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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1913)
; POULTRY AND GAME Can gat 70a fancy pricee for Wild Ducks sad ether ma in season. Wriu us foe cash offer on allkindsof poultry, pork; etc.-. Pearson-Page Co., Portland Ship us your VEAL, PORK, POULTRY, HIDES Wauaxante top prices ruid CHECK BY RETURN MAIL. 1 am. f.riou, 0001. fre. We will -wud for otw rear on request u nil who muke thlpmenu durin l-ctbruary ene yer' subscription to either Northwest I'oultry Journal. Pacific Horrectead. Poultry Life, nrthweat Pacific Fanner, Pit-see tall rour neiga bora about oar liberal offer, bhip to K H. SCHMALZ dt CO. Uw jeW $10,000. .141.143 fmt SU PORlUNB. ORE. Mention this paper when writing. AGENTS WANTED "SSS F where. Send 85e for sample and two live propositions by return mail Don't waste valuable ffextinfr started. Show nam plot and take Itast Keen HZ, Wics, Net, PextUai On. Machinery Second-Hand Machin ery boufrht, eold and Mrhanmri' n or I n baOen. sawmills, ate. The J. E. Martin Co.. 83 lat 8t rertland. Sand far Stock List and prices. BANDMEN:K:?t HOLTON and BUESCHER band Inatrume nta. The moat complete atock of Muiical Merchandiae in the Northweat. Write for Catalogues. 8E1BERL1NG-J.UCA8 MUSIC CO. ,184 Seaond Street Portland. Oregon $450 PROFIT mTti" 12 grow LARKSPUR it makes this record. Small Dae will do. It's the king of money-makers. "Beck Lot Schemes" explains this and core at other remarkable "schemes in dirt." Writ for prospectus. ROBERT H. CLARK, 1400 East Irving St, Portland, Oregon. RAW FURS WANTED, BKHEST PRICEt QUICt KtTUKNS K H.LIEBES4 CO.J . P. Ptagemann. Mgr. MiNimmiRiMr riiDDirDc 298 Marring Si C.rWi KIJ. 'S Rl First dill Bink. prilua.0rt. A Toy "for Cats THE CATNIP BALL For fnn and health! At drug toy and depurtrm-nt ftoroa. Write DR. A C. DAN ItLS. lac. 182 MIL M.. Bnlia. Mut, Kir book, on uaui. HUNTERS! TRAPPERS! Dra! direct with manufac turer. We pay the hisrheat prices for Raw Furs. Write lor free pricv Uxt and ahippins luffs. 'a"- N. M. UNCAR CO., FURRIERS Z Cm SirMt PnbTlllin nnv Men and Women. As times go on we have the two re sults to be anticipated. Men reach the point usually early Tn life where business or politics absorbs their whole attention, and they have little time, strength or Interest left for the broader culture and the amenities of life, wWle women are prone to be too much preoccupied with these things, to the Injury of the home not, per- aaps, m its smooth running, for In the) average American home the wheels of its machinery do usually tun smoothly, though atreat expense and to the Injury of the home spirit. If the two could be averaged we should more nearly approach the Ideal. Men need more relaxation, more rest, more variety, especially as they ad . ranee In life. Women need more con--entratron, more definitcness In their work, and especially more interest and -a different kind of Ideal In their home .maklng. Mrs, N. n. Hlllis in the -Amau-inan -- HAtn ( - Kr, ' A French scientist makes the an nouncement that baldness Is a sign of 'Intellectual grefttuesa. v Let us not be khasty in accepting his theory. He may have a grudge titrntrc cni) fiddler. a Pay Big Price for Water. Water Is sold by the ton at Per nambuco, Brazil. It Is ' piped from springs eight miles out from the city, and Is furnished to ships at elghty-ona cents a ton within the harbor. Swat Indirect. Vandy What foh yo ben goln' to da postofflce so reg'lar? Are yo' cor respondln' wl' some other female?" Raatus "Nope; but since Kh been a readln' In de papers 'bout dose 'con science funds ah kind of thought ah might poBslbly git a lettah from dat mlnlstah what mnrrlpd us." Life. North Pacific College of M Price 10c. THE EXERClStR V I'M TTvtUHUP0n aPP"cation t0 ar. -.. (j 'i. si p 551 l s l' - TTr''---'-- ' PURE FOOD LAW NOT MODERN Centuries Ago Tradesmen Who Adtil , tented Goods Were. Moat Severe t r ly Punished, j Pure food laws are ' not quite bo modern an Invention at we may be lieve. Dr. Reisner has made aiacor eries In Palestine that aeem to In dicate some sort of supervision of the food supplies delivered to the palace nearly 8000 years ago. Labels have been found that were once affixed to "a Jar of pure olive oil." We may wonder what tests were employed and what would happen to the man whose oil was found to be not pure. Prob ably something unpleasant, for there was no Supreme court In those days. We know what happened In th mid dle ages to the enterprising tradesman who adulterated his goods. In 1444 a Nuremberg merchant was burned alive for mating foreign material with