Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1908)
yrupfigs Oixir 'Joeraia Cleanses the tct- uaiivtUisD iel& Cot utiles QUO in IjnncTmnTinn. n 1. J - I L isupaTi :ts Trul x . . ii .J..rw.;.., Acls naturally, acts truly as aJUaxativG. Best forAfenK)mpn and Child-ren-ybunand Old. enejicial Effect Always duv the Genuine which has the jull name of the Com pany CAUFflRNIA Ro Syrup Co. hora it it manufactured. printed on the front of even acknge. SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS, wttit ( cjuiui prKB au aarDouia. INSURE YOUR HEALTH COMFORT . on stormy days a oy wearing a SUCKER Clean - Light Durable Guaranteed Waterproof -1 325Everywln. J TO CA OSron. u S 4 On to Her Calling. Our Landlady It's the strangest thing In the world! Do you know, cur dear old pet cat disappeared very suddenly yesterday.' Excuse me, Mr. Rudolph, will you have another piece of rabbit pie? Mr. Rudolph (promptly) No, thank you! Our Landlady (an hour later) That Is three more pies saved. This season will be a profitable one, Indeed. Dlapnted the Proposition. "All that you are, my friend," said the lecturer, singling out an elderly man sitting In a front seat who ap peared to be deeply Interested "all that you are, I repeat, you owe to heredity and environment." "Gosh," exclaimed the' elderly man, turning red with Indignation, "I never had no dealln's with that firm in my life, and I don't owe them or nobody else a blamed cent !" Chicago Tribune. A Discourage Digger. "I see they say that when a diamond passes a certain size it Is worth no more than a smaller, one." - "How's that?" "If It's too large It Isn't marketable. Nobody wants to wear a diamond as bulky as a glass door knob." "Is that so? Then it must be aw fully discouraging for a man to dig up a sparkler as big as a football." Cleveland Plain Dealer. A Beauty Parlor. There was a long silence. "Gerald,' she said, breaking the mo noFony. "what Is a 'beauty parlor.'?", "A 'beauty parlor,' my dear," hi whispered, moving closer.- "Why, thli Is a 'beauty parlor.' " 'Tift Idea! Why so?" "Why, any parlor would be a beauty parlor If you were In it" And after that the rest was easy. She accepted blm on the spot The data about the manufacture oi teel ears in this country are not as defi nite as might be desired, but the Railway Age reports the number of all steel cars ordered in 1007 to be 27.SO0, and of cars with steel underfrnrpBs. 44.f00. Pale, Thin, Nervous ? Then your blood must be in a very bad condition. You certainly know what to take, then take it Ayer's Sarsa parilla. If you . doubt, then consult your doctor. Weknow what he will say about this grand old family medicine. Sold for over 60 years. Ttati It the first qnestlon yonr doctor would k: "Are your bowels reirulart" He know, that dally action of the bowels Is absolutely esiential to recovery. Keep your lWer actlr and your bowel, regular by taking laiaUr doses of Ayor'i Mil. A jtad by J. O. Ayer Oo., Lowell, Also nuiuHiunri ok 9 HAIR VI 000. tf0 auuhcube. 17 Wf O CHEWY PECTOIAL. i i mm mm Refrigerator- Alarm. Occaslonaly the busy housewife neg lects to keep tab on the waste water from the ice In the refrigerator, with the result that the f i .,.U J o I & the Wh8te pipe t0 J I PjJ catch the drip wa- If ' tor ntrorflnn-s Tha 1 drip pan being out Pi N of sight, she has no way of telling when It Is almost full and needs emptying. THE ALARM. This overflowing of the waste water is neatly prevented by the contrivance shown in the accompanying illustra tion, which the Inventor calls a "refrig erator alarm." Extending from a bracket attached to the refrigerator is a pivoted "float" which rests In the waste water basin. As the water in the basin Increases the float gradually rises also. When the water reaches a predetermined height a small project ing arm comes In contact with a spring bell, causing the latter to ring until the basin is withdrawn. With this warning the housewife knows Instantly when the rcfr'.scrator needs attention. Rice Saote Pick over and wash one cup of rice Add It gradually to vigorously boiling salted water and cook until tender. Al low much more water than the rice will absorb In order to keep the kernels -ep-arate. When done, drain, allowing old water to run through it for