE TVa ftart f 1w1t la AtnenA Rtrenirth. When thia life stream ia purity and richness vre are assured of, perfect and uninterrupted health; because pure blood la nature's safe-guard against disease. When, however, the body is fed on weak, impure or polluted blood, the system is deprived ol Its strength, disease germs collect, and the trouble is manifested ia various vrays. Pustular eruptions, pimples, Chow that the blood is in a feverish, much acid or the presence of eotne irritating humor. Sores and Ulcers are the result of morbid, unhealthy matter in the blood, and Rheumatism, Ca- tarrh, Scrofula, Contagious Blood Poison, etc., are all deep-seated blood disorders that will continue to grow worse as long as the poison remains. These impurities and poisons find their Often a sluggish, inactive condition of "'U1U"V' . r V"V, lorauricanuoujCTBcius, waica are another cause for the poisoning of the microbes of Malariainto our lungs, . sufficient quantity it becomes a carrier are so unfortunate as to Inherit bad rnnatnntlv nnnnved nnrl trnnhleri with ease, and until this vital fluid is cleansed and purified the body 13 sure to breeding, pure-blood chickens for some suffer in some way. For blood troubles of any character S. S. S. is the best yars, and he always sold what he had remedy ever discovered. It goes down into the circulation and removes any In poultry and eggs, without any trou and all poisons, supplies the healthful properties it needs, and completely bie to his neighbors and little market ana every and cures PURELY. VEGETABLE and ceT3 Skm Diseases, Contagious - Blood Poison, etc., and does not leave the Slightest trace of the trouble for future outbreaks. The whole volume of blood is renewed and cleansed after a course of S. S. S. It is also nature's greatest tonic, made entirely of roots, harmless to any part of the system. pfaue stores. BooPkon the blood . THE SWIFT Are always reported when Seeds are planted. Why ? best on this Coast Our Annual tens an about remittors, incubators, V' 1 fat Both tt Tim. Sknka. PORTLAN D SEED CO. Portland Oroaton Stat Treasrnles Overflowtnsr. I . Through Ingenious methods of taxing railroads the treasuries of some States are so swollen that State officers are puzzled to know what to do with State funds. New Jersey's receipts from cor porations have filled Ita treasury. Penn sylvania had a surplus of $10,000,000 and no debt to apeak of. Back taxes re ceived from railroads and the collection of a war claim of 11,000,000 have en abled Wisconsin to pay extraordinary4 expenses, put 643,000 Into the Stats teraaury and cut the school tax levy In two. Prejadleo. "What do tbey call thia skyscraper on the left?" asked the stranger. "That's the Eeliance building," said the native. "It's occupied almost entirely by doctors." "By doctors? And they call It the 'Re Hancer Well, welir ladlaa Woman Mia Owner. An interesting character is an old Mexican Indian woman, Mrs. Bermlna Sarras, who has recently sold a mine near Hawthorne, Nev., to an Eastern syndicate for $90,000. For years she has dressed in men's clothes and per sonally worked her claim herself, do ing washing for prospectors and min ers In order to secure necessary money. She says that she now Intends to rest and enjoy the results of ber long years of privation and hardship. Something New Aboat Elijah. The vicar of St John's Galnsbor- ough, England, Bays that recently the scholars in his prih were asked to give an account of the translation of the prophet Elijah to heaven, and one boy wrote: "Elijah, the prophet was carried Into heaven by a whirlwind, and the children stood up and cried,' 'Go up, thou bald head I Go up, thou bald head, and before hs went up he divided the Ked Sea." ' i la Jamplna; Over. Little Dixon, aged three, bad just learned that famous nursery rhyme, "Hi diddle, diddle,' and electrified hli mother one night by exclaiming, as h stood gazing m wonder at the new moon which had just risen. "OOO-oo-oo, mamma, Just look!" "What is it dear," said she. "Why," he. answered. In amazement "that, old cow has gone an' kicked i piece right out of it' A Nan for Sick Do(i. A young New York woman Is a train ed nurse for sick dogs. For some time she has been a member of the staff of the New York Dog Hosptal, where tha sick pets of the wealthy are nursed back to health. She often has as many es a hundred dogs to care for. It is her duty to give them their medicine, and In other ways carry out the doc- tor's orders exactly as a trained nurse would do for human patients. a t1i UlnnA tnr nr?ci,f flowintr through