Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 10, 1908)
IN MY FAMILY "I Have Used Pe-ru-na at Various Times for Several Years." if re. ' vs ' v I Recommend Pe-ru-na Mr. Edward M. Buitt, 6 N. Jefferson Ave., St. Louis, Mo., writes: "It affords me mioli pit Mare to an nounce that I have used your medicine at various times for several years, and Unit it Las nivcn entire satisfaction, not only in my own family, but alao tbat el others of my friends. And would cheerfully recommend the nee of Pernna, as I certainly do endorse your medicine." Catarrh or Head, Nose, Throat Mr. Chsrlea Levy, 80 Allen St., New Yoik, N. Y., writes: "I am very glad to tell yon of the cures wrought by Peruna in my family. "My son, aged seven, who had ca tarrh of the nose, was cured by two bot tles of Peruna, and I had catarrh of the head, nose, throat and ears. One bottle of Pernna cured me." Peruna tablets: Some people prefer tablets, rather than medicine In a fluid form. 8uch people can obtain Peruna Tablets, which represent the solid me dicinal ingredients of Peruna Ask Your Druggist for Free Pe-ru-ne I Almanac for 1908. Animals to the number of nearly 70, 000,000 are killed year!; for the sake of their fur. State of Ohio, City of Toledo I Lucas County. I Fran J. ('honey makes osththat he In Heritor partner of the Arm oi F. J. Cheney A Co., dolun buslnesatntheClty of Toledo, County and State ,,.0.aidl.nJihat1'1 "rn w"l pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every cane of Catarrh that rannot be cured by the use oi Hall's Catarrh Cure. o , v . FRANK J. CHENEY. Bworn to before me and subscribed In my tires ence, this fitlt day of December A D. 1886 (Seal.) W. GLPASON, ',7' . Notary Public. nall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, and acts directly upoa the blood and mucous su? laces of the system. Kend fortosilmonUln free. oiv .. 'J-fiHKNKY4CO.,ToleJo,0. Sold by all drnRKiKts,75c. Take Ball's Family l'llls for oonstlpatton. Prince Edward of Wales has a collec tion of seabirds ejrgs from St. Kiltla, which is said to be the finest in the Brit ish empire. Truth and Quality appeal to the Well-Informed in every walk of life and are essential to per-: manent success and creditable stand- j ing. Accordingly, It Is not claimed ' that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of known value, but one of many reasons why it is the best of personal and family laxatives is the fact that It cleanses, sweetens and relieves the internal organs on which it acts without any debilitating after effects and without having to increase the quantity from time to time. ; It acts pleasantly and naturally and truly as a laxative, and Its component parts are known to and approved by physicians, as It Is free from all objectionable substances. To get its ' beneficial effects always purchase the genuine manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and fori ale by all leading druggists. P.74 ' is a; W. L. DOUGLAS nn o. o en cunCQ 4WsVW SJi, tiiww wa awa-wr THK WORLD k0shoes roR Evey member ofm W THE FAMILY, AT ALL PRICES. 53 , , ((OS nnft iTomnvonomhoomnpmrmTl.l., ifdSiffUUU) Douolmm domm not mmkatmmll nn ia rtwrt I imraMsn's 3A3.60mhom ST a l inr I M thmnmnyothmrmmnu1maturar. TUP. RRARDN W I.. Dowlas shoai are worn In all walks of life than any other maks li became of their xosllent style, easy-fitting, and superior wearing qualities. 1 he selection ofthslaathers and other materials for each part of the shoe and every detail of the making is looked after by the most eomplata organ! uktion of auperintandents.foremenand killeds'ioemaiers, who receive the highest wages paid in the aboei ndmtrv, and whoe workmanship cannot be excelled. If I could lake you. ntomylerge factories at Brockton , Mus., and show you howearefully W. L. Dougla shoes are made, you would then understand why they hold their shape, fit better, mmr and ara of rmiter value than anv other meka. tHly 94. OO mnd 0B.OO 0ILT tDdEMhomm omiutot bm uaTW ml mny prfom. CAUTIOM The genuine bare W. L. Douglas name and phea stamped on bottom. '1'aka Fin aabatHute. Aik your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoas. It he cannot supply you, lend direct lot eaters' ShoesseotererjrwbarebriiiaU. Catalog free. W. L. Daaglaa, Bracktoa, Maaa. Lack at Co-Ordlnatlon. I Pupil's Mother My daughter has s good ear for music, hasn't she, professor 1 j Piano Teacher O. yea ; her ear seems to be all richt. She has also an excellent nose and chin. But you are wasting yoai money trying to make anything of bar Ca rers, madam. Amenities of the IjMt, "That's a magnificent voice of jours," said the sarcastic passenger. "You ought to hare it trained." "I am baring it trained, sir." said the ruard: "elevated railroad trained. Stet lively V Nest te Nothing-. Mistress Malvina, do you know any thing about dill pickles? New Girl I think I m him a dance once, ma'am, but I haven't any ac quaintance with hina. Chicago Tribune. E'em So. Jinx Why do rrm ear r tt,. i v counter around the corner? They give you butterine, and the bread tastes of kerosene. Sninx t know If hnt ft,, t.t .v.. serves them is a peacherine. C"TC . Vitus' Dane and an ticrrone Dlarasee III 0 p-rmanently cured by Dr. Kline's Ortat Jrv Brsiorer. Bend fur FREE S2 trial bottle and treaties. Dr. B. H. Kll j.. Li., su Arch su, Phlla. J". I'rareaf. "Ma." began Tommy, trying for the sixth time to say something. "Tommy!" said bis mother, sternly "didn't I tell you not to Interrupt Mrs! Gaddle and me? Wait until we are through." "But, ma. I want tn tM. a.- Catholic Standard rnit Tlm Shaka Inta Vau ku Allen's Foot-F.ua. It nn. n " va aiiiii ui, at w in inwf, !miVin', ei'ng lee t. tiiu new snoeaeaay. Sold by all Drurglsta and Shoe Stores. Don't aWiftatnt sin v K n C laann.. . A. b, Olmsted, La Roy, N. Y. Not Sa Rnonroelil u Bloat Olrla. Evelyn Some of our proverbs are so ridiculous. For Instance, "where ignor ance Is bllsss " Ethel What's the matter now? Evelyn Why. you know. Fred eavi me my engagement ring last week and i simply can't nna out bow much It coal him. Judge. l'acle Jaeper'a Version. "Yes," remarked old Undo Jasner. after much meditation, "de food Darson sed et was de apple tree dat caused all no trouble In de world, but I think et must have been de banana tree." "And why do to' think It was de ba nana tree, Brudrer Jaspah?" asked Deacon Dewberry, curiously. "Because troubles am lak bananas iey always come in bunches." THOUSANDS 1 TRY IT HOME-MADE MIXTURE SAID TO BE CUR. ING ALL RHEUMATISM. The Philadelphia and New York News, papers Print Simple Precription Which Thousands of Readers Take Advantage Of. Some remarkable stories 55 e being told in the large Eastern dailies of this simple home-made mixture curing Rheumatism and Kidney trouble even after the rioted health resorts failed. Here is the recipe and directions for taking: Mix by shaking well in a bot tle one-half ounce Fluid Extract Dan delion, one ounce Compound Kargon, three ounces Compound Syrup Sarsapa ill la. Take as a dose one teaspoonfu) after meals and at bedtime. No change need be made in your usual diet, but drink plenty of good water. This mixture, writes one authority in a leading Philadelphia newspaper, has a peculiar tonic effect upon the kidneys; cleansing the clogged-up pores of the eliminatiye tissues, forcing the kidneys to sift and stiain from the blood the urio acid and other poisonous waste matter, overcoming Rheumatism, Bladder and Urinary troubles in a short while. r A New York druggist who has had hundreds of calls for these ingredients since the fln-t announcement in the newspapers last October stated that the people who once try Jt "swfar by it," especially those who have Urinary and Kidney trouble and suffer with Rheu matism. Any druggist can supply the ingredi ents, which are easily mixed at home. There is sa d to be nc better blood cleansing agent or system tnnio known, and certainly none more harmless or simple to use. but in bv mors Deople fife Horses avnd Hmlaa. There has been a rapid increase the laet few years la the number and value of the horses and mules In the United States. In 1900 there were 13,624,000 horses and mules In the United States. Dur ing the next five years there was an increases of 27.7 per cent, so that on January 1, 1905, the number of horses and mules had increased to 19,946,000, but the increase did not stop at that rate. On the first of January, 1907, there were no less than 23,564.000 horses and mules, showing an Increase of 18 per cent dur;ng the two years subsequent to '905. Those who are inclined to talk over production at the present are confront ed with the Indisputable fact that dur ing the seven years when the increase In numbers amounted to SO per cent there was also an Increase In price per head amounting to over 50 per cent Thus on January 1, 1900, our horses and mules were valued at $715,688,000, while on January 1, 1900, they were valued at 12,274,642,000. This Is a phenomenal record and yet, notwithstanding this extraordinary In crease In number ans value, horses are In greater demand to-day than they have ever been before In the history of h United States. KaaBtaa; Host 1st Binati, Here Is an easy plan of keeping hogs from going from hog pastures to cow pastures, and at the same time allowing the cattle to go from on pasture to tho other at will. As shown In the sketch, the opening In the fence may be as wide as desired. Two by twelve Inch plank are nailed to the fence posts about four or six Inches from the ground, and two extra posts are set out from the fence about a foot The plank Is nsfled to the Inside of these posts, and this plank should be about four feet longer than the one fastened to the fence so as to go by the opening at each end about two feet. The hogs CATTLE STILE. cannot Jump the two planks, and small