his saffron and the saffron Itself was used for fuel. Probably that artistic touch Impressed the matter upon his memory. Some Augsburg bakers who ' used false weights and bad flour were ducked in a muddy pool, and through a faulty knowledge of the human re spiratory system, or , sheer careless ness, they came to the -surface dead. In 1482 a wine merchant was or dered to drink six quarts of his own adulterated wine, and as he died soon after It Is evident that the adultera tion must have been serious. It Is true that he had to finish the draft In a given, number of minutes, and a small number at that, but In those days they had a ' pleasant way of weighing the scales and loading the dice upon the side of justice. Civilization has chanced all that. Nowadays we shiver with apprehen sion lest, a rogue shall be punished. Baa Francisco Argonaut. Red Ctcm Rail Wn will mh ilnnhl man. I clothes aa any other blue. Don't put your monej i uiw any vioor. The Calf to Rtise. I never raise a calf from a cow that will not give at least 20 quarts of milk a day, and she must be bred to a pure bred bull. The percentage of poor heif ers when they come to freshen with this method Is very small. The ells' torn of feeding mill feeds Is not on the Increase now, but it had grown heretofore to a very great extent Many farmers grow as much clover as possible, also peas with oats. The silo has made Its appearance on most of the dairy farms. This helps much where properly managed, says a writer in an exchange. Qood corn silage ted In connection with clover hay or oats and pea hay and one feed of timothy and redtop mixed a day with a small grain ration should make a good flow of milk If you have good cows. With out a good dairy one cannot make milk, regflr'1: . .' :' . .';?2 used. Save Tour Horses , Prom Distemper, Mountain Fever, and all other forma of Contagion by using Spohn'a ' Distemper Compound. Put on the tongue or in the feed. Safe at all times for all ages and sexes, under all conditions. Same for Dog I Distemper and Chicken Cholera. Acts on the blood, expels the germs. Removes worms from stomach and intestines. A fine tonic and appetizer. Absolutely safe, even for hu man ueingH. vver i,wu,uuu Domes sola l&sl year. Greatest cure and preventive ever known for Contagious diseases. Nearly every one knows Spohn'a. Over 18 years on the market Have you used this great remedy! Why not! It ia not an experiment Try it; be convinced; let "Bpohn's" help you save and make money. All wholesale druggists handle it Your home druggist can supply you, or write to manufacturers, with pries enclosed. A bottle, 60c. and $1.00; $6.00 and $10.00 the dozen. Local agents wanted. Spoon Medical Co., Goshen, Ind., U.S. A. Not Likely. "I wish you would shout at me, Just the same as you shout at the animals you are going to kill' said Judge Moss, at the Carnarvon (Wales) county court, to a butcher who was giylng evidence in quiet tones. "If you were going to kill an obstreper ous bull you would not whisper like this." added his honor. . Writing Pad. A compact traveling case Is a book, shaped writing pad, which folds ovei flatly, and when open reveals compart ments for all the correspondence nec essities, as well as a calendar and nar row slides holding memorandum slips One of these fits nicely Into a hand bag. I -J 1.1 1 b.t'J : I J ' I a .V ..n ll BiMCcueh 8ynip. TaiUs Qood. Via B tn. Sold by DnifjrJ'ti. hi Dentistry and Pharmacy The North Pacific College was estab lished in 1898. It has departments of , Dentistry and Pharmacy. No school in America has better facilities for the train ing of young men and women for success ful professional careers. The annual ses sion begins October First An illustrated catalog; of information will be forwarded Bw"" mm racinc toiiege East Sixth and Oreson Stt, Portland, Ore. t r -. - f Tr-iri sTl.is.nM WOULD EDUCATE MAN . To carry knowledge of sclentlflo agricultural methods directly to thJ man between the plow handles, and thereby Increase the agricultural prod ucts of this . cbuntry by at least 20 per cent Senator Hoke Smith In a speech In the senate the other day urged the passage of the Smith-Lever bill to establish agricultural exten sion . departments in colleges of agri culture. "The annual value' of our agricul tural products is, In round figures, $9,000,000,000," Senator Smith said: "If the increase as a result of this work were only 20 per cent we would have an increased value of $1,800,000, 000, or a sufficient sum to. meet the proposed appropriation for 600 years." Senator Smith pointed to the pas sage of the Morrill bill for the estab