the svstom in Rrnt nl rashes and the different skin affections and diseased conaicion as a result of too way into the blood in various ways. the system, and torpid state of the . ww jiuuras wi wnr auu ian up oy ine diooq ana aismoutea blood ; we also breathe the germs and and when these get into the blood in of disease instead of health. Some blood, perhaps the dregs of some old f the. 0A t,o it. TlaA Mnnd ia tht riii-pa f oil dia. permanently cures blood diseases ol kind. The action of S. S. S. is so thorough that hereditary taints are removed weak, diseased blood made strong and healthy so that disease cannot remain. It Rheumatism, Catarrh. Scrofula. Sores herbs and barks and is absolutely S. S. S. is for sale at all first class ito SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, CA, The Finest Gardens Portland Seed Co.'s "Diamond Brand" Because we sell you the kinds that grow handsomely 'Illustrated and descriptive our seeds, Plants. Roses, Spray Pumps. Brooders, Poultry and Bee Supplies. N. 260 ik. t,. . aal.1 .UM IiC tttk N 261 Ina M nM., - SpoKan, Wash. V y.Vwi.wgii( New Method of Grafting-. Before a meeting of the American Pomologlcal Society the following meth od of grafting was described by a gentleman from Colorado, who stated that It was the most successful meth od that he had employed in top-working old orchards, and that It could be used on branches as large as four Inches In diameter with great success. It impresses one as being possibly bet ter than ordinary cleft grafting for large stocks, from the fact that the surfaces of-the union were all smooth and the scions held more firmly. The method of procedure Is as follows: Af ter determining where the graft had better go the stock is cut off with a tine saw and the cut made in the side of the stock, as shown at "A." This Is then cleaned out with a knife, as shown at "B ;" a saddler's knife Is used for this purpose, outline of which Is shown at "E." The scion is cut as Is usual In' cleft grafting and Is driven with some little force into the groove 0f the stock as shown at "C" and In : , . . METHOD OF OBAFTINO. cross section at "D." It wll be found that after this graft has been driven In It can only.oe pulled out by using con slderable force and It is held much more firmly than In the ordinary cleft graft All wounds should be covered with wax as In ordinary cleft graft ing. Feeding Animal. It is economical to feed only as much as may be required. If too much car bonaceous material be fed to. an ani mal the excess will be a loss, for the reason that the animal will assimilate and appropriate only the actual amount necessary for the purpose required by the system ; and even when the farmer feeds liberally of carbonaceous material he may starve his animals if they do not receive nitrogenous food, for which reason It may be noticed that on some farms, where the stock is liberally pro vided with certain kinds of food, the animals are not thrifty, the young ones do not grow, and the farmer is annoyed at tne unsatisfactory results of what he supposes Is good management when the cause is a lack of perhaps only a single element, which, in connection with a less quantity of one of the kinds of food' given, would produce a radical change. It Is Important then, in order to derive the best results from feeding animals, that the farmer thoroughly unHorarnnrt the nualltv of the mate- riai8 used, its feeding value depends UTK)n the proportions of those elements at adapted Ho the purposes in view, for unleS8 perfect knowledge of the composition of feeding stuff s Is gained 7jrjrr" ; " " Advertise Your Pooltry, There W8B a farmer WDO had been town, out ne naa never wougm rnwui pushing this little by-buslness of his regular vocation of farming, Finally It was suggested to him that be ought to advertise the poultry hmnch of his business and extend It somewhat but he was timid about smk - m- a few dollars already in hand In nriuter's Ink with the view of getting :. . mi.n, y n t ,k the matter over wltn hl9 . . . f . fo H,1n. rr. advertises extensively and does a big business. J i Rival of Beeswax. A substitute for beeswax has been discovered In the leaves of the rant palm, a product of the island of Mada gascar , The wax Is extracted by the simple process of beating the dried leaves on a mat to small bits. The particles are then gathered and boiled. The resultant wax is kneaded Into small cakes. Experiments are being made with the new substance to find out its commercial value whether it may be used for bottling purposes, in the manufacture of