a few sec onds. Drain again. Melt a level table spoon of butter in a rrylng pan and saute a little of the rice at a time, browning slightly. Season with more lt, If necessary. Harahmallow Filling. Dissolve five teaspoonfuls powdered gum arable In half a cup of cold water, add half a cupful powdered sugar and boll until thick enough to form a soft boll between the fingers when dropped Into Ice water. Pour upon the white of an egg beaten stiff, flavor with a teaspoonful of vanilla and a few drops of lemon Juice and spread on the cake with a knife dipped. In hot water. Fruit Punch. Put into a bowl the pulp and juice of eight good-sized oranges with the Juice of two lemons, two sliced bananas and a small cup granulated sugar. When the sugar Is melted put In a heap ing tablespoonful minced pineapple. Let It stand a few minutes before pouring on a block of Ice In a punch bowl. Just before serving add a quart of apolli. narls or other charged water. Eggleaa, Chocolate Icing. Melt half cake unsweetened chocolate, add three-quarters cup sugar, make a smooth paste of one teaspoonful corn starch and a little cold water in a cup and then fill the cup with boiling water. Put this In chocolate and be sure It Is perfectly smooth before taking from Btove. Flavor with vanilla. It Is best to make It In a double boiler. Baked Bananaa. Strip back one section of the skin, remove the fruit, scrape It and replace, covering it with the skin. Place in an agate pan, allowing one banana for each person. Bake In a moderate oven until ine skins are dark and the pulp tender. Slip the pulp on to a serving dish and pour round. Waffle. Sift a pint of flour twice with a tea spoonful each of baking powder and salt Beat three eggs, yolks and white separate, and add to the yolks two cups of sweet milk, then stir this liquid into the sifted flour. Beat until smooth, add the stiffened whites of the eggs, and pour Into heated and greased waffle Irons. Milk Froatlng for Cake One and a half cups sugar, half-cup milk, one teaspoon butter, half-teaspoon vanilla. Melt the butter in a saucepan, then add sugar and milk. Boil gently without stirring for thirteen minutes. Beat until stiff enough to spread, then add flavoring and spread over cake. Doughnut. Half a teacup thin sour cream or rich buttermilk, one teaspoon soda dissolved In a scant teacup of sweet milk, one tea spoon salt, one and one-half teacups Sugar, made Into a dough with flour n little stiffer than when eggs are used, Flavor with nutmeg. Honey Cake. llalf-cup honey, half-cup sugar, half cup butter, one egg, two cups flour, one Plin fVlsl nnrat nm InncnnnnnU ii powder. Flavor with lemon or vanilla Griddle Cake. One cup flour, one cup apple, half cub sugar, half teaspoonful soda, pinch salt I wet with water until as thick ag honey and fry. Holding HU Job. Michael Callahan, a section boss for the Southern railroad, has a keen Gaelic wit One warm afternoon while walking along the railroad tracks he found a section hand placidly sleeping beside the rails. Callahan looked dis gustedly at the delinquent for a full minute and then remarked: "Slope on, ye lazy spalpeen, slape , .... "o juu eiiipe you ve got ! a Job, but when you wake up you ain't ' it r t i ... - - ' bui, uuue. uii'i'iui'oirs Magazine. Lightning aa She Saw It. While little Gertrude was looking out of a window during a thunderstorm she saw a flash of lightning play along a telegraph wire. "Oh, mamma," she exclaimed. "I Just saw a piece of the sun fall down from the sky !" New York Press. Mother win find Mri. Window Soothing- Byrup the best remedy to use for iheir children Perfectly Plain. With all the Impartiality of the par tisan, Prof. Price set forth the con-! tentions of both political parties regard- j lng the tariff. At the close of his talk he was sur rounded by the fair members of the Woman's Current Events Club. "Oh. Prof. Price," cooed the fairest "thank you so much for your perfectly lovely talk! I understand all about the tariff now. It's just like a lover's comparisons the free-traders are the other girls 1" Not Disappointed. Adam Zawfox What's got you so much interested in that there paper? Job Sturkey I'm looking over this list ef a hundred men that owns all the money in the country. I thought mebby my name would be there, but it ain't Well, I didn't much 'ipect to find it, no how. There la mora Catarrh In this section of tha country than all otaer diseases put together, and until the last few rears was auppoaed to be Incurable. For a great many years doctora fironounced Ha local disease and prescribed ocal remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it In curable. Science haa pro. en catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requirei conBtiiutionaltreatment. Hall'aCatarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, la the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acta directly on the blood and mncoua surfaces of the system. They offer one h tindred dol lars for any caae it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testi monials. - Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Hold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation. Hakes a Difference. "If a man loses his pocketbook," laid the moralizer, "he thinks the chap who finds It Is no better than a thief if he doesn't return it" "Yes," rejoined the demoralizer, "but If he finds some other fellow's pocket book well, it comes like pulling teeth to give it up." Her Grievance. "Mr. Clugston," laid the caller, "you may stop my paper." "It doesn't fit your pantry shelves, per haps, ma'am," said the editor ef the Spiketown Blizzard, sarcastically. "That hain't got nothing to do with it." "You've found that you can borrow it from a neighbor hereafter?" "That ain't the reason, neither." "Possibkjr you don't like the editorial policy of the paper." "No, sir ; I don't My nephew was ar rested last week for stealin' a hog, and you didn't say a word about It !" He Aimed High. To the uninitiated observer some of the gymnastics performed In a game of football are beyond explanation. The story is told of a half-back who complained to his family about the In justice of allowing football players to wear head protectors. "I should think It was most neces sary," said his mother, who had wit nessed one game with many tremors. "Look at the front teeth your poor cousin Frederick lost!" 'That may be," said her son, stub bornly, ut look at me, laid up for two weeks with a' lame foot Just from kicking a fellow's nose-gear!" St. Vitas Dance and all Nervous Diseases ocrmanently cured br Dr. Kline's ureal irve Restorer. 8end for FBEE a2 trial hnttu m.n metis. Sr. XL H. Kline, Ld.,831 Arch UL, PliUa.,Pa HI Idea of One. The teacher in the Darktown schoor was hearing the class in geography. "What is known as the Great Divide?" she asked. "Cuttin' a big watermelon 1" answered little 'Rastus with a grin that showed all his ivories. Chicago Tribune. nji OTEL MOORE ml OPEN ALL THE YEAR U U Clatsop beach Seaside, Oreoon "Tup Directly on the beach overlooking nc the ocean. Hot aalt hatha and QC Ban parlors. Electric light. Fire. ur nlaca and steam heat. Vln w&lke flRmnN'l and drives. Sea foods a spec UKtUUn ,ltT. Rates. 12.60 and 1X00 per lay. -Special rate by the week. DAN. J. MOOlti., Proprietor P N U No, 17-08 w HKK writing to adTertUer pleas I neniioa tins paper. I PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more roods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. On 10c package colors silk, wool and cotton equally well and Is guaranteed to gly perfect results. Aalc dealer, or w will send post paid at 10c a package. Write for free bookie bow to dye, blsaculand taix colors. MONROE DRUG) COMPANY, Qulncy, uunola. MO OWE CAN I Pe-ru-na Pre--C2:5tlPC! Uents Catchijifrjrjjd Many people persist in tiding on the street cars, liiBufliciently protected by clothing. They start out perhaps in the heat of the day, and do not feel the ceei of wraapa. The rapid moving oft he car cools the body unduly. When they board the car perhaps they are slightly perspiring;. When the body is In this condition it is easily chilled. This is especially true when a person is sit ting. Beginning a street car ride in the middle of the day and ending it in the evening almoft invariably requires extra wraps, but people do net obterve these precautions, hence they catch cold. Colds are very frequent in the Spring on Ihis account, and as the Sum mer advances they do not deciease. During the Spring months do one should think of riding on the car 'without being provided with a wrap. , A cold caught in the Spring is liable to lait through the entire Summer. Great caution should be observed at this season against exposure to told. During the first few pleasant days of Knrinj, the UnlHty i.