Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987, September 20, 1907, Image 7

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ALCOHOL 3 PER nrwr
AVgelable PrcparationforiU
slmilatin iteFooiJ niuiRpniite
ting (Jie Stomachs andBowels of
ftomofcs DiiestionJChccrM
ness and festXontalns ncittur
OpiimiIoqihine norMoEraL
WOT 14 ARC OTIC.
AdptitQli IkSHMWimUliH
JUJm
jtaatittd
himSml-
Viperfect Remedy forConsRpa
tlon , Sour Storaach.Dlarrhoei
WorrasfonvukionsJeverisfr
ness andLoss OF Sleep.
Far Simile Sitoarareof
NEW YORK.
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Boughf
Bears the
Signature
In
Use
For Over
rhiriy Years
anleed under the K
niil il'IttHf""
Exact Copy of Wrapper,
THC OINTMia SOHMNT, NIW VOK OITT.
,. Lonserlty.
My State," aid the Virginian, "is the
mother of Presidents."
"Tee," said the Ohio man, "bat the
Id lady has outlived her boys half a
century or more."
I Heado,aarters for Information.
. Dicky Too don't b'lieve that story
about Little Bed Riding Hood an' the
wolf j do you?
Kitty -Course I do.
Dicky Well, if you'll Jist write to
Pres'dent Roosevelt an' ask him about it
he'll tell you It's a fake. . ' -
' Kieit Better.
Kan O, that atory looks too long. I
don't want to read it. . ,
. Fan Yes, you do. It's a story about
a woman you don't like.
Trace ol the Teddy Bear.
When it sits up on its haunches, in a
' pose for catching flies ;
When it ogles you,' my children, with its
wicked little eyes ;
When it reaches out caressingly, its fore
paws in the air
That Is the time of peril, dear I No
truce with the Teddy Bear I
Peculiar TllnOoo Drama,
Drums used in Hindoo religious pro
cessions are called doles. They are
made of baked earth, and sometimes
a yard long, and twice as large at the
center as at either end. Kettle drums
are thin copper basins or bowls, cov
ered with parchment or calf-skin,
which Is held in place by, an. Iron hoop.
BED
SORES
Excellent Sngrar Deets.
Those who have raised beets for su
gar know the value of the two veri
ties shown in the illustration. The
one ou the right Is 'the famous Klein
Waenzelben sugar beet; ttie other the
Imperial. The first named Is largely
planted for 'sugar making, and they
are rich in sugar. The Imperial Is
also a good sugar boet for sugar mak
ing. In this Item, however, attention
Is called to these two sorts as being
especially valuable to raise for the win
ter feeding of Btock and especially of
the cow.
Being rich In sugar, they will sup
ply much food matter, and at the same
time give the needed amount of green
or succulent food so much needed by
cows during the winter. Neither va
riety Is especially new, but they have
GOOD BEET VABITIES.
not been so freely planted as they
should be. The seed Is low In price,
and it will pay any one with stock to
plant A small field. Both varieties are
exceedingly productive, and they will
grow in any good soli.
FEB AND
KEP.T OPES
asviMimRixiEs in the;bloqo
7henever a sore refuses to Heal it Is because the blood Is not pure and
healthy, as it should be, but is infected with, poisonous germs or some old
blood taint which has corrupted and polluted the circulation. Those most
usually afflicted with old sores are persons who have reached or passed mid
dle life. The vitality of the blood and strength of the system have naturally
begun to decline, and the poisonous germs which have accumulated because
of a sluggish and inactive condition of the system, or some hereditary taint
which has hitherto been held ia check, now force an outlet on the face, arms,
legs or other part of the body. The place grows red and angry, festers and
eats into the surrounding tissue until it becomes ar chronic and stubborn
uleer, fed and kept open by the impurities with which the blood is saturated.
Nothing is more trying and disagreeable than a stubborn, non-healing sore.
The very fact that it resists ordinary remedies and treatments is good reason
for suspicion; the same germ-producing cancerous ulcers is back of every
old sore, and especially i3 this true if the trouble i3 an inherited one.
Washes, salves, nor indeed anything else, applied directly to the sore, can
I do any permanent good : neither will remov
' I was affiioted vrlth a sore on my v,5, o; ,1 -
face of four years' utanding-. it g the sore with caustic plasters -or the
was a arnaU pimple at first but it surgeon's knife make a lasting cure. If
KafveryytiirinbSa"2 every particle of the diseased flesh were
Several ahaicianaa The BUali akea awa7 another sore would come, be
treated me ifut theSore oonftnued cause the trouble is in the blood, and the
lSd";oin0Ak0it8, S MOOD CANNOT BE CUT AWAY.
Vertlsea ana oommenoea Its uso rrv1 . . , , ,
md after uking- it a while I was The cure must come by a thorough cleans
completolycuredMy 1 Ing of the blood. In S. S. S. will be found
pffeot'ofS. BJ9., and there has not a remedy forsore3 and ulcers of every kind.
BsnBny "'lit.0' h8 re "lnC Jt 19 ai unequalled blood purifier one that
P" our THOS. OWEK. goes directly into the circulation and
West Union, Ohio. promptly cleanse3 it cf all poisons and
taints. It gets down to the very bottom of
the trouble and forces out every trace of im
purity and makes a complete and lasting
cure. S. S. S. Changes the quality of the
blood so that instead of feeding the diseased
5arts with impurities, it nourishes the
rritated, inflamed flesh with healthy blood.
Then the sore begins to heal, new flesh is formed, all pain and inflammation
leaves, the place scab3 over, and when S. S. S. has purified the blood the
Sore is permanently cured. S. S. S. is for sale at all first class drug stores.
Write for our special book on sores and ulcers and any other medical advioa
SOU desire. We make no charge for the book or advice. .
r THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA, CAm
Hovr to Find Scale Insects.
Prof. Troop of the Indiana Experi
mental Station gives the following di
rectlons in a recent bulletin: In loot
ing for the scale Insect most persons
will pass It by unnoticed on account of
Its very small size. The female scale
Is only one-twenty-flfth of an Inch In
diameter, while the male Is only about
half that size. The shape of the fe
male is nearly circular, while the male
Is more elongated. The female Is sharp
ly convex or conical In the center. This
last characteristic will help to distin
guish It from many of the other more
common species. Its color Is nearly
like the bark on which It Is found; An
other distinguishing character Is found
In the reddish discoloration of the bark
immediately surrounding the scale, ex
tending through both the outer and In
ner bark. These characters will enable
one wlth--an ordinary pocket magnify
ing glass to readily detect the presence
of the Insect
PURELY
VEGETABLE
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3.00 & $3.50 SHOES thswo'rld
S?8HOE8 FOR EVERY MEMBER OF-BT
THE FAMILY, AT ALL PRI0E8.
(OR n fin (To mny am tiro can provm W. I
iHSOpUUU Soouatmm doom not nialro at aai
Mrf )morm Mmn'm $3 St 93. BO mhomm
ntSWuMru Klhmn mny othmr manufacturer.
THE REASON W. L. Douglas shoes araworn by more people x
in all walks of life than any other make, is because of their
exoellent style, easy-fitting, and superior wearing qualities.
The (election of the leathers and other materials for each part
of the shoe, and ererjr detail of the making Is looked after by .
themosteompleteorganlzHtlonof superintendent, ioremenami
killed shoemakers, who receive the highest wages paid In the
hoe industry, and whose workmanship cannot be excelled.
If I could take you into my large factories at Brockton, Mass.,
and show you how carefully W.L. Douglas shoes are nrnde, you
would then understand why they bold their shape, fit better,
wear lonirer and are of irreater value than anv other make.
My $4 Gilt CdommndtB Gold Bond Shorn cannot ft oquallod mi mny Brloo
W. L. Douglas stamps his name and price on the bottom to proteut you against high prloeS
feud Inferior shoes. Take No Substitute. Sold by the best shoe dealers everywhere.
. fan Vttr tttUU Ultd uelutivtly. Catalog maildjru. W.l- J0 HULAS, Jlruektaa. Maas.
v
Handy Fencing; Device.
A very handy device to be used In
handling barbed wire Is shown here
with. Take two strips 2 inches wide
and 30 -Inches long and bore' holes
through each end. Through these, says
Farm and Home, put old broom han
dles or any round stick, and fasten by
driving a nail through the square tlm
ber. Leave one loose so that It can be
put through the reel of wire as shown
BABBED WIRE BEEt,
In the cut The spool of wire may be
enrolled by drawing It over the ground
with this simple device.
t'owpeas a. Orchard Cover.
Growers of peaches are using cow-
peas as cover crops in the orchard. The
vines shade the land and may be turn
ed under when the pods are nearly ripe
or may remain as a mulch In winter. It
Is more profitable to use the vines for
food for cattle, but, at the same time.
If a rmilch Is required, It Is well to
grow the mulch, especially when a
leguminous plant answers so well. One
advantage In ' growing the cowpea Is
that it Is almost a sure crop, and lime
or wood ashes may be used as a fer
tilizer with It. The peach orchard will
In no manner be Injured by growing the
cowpea as long as the land is given
the benefit of the crop by plowing the
plants under.
Modern Methods?
Farmers have for hundreds of years
been engaged In opposing every at
tempt to improve them In their meth
ods of farming. Hundreds of farm
ers wives work dally at churning In
a manner that is most laborious, tak
ing an hour or more to do what could
be performed In a few minutes If they
were not too prejudiced against "fancy
farming" to use a thermometer. They
nave no raitn in "dook farming," and
pay dearly for refusing to be con
rlneed.
Effect of the New Meat Law.
One highly Important result of the
new laws regulating the meat packing
business may already be seen In the
tendency to keep more stock. "I am
goln? to Increase my herds a little," a
leading fanner says; and the argu
ments he uses are these: More pork,
beof and mutton will be eaten here
after. Folks are satisfied now that the
packers will send out only good, pure
meat, and they will use It freely. Some
one must grow the cattle to make this
meat We might as well all have a
hand In It. Not that all should drop
everything else and put the eggs all
Ino the meat-growing basket ; If we did
that there would be a big crash, but we
can keep more stock and make It pay.
And this Is a jonsible view to take of
the matter. It will mean better times
for farmers all over tne country.
Corn CnKlratlon.
When cultivating young corn It must
be done In a manner to destroy all
weeds ; hence shallow cultivation may
not answer, as the weeds must be de
stroyed by any method possible, rather
than to permit them In the cornfield,
But after the coru Is well advanced It
may prove detrimental to run the cul
tivator deep, as It then cuts many roots,
Hoot cutting has been tested and found
injurious. After the weeds are killed
the only work required Is to keep about
an Inch or two of the surfnee soil
loose, In order to conserve moisture, as
well as to put nn end to any young
weeds that may be ready to start
The Dlao Harrow.
Too much reliance Is placed on the
disc harrow as a substitute for the
plow. There Is no Implement more use
ful than the disc harrow In some lines.
but Its place Is to cut up the sod and
render the soil fine after the land has
been plowed though farmers frequent
ly use the disc harrow for preparing
stubble land, leaving out plowing al
together. There Is something more In
plowing than simply loosening the
ground for seed. When land Is proper
ly plowed It holds more moistures, ab
sorbs warmth rapidly and permlta of
greater" feeding capacity for plants.
Draw-Knife Bench.
Make a bench of some heavy timber
(2-lnh oak), 0 feet long and 12 or 14
Inches wide. Next tnke a piece of some
20 or 24 Inches long and 3 or 4 inches
DBA W KNIFE BENCH.. i
wide, and shape like (C). Nail one on
each side, as In cut, after having bored
a hole near the middle of each.. Nail
on end piece (D). Nail on (B),. hav
ing first chiseled a hole (J or 8 Inches
long and 3 or 4 Inches wide In it to
admit of lever-(F).
-v
Better Cultivation.
The farmer should endeavor to In
crease his proportion of wheat by bet
ter cultivation rather than by planting
more acres. The latter method Is be
ing adopted In other countries that have
the available area. Our people have an
Immense area of wheat culture" in for
eign lands to compete with, lands where
labor Is cheap. Europe, except perhaps
in Russia and Roumnnia and India,
have dense populations and; are less
dangerous competitors. European and
Asiatic Russia, Argentine and perhaps
before many years large areas of Af
rica will be In the market against us.
We must diminish the cost of produc
tion by Improved methods. Texas
Stock and Farm Journal.
About Chicken..
Keep the early pullets for next yearfc
layers, and kill off all tlie young cock
erels for market, so as to give the pul
lets more room. They should be kept
In good growing condition, so as to
reach maturity before November, In or
der to become winter layers. Late pul
lets seldom begin to lay until .spring.
Two Gallon, in One Earsj.