phonograph cylin ders, etc. V if" 1 A. . rcdlagecd Seeds. The achievements of the plant breed ers In the development of pedigree seeds are quite wonderful, considering the difficulties of fixing permanently characteristics resulting from hybridi sation. For instance, when species of rye with different types of heads are crossed it Is found that the female parent is neither alone nor most prom inent when exerting its Influence on the product and Its progeny. In about one-half of the plants of the first gen eration of rye crosses the type of head and form of seed of the male parent were prevalent while In the other half the same characteristics of the female predominated. In the second genera tion the Individuals split up into groups of either one type or the other. One- fourth of 'the number of Individuals showed the spike characteristics of the female parent one-fourth those of the male parent and one-half intermediate forma Agricultural Epltomlst Feeding- the Dalrr Cow. What Is the proper amount of food for a cow? Such an Inquiry cannot be satisfactorily answered, as each cow la an Individual, having peculiarities of disposition. There are preferences among animals for certain foods, - as tbey have their likes and dislikes. A row may have an excellent appetite to- lay and refuse to eat but little of her food to-morrow. Of the various foods, however, a cow will eat from 40 to CO pounds of mature corn ensilage, with from 5 to 10 pounds of grain with the ensilage, which may be given In place of the biau. Of clever hay, a cot may De auowea to eat as mucn as sue wishes. The ensilage may be reduced and more grain given, ground. If pre ferred, but tlKre Is no rule to gove the feeding of a cow. Each cow mufe be studied and her wants .satisfied. Those yielding milk should be fed more liberally than those that are dry, or nearly so. Cnttlnar Potatoes (or riant Ins. In regard to cutting potatoes a very large , number of experiments have proved that whole potatoes are best for warm, high land, and for very early potatoes they will not only yield enough more -to pay the cost of the seed, but win produce a crop rrom a week to ten days earlier than cut po tatoes, which will sometimes make a difference in price of from 50 cents to SI per bushel. But on rich, moist lands the difference between whole and cut potatoes is not so great In the first place, on a rich, moist soil. It Is not so Important to secure , an early 'JS DUll, ClUU 1U L11C BOWUU 1AV.C, UUb . planted too deep below the surround ing land, there Is a tendency to the production of a larger number of stalks V 7, " k11 , ,., k .. . -.i.y fr this, It as been proposed to in- mull uu uij uuu, urn 1 1 lu nn & u.v . . It will be better to plant medium-sized potato. a w o e Poaatbilltles of Tomato. 1 "If you could keep the frost away from a tomato vine for a f couple of . years It would get to be a fair-sized j tree," says the Texas Farmer. "Thlsi occurs sometimes In Florida In years when the frost king leaves that State alone. By the same sign, yon can plant tomatoes In the winter In Florida and have them grow all the spring and sum- mer and fall, and under the right con- ditlons they become very large. The midrib of the leaf of such a tomato plant will grow to be eighteen Inches bT Tiv J , TT . Six feeUs the height to which the to - matoes should be trained, and pruned to a single stem. They can be made thotroubie t0 hl8 lack of haIr. He told to grow ten or fifteen feet as well, but.the rourt nls wife ,eft blm ,n lfl01 mis is an inconvenient neignt. There is one advantage in growing strawberries in preference to other fniit. which In rhnt lea ounirni la r. quired and the crops come sooner. Plants set out this spring will send out runners and form matted rows full of berries next year. If kept clean the rows will give two or three crops, with a partial crop aftea, the bed Is old. The proper mode, however, is to make a new bed each year, as the cost is but little comparatively. Demand for Horses. Horses are in greater demand than a year or two ago, despite the fact that electrlcjty Is displacing their use. The horse is maispensame on rarms ana in head thoughtfully. "Yes, I am begin drawing loads in cities. The automo- nlng to get bald and , wonder I won blle and traction engines are too costly der if that will cause trouble wjth th to take the place of one horse. Good folk8 at homei be soliloquized, horses are bringing fair prices, and the The ca9e wag taken -under advlso scarclty of heav yanlmals Is sure to in- ment Chicago Tribune. crease the demand for both