( poichinj finld la great. No wonder so many people acquire muscular rheumatism and catarrhal diseases during this season. However, in spite of the greatest precautions, colds will be caught. At the appearance of the first symptom, Peruna should be taken accord ing to directions on the bottle, and continued nntil evtry symptom disap pears. Do not put it off. Do not waste tlma by taking other remedies. Begin at once to take Peruna and continne taking it until you are positive that the cold haa entirely disappeared. This may save you a loug and perhaps serious illness later on. , Bad Effects From Cold. Mr. M J. Deutsch, Secretary Build ing Material Trades Council, 151 Wash ington St., Chicago, III., writes: "I have found your medicine to be onnsuallv efficacious in getting rid of bad effects from cold, and more espe cially in driving away all symptoms of catarrh, with which I am frequently troubled. v "The relief Peruna gives in catarrhal troubles alone ia well worth the price per bottle. I have nsed the remedy for several years now." Spells of Conghing. Mrs. C. . Long, writes from At- wood, Colorado, as follows: . "When I wrote you for advice my little three-year old girl had a cough that had been troubling her for four months. She took cold easily, and Glrlng Hint a Pointer. "Naegus," said Bonis, "you've seen that story of mine that's running through one ef the magazines. How would you adviie me to wind it up? I want to give It -a happy ending." "Put all the characters in the story," answered Naggus, "aboard an excursion steamer for a moonlight ride. Send the boat out to the middle of the lake " "Yeir "And blow It up." A Hungarian student who was plucked at a recent examination at Klausenburg shot himself, but first winged an examiner. OUCH. OH MY BACK" NEURALGIA, STITCHES LAMENESS. CRAMP TWINGES. TWITCHES FROM WET OR DAMP ALL BRUISES, SPRAINS, A WRENCH OR TWIST THIS SOVEREIGN REMEDY TH EY CAN'T RESIST Price 25c SHOES AT ALL r PRICES. FOR EVERY MEMBER OFTHE FAMILY, MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. aSa. W;L. Douglas makam end noM CA VQ) nton'a$2.6a,$3.00mnd$a.B0uhomm ir thmn mny orhee manufacturer In thm JJteT" world, hocaumm ihmy hold thalr H(ta3 aha pa, fit bailor, woar lonomr, mnd 3n mro or praater valua thmn any othar otns, ahooafn tha world to-day. JB W. L Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt (dee Shoes Cannot ar- ia irri its. w. I DoliIus name and mice Sold by the best shoe dealers eTerywliera. tilioea batwl (,'Meloa free to any address. ALWAYS AVOID One Dose in Time, Saves Nine. would o-heeae and have spells of cough ing that would sometimes last for half an hour. "iSuv we can never thank yon enough for the change you have made in our little one's health. Before she began taking your Peruna she Buffeted every thing in the way of cough, colds and croup, but now ehe has taken not qni'e a bottle oi Peruna, and ib well and strong aa she has ever been In her life." Pe-ru-na for Colds. Mr. James Moirison, 68 East 16 tb St., Paterson, N. J , writes: "I have given Peruna a fair trat, and I find it to ba just what you clai' - be. I cannot praise it too hi I have used two buttles in my fm, ,'r colds, and everything ituapirmb . ( can safely say that your medicine is the best I have ever used." I.oat (he Connection. Mrs. Chtigwater, in looking over, the morning paper, had come across a Ilns that looked like this : gffeozzwkwlwhyojjjtjjybltizarxitbizuggml "Josiah," she untied, showing it to him, "what does this mean?" "It means," said Mr. Chugwater, "that the line's out of order. Same old story. Can't you see?' 01 Stnull Valn'e. The nose of the Egyptian sphinx had dropped off. "Let it go," said the sphinx, speaking for the first and only time. "It wasn't s -Grecian nose, anynnv." and 50c Be Equalled At Am Price la stamned on bottom. Tnke We anhetttiite. mailed from faetory to any part of the world, lllua- W. JU. ItoUUls, asrooauou, Alaaa. saaa. t.1 Ti Tf ftfidl W ffTr1 ' I'l W " Jixrhuwil.