Worth $300, an egg of a tall, flight
less bird, the aepyornls maxlmus, (s on
exhibition in Liverpool. This gigantic
bird made Its home in Madagascar, and
only twenty of its mammoth eggs are
known to exist Each Is a foot long
and nearly ' a yard In circumference.
One will hold two gallons of water.
' Breeding Salt? Onion..
Joseph Zuch, an enterprising garden
er of Marietta, I'a. succeeded In rais
ing a variety of onions which have Bait
flavor, so that no 'seasoning at all Is
necessary, whether eaten raw or
stewed.
Thinning Apples.
The effort to produce the seeds of
apples exhausts the tree more than to
produce the much larger quantity of
meat, because seeds contain a much
larger, proportion of the mineral ele
ments. As much meat (or pulp) can be
grown on 500 fine, large apple trees as
upon 1,000 small, Inferior ones, but the
production of seeds will only be one
half as great This "thinning" not only
adds to the value of the present crop,
but economizes the energies of tha tree
for future use.
Banking by.Mall
WE PAY
INTEREST
On tarings deposits of a dollar
or more, compounded twice
every year. It is iut as easy
to open a Savings Account with
us by Mail as if you lived next
door. Bend for our free book
let, "Banking by Mail." and
learn full particulars. Address
Oregon Trust 8c
Savings Bank
Portland, Oregon
Sixth and Washington Sts.
i I'oor Thlim.
"I don't suppose Miss I'assay ever
hnrl any beaux when she was a youim
girl."
"No, she was too dignified and old
fashioned."
"And the men don't like her - now,
either."
"No, she's too kittenish now." rhIU
delphla Ledger.
Not Always Safe,
"Don't you think a man ought to tvu
his wife all about his business affairs?"
"I should say not. A friend of mlna
who was about to start on a journey bor
rowed $30 from a -rich old uucle and then
told his wife of it. lie was wrecked at
sea, crushed in a railway collision, or
something of that sort, and when his wife
collected his life insurance, of course, sha
felt bound to pay bark that loan.
ENGRAVING Write Us
PLATES
FOR PRINTING
HICKS-CHATTEN
Portland Oregon
BRING YOUR TOOTH TROUBLES TO US
, Before Going Elsewhere.
DR. B. C. WRIGHT,
342S WashingtonSt. Portland Oregon,
ST. HELEN'S HALL
PORTLAND, OREGON
A Girls' School ol the highest class. I Collegi
ate department. Music. Art. Elocution. Uyiu
saslum. Kali terra opens September 16.
V . SEND TOR CATALOGUE
BJsXJlsWJJ lS fat
usiiiEss collegL
TENTH AND MORRISON STREETS '
i
v PORTLAND, OREOONJ
A. P. ARMSTRONG, LL. B., PRINCIPAL
Quality la our motto. We educato for success,
and send each student to a position when com
petent many more calls for help than we caa
meet Individual instruction Insures rapid prog
ress. All modern methods of bookkeeping are
taught; also rapid calculations, correspondence,
commercial law, office work, etc Chartier la
our shorthand easy, rapid, legible. Beautiful
catalogue, business forma and penmanship free.
C. Gee Wo
t The Well-Knowa
Reliable
CHINESE
Root and Herb
DOCTOR
Has made s life study of roots and harbs, and In that
Study discovered Aii Is giving to the world his won
derlul remedies.
No Mercury, Poisons or Drags Used He Curet
Without Operation, or Without the Aid
ol a Knife.
' He guarantees to Cure Catarrh, Asthma, Lung,
Throat, Rheumatism, Norvousnosa, Nervous Debil
ity, Stomach, Llvor, Kidney Troublos: slao Lost
Manhood. Female Weakness snd All Private Dlsaasea
A SURE CANCER" CURE
Just Received from Peking, China Safe, Sure
and Reliable. .
IP YOU ARE AFLICTED. DON'T DELAY.
DELAYS ARE DANGEROUS.
II you cannot call, write lor sympton blank snd circu
lar. Inclose 4 cents In stamps.
CONSULTATION FREE
THE C. GEE WO CHINESE MEDICINE CO.
, I62i First St.. Cor. Morrison,
1 Portland, Oregon
Please Mention This Paper.
P. N.U.
No. 34-07
w
HEN writing to adTertUara please
mention iuis paper.