roadsters I ; ' . and general farm purpose horses. ( . , Rapid Transit. A Good Fertiliser. "Fare, please." Chicken manure and wood asLes will The P1188611 loked up In surprise, make good fertilizer for all crops. They MI have Pa,d yu one 'are" he Bald should never be mixed together except "Sure yu dld" resPonded the con st the time of applying, as the wood d"ctor; "but when a blockade lasts ashes have a chemical effect upon the more tnan an bour we chare for.lodg hen manure and set free tha nitrogen lag." Philadelphia Ledger. in form of ammonia, which Is thereby - . .. . TT lost Coal ashes may be safely mixed Heaven may be the ountaln head of with hen manure. Land plaster, rock Pralse' but ' wlU do 110 harm 40 let out or even dry earth make good absorb- an occasional cheer during your sojourn ents to use with It Ostrich farming In South Africa con tinues a most profitable business. The life of the mercury arc lamp in some cases amounts' to 8,000 hours and . more. The conducting material of the anode Is either mercury alone, graphite and Iron, or nickel. A bill is before the New York Leg islature to make the existing laws gov erning telephone and telegraph compan ies organized for the distribution of music by electrical means. At a mild red heat good steel can be drawn out under the hammer to a' fine point ; at a bright red beat It will crum ble under the hammer, and at a white . beat it will fall to pieces. American . tunnel projects have at tracted attention abroad. The French government will build a tunnel for rail- , road purposes under the Seine from Havre to Rouen and has retained the services of Charles M. Jacobs, designer of the Pennsylvania railroad tunnels under the North and East rivers 1 at New York. ' . Pennsylvania still leads in the num ber of her cokemaklng plants. She has 112, and their product In 1905 was 70 per cent of the country's total output of coke. Fifteen years before the per centage was over 84. The capital rep resented In the establishments of this country is $90,712,877, and the total number of wage earners Is 19,000. in human iiiui-y a gicat liver ti sometimes formed a dividing line be tween peoples possessing quite different characteristics. Dr. W. M. Lyon, JK, ha,s discovered a similar phenomenon affecting squirrels In Borneo. He found . eight different forms of squirrels Inhab iting the northern and western parts of that great island, and observed that a large river proved an effectual barrier in separating two distinct races Engineers are harnessing many of the waters of the world to the use of man. A great project is under way to, catch the floods which rush down the West ern Ghats, near Bombay, and to use tho water-power in cotton mills and other factories. The valleys are of rocky formation, and with dams st the lower ends can be made into tight res- ervolrs. Three valley 8 will be closed in by dams respectively half a mile, a mile, and a mile and a half long. ' Oneof the reasons why paeumatlctlres gradually become exhausted, even when unpunctured, is that the compressed air wltbln slowly escape, through the rub- ber, and this process la hastened by the oxidation of the rubber, which causes 1 A ArniAlr Asa at Irva sif m atfla1 aAm flats tirea not with nrdlnnrv sir. hut nitrogen, an inert gas which does not affect the rubber. Tests of nitrogen- inflated tires for automobiles have been made In France, and the results are said to be encouraging.' MAH'S OBSTINACY THE CAUSE. As Meeker Wouldn't Wear Wis Wife Waa Compelled to Divorce Him. George I. Meeker, an actor, la wait ing for Judge Patton to grant him a - rilvnrra frnm Mlnnlp Mppker. And Tia blameg al, nU trouWea to hi8 bald hea(L Th gt whlch he took t0 tne jud caused merrIment ,n the roomj wnere geveral baldheaded men iw wa,tln to be called, as witnesses ! , other case9- Atthough the technlca, , , dp-ertion. M.kr nttnh,, , .m, ,,M ahl ,un vnnV, ttt1 !f 1 SUM I V J f U HDatAI Judge Patton. "Another man in tha ;case?" "op." responuea iueener, placing his hand on his bald head. "This was the cause of our trouble. Before my wife deserted me my hair began to fall out, and finally I was almost completely bald. Well, Minnie wanted me to buy a wig, but I objected to wearing ono and said so." "And you refused to buy the wig?" asked the court "Yes, that was It and my wife then began nagging at me until we quar reled about it." "Well, well," meditated "Judge Pat- Kn "Bald bead divorce." Slowly ihe jndge pinced hlg nand on w, own ; on earth. Mothers care not who does the love- making if they are allowed to do tha matchmaking