Jump over, as they are lengthwise of bogs that go between them cannot the opening. The cattle will readily step over. The same plan may be used for sheep, only three planks may be necessary to retain them, although the writer uses only two for them also. Farmre. Matching: Helpa. A very Intelligent and' observing fanner says: The Importance of a mulch to counteract a drought was presented to me In a rather forcible manner last spring. We had planted a few rows of early beans and after they had come up we had1 a cold spell, and In order to save the beans from the frost, they were covered with planks. After the danger from frost had passed, at one end of the rows the planks were laid between the rows and left for about two weeks, which was a dry sea son. At the other end the planks were moved clear away. The part where the planks were between the rows made double the growth of the others. The growth was evidently due to the mois ture saved by the planks. Tranaportatton Change. The freights and . transportation charges on a full car of strawberries from southern points are often from 200 to $300, while on a car of south ern peaches the cost of refrigeration and the high priced packages that hnve to be used run the cost up above $500 on each car that comes Into the State; 400 of this would be profit or Increased Income to the local grower. The local grower can often sell di rect to consumer; there are no heavy or refrigerator charges to pay, and these two Items alone often eat up over one-balf to two-thirds of the gross snles of fruit brought from a distance, while the local grower saves It. J. H. Hale, Connecticut, In American Cultivator. Loss of Manure, An authority claims that fully one third of the manure voided on the farms of the United States Is lost The fermentation of manure Is caused by the action of two forms of organisms. One form Is that which requires an abundance of oxygen and dies when ex posed to It The former thrives on the outside of the heap and the latter ra' the Interior. The tatter's office seems to break up the more complex particles . and prepare them for the action of th former. If the action of the former Is too rapid a great deal of the nttrro-' g?n passes off Into the atr In the form of ammonia or free nltrogvn, and Is loaf to the soil from whence It came. Wisterias Baea. D. H. Storall says a neighbor wh makes a good living from his apiary successfully winters bis bees through the cold months In a cellar provided for the purpose. lie states that beet may be successfully wintered In cellar! provided the cellar Is given over entire ly to the bees and used for no othei purpose. There Is always an un healthy odor, that Is as disastrous to bees a anything else, emitted from de cayed fruits, vegetables and such things as are usually stored In cellars. Thi bee cellar should not be entered not disturbed any more than Is absolutely necessary; It should he made quiet unmolested home for the little hone; makers. Fralt Picking; Basket. This basket Is made from an ordi nary Deleware fruit basket A srrar goes over the shoulder of the picker and leaves both bands free for gather Ing the fruit It Is bad practice to shake any kind of fruit from the tree. It should always be picked by hand and carefully placed In the package In which It Is sent to market By this method Injury to the extent of 10 t 25 per cent may be avoided. Cora Land (or tha Bean Crop. Beans may be planted late and ma ture before a probably frost For sev eral years beans have borne a good price, and If the wheat crop proves to be as short as threatened at this writ ing the consumption of them Is likely to be larger than usual. The planting, harvesting and thrashing of beans may be done by machinery now, which re moves a former serious objection to their culture; and If the crop area on a farm has been made smaller than desired, by reason of the cold spring, a field of beans might be advantageously used In extending the season's crops. Good corn land Is excellent for beans, and their cultivation does not differ materially from that of corn, hence It does not require any special Instructs or skill to grow them successfully. No Norse Crop (or Alfalfa, Some people still think alfalfa should be sown with a nurse crop. Those who have bad experience with It know bet ter. A recent publication of the Ari zona Experiment Station sums up the facts as follows : x , Nurse crops hinder the development of tops and roots of alfalfa, especially when by reason of a thick stand or rank growth shading effects are exces sive. After the removal of the nurse crop the weakened and undeveloped al falfa plants are poorly fitted to with stand drought and the stand may bf lost. In the average Instance the loss In yield of alfalfa due to a nurse crop probably more than offsets return fron the nurse crop Itself. Missouri Sheep. A new breed of sheep Is said to have been developed by William Buckman near Clapper, Mo. The new breed has all the best points oif Rambouillets.. Shropshires and Cotswolds. To start with he used twenty Shropshire ewes and crossed them with a Ramboulllel buck, and the ewes secured from this cross were then crossed with a Cots wold buck. It Is claimed that they in herit the hardy traits of the Rambouil lets, the mutton qualities of the Shrop shires and the heavy fleeces of the Cots wolds. Rock Salt for Horses, For cattle and horses, rock salt placed In boxes or troughs In winter and scattered about the pastures on the grass hi summer Is preferable to any other way. Rains have little ef fect upon It and this will be found both convenient and economical. For sheep, however, this plan does not work so well. The rock salt is so slow to dissolve that they are not able to get a sufficient quantity of It to satisfy their wants, hence It is necessary to use the loose salt for them. Merino In Vermont. The merino sheep Industry In Ver mont Is again entering an era of pros perity that presages a boom. While by no means approaching the palmy days of thirty years ago, the Industry Is reviving and each year for a decade past has shown an Increase In ship ments of fancy strains of merino breeding sheep to Africa and trail B-ASKIT rOB FBUIT HCKINQ. J I Henry the Eighth's Chair. In the earlier half of the sixteenth century a large proportion of the furni ture used In this country, as well as of the earthenware and other household Implements during the greater part of that century, was Imported from Flan ders and the Netherlands. Hence, In CHAIK Or HE3VBT VIIL the absence of engravings at home, we are led to look at the works of the Flemish and German artists for lllus tratlon of domestic manners at this period. The seats of that day were termed Joint (or Joined) stools and chairs. A rather fine example of a chair of this work, which was, as was often the case, three-cornered, is Dre- served In the Ashmolean museum, at Oxford, where It Is reported to have been the chair of Henry VIIL We here annex a sketch of It KESENTS HEADING OP METES. Dogf Notes the Stse of Master's Gas Bill and Attacks Inspector. Walter Freeman, a gas meter reader for the Public Service Corporation of Montclalr, N. J., Is no lontrer a skentlc when it comes to believing the stories which he has' hitherto regarded as the product of the "nature fakers. Free man, who lives In Newark, went to the house of Charles W. Tracy, on Upper Mountain avenue, to-day, and read large figures on the gas meter. This duty and the appalling flgures set down in a big, red-covered book. Freeman left the Tracy dwelling and started across the lawn, whistling glee fully. As he proceeded, he was startled by a growl from a fierce-looking bull dog, which, despite Its savage appear ance. Is a great pet of Mr. Tracy's. Freeman hurled his meter book at the dog. The book opened as It hurled through the air and fell at the feet of the dog. On the open page was record ed the amazing figures which Freeman had set down as the basis for Mr. Tracy's current gas bill. With a fierce growl, the dog made a Jump for the frightened corporation servant Free man fled, the dog at his heels. In a moment the dog sank his teeth In Free man's leg. Then he let out a howl even louder thnn that which goes up from many an angry victim of meter readers all over the world. There was a wild swirl of dog and man for several minutes, and when Freeman finally emerged from ' the conflict he hnd been severely maul ed and chewed. The bulldog Is In possession of the red-covered book, and It Is said that he has torn therefrom the page which contained the objectionable reckoning made by Freeman. Kansas City Jour nal. Qotngr to Be Fined. When George Ade was a newspaper reporter he was sent to "write up" an Irish laborer who had fallen from a building. When Mr. Ade arrived on' the scene, several officers and others were helping the Injured man Into the ambulance. Mr. Ade pulled out his pad and pencil. "What's his- name?" he asked one of the policeman. The Injured man, who had heard Ade and who mistook him for the timekeep er employed by the contractor, rolled his eyes In a disgusted way. "What d'ye think o that?" he mut tered. "I'm goin to be docked for the few minutes I lose goin' to the hos pital!" Success Mngnzlne. Dead Invited to the Banqnet. On "the accession of a new emperor flf China he goes In solemn state to the Temple of Heaven In Peking and formally announces to his . Imperial predecessors the new titles and dig nities which he has assumed. These ancestors are then dutirully Invited to the banquet of commemoration, where seats are duly reserved for them. Bad Temper. Bad temper has an injurious physi cal effect on tye digestion. .Bad tem per tends to a disposition of blood to the brain, and this leaves the stomach unable to perform Its functions prop, rly. j Marvelous, j j Quaint and Curious. LI,