lishment of land grant agricultural colleges In each of the states of the Union, and of the Hatch bill for the establishment of an experiment its. tlon In each state. Upon them the government is now spending about $4,000, uoo annually.. Much of this money and of the $15,000,000 appropriated each year for the exclusively agricultural work of the department of agriculture, ne stated, la spent In investigating and experimenting to show how the best and greatest crops can be raised. J. H. HAMMOND WOULD PACIFY YAQUIS r 1 , wishes to pacify the Taquls and his plan for accomplishing that object The Taquls, maintain In their stronghold at this time. In addition to their warriors, a force of 1,1500 men armed with modern rifles. MISS BOARDMAN LAUDS BOY SCOUTS Miss Mabel T. Boardman, secre tary of the American Red Cross association, has sent a message to the 400,000 Boy Scouts of America, She rejoices In the good deeds that the Boy Scouts are doing. She com pares them wih the knights of King Arthur of old. "The Vision of King Arthur" Is the title of Miss Boardman's article in Boys' Life, the Boy Scouts' magazine. Miss Boardman pictures the dying King Arthur, and says: "Something held his clear blue eyes not glitter ing armor nor helmet with its visor down only a boy in simple brown, who stopped to lift a little fallen child. And there! Another guided a blind man through the dangers of the noisy street, and yet another, with kindly mien and friendly stroke, soothed some poor, bewildered dog, his master lost Here one took from her trembling hands the heavy load of some old dame and bore it for her. Another darted swiftly through the town to call the doctor to the aid of some one who was ill. Not here, not there alone, but everywhere, through north ern winter snows and under sunny southern skies, the king beheld these knights In brown. "This is a little story for your Boy Scouts.' continues Miss Boardman. Tou are the knights in brown. The bold Sir Belvedere thought the true old times were dead, but you have brought them back to life again." MME. JUSSERAND BARS "FREE LUNCH" j whereby they have been able to piece out their meager Incomes by saving what otherwise would be spent at hotels and restaurants for food and wear. BEHIND THE PLOW t;"ii il.sjp'ffi- 1 ' i 1 a-ew&WJWM John Hays Hammond has asked ln8 battles while pitching - hay and the Mexican government to permll manipulating railroads while running him to go, unarmed and accompanied i 1118 reaPe?- only by an interpreter. Into thai when ne CnaIly break" away "J? mountainous stronghold of the Yaqul ! come t0 the cRy he ,B ortlfleQ wlta Indians in Sonora, to pacify that rugged health, courage and lndepend turbulent tribe. The government -ol!ence: tne wor,d look8 eaBy t0 hlm' Mexico has fought the Yaquis for He Is often disappointed, but he makes thirty years, but today the Taquls are unconquered. Mr. Hammond expects 'that the Madero government will give 'him the permission which he desires. Hli program is baBed on his belief that as a result of hlB life and work in Mexico, many years ago, the under Atnnrtlno hntwann Mm anil tha Vanilla Is so thorough as to obviate the risk enervating and surfeiting. The coun of his being Injured or killed. Major ll7 teaches the boy push and perse Burnham, the famous American and ' trance and determination. South African scout and fighter, will ! He learns philosophy-and truth, so, accompany him. j when he comes to the big city he Is Last July Mr. Hammond wrote totrong and capable. Renor Calero. the Mpilrnn amhaasa. Many of the really big men who dor to this country, outlining his Mme. Jusserand, wife of ths French ambassador, and new doyen of the diplomatic corps at Washing ton, has decreed the abolition of tha dlplomatlo "free Hunch route," which is the undiplomatic designation of that Indiscriminate and uncensored list of hostesses from whom the at taches 'of embassies and legations, have been wont to accept luncheon, dinner and dance .Invitations. Henceforth there will be a rigid adherence to dlplomatlo and soda) lines by the young diplomats who have entered too much Into the spirit of our democratlo Institutions and gone to those entertainments whera he spirit of conviviality led them. The gossip In diplomatic circles la that there has been not only a weak ening of discipline, but that- the young bachelor set, not provided with tha large expense account of the heads of legations, have found In the bountl 'ful hoBDltallty of Washington means Jj wW-m-M&s Mil i " N. - POWER OF FARM-BRED BOYS Unlike the City Youth, He Is Not Cod-" died Nor Helped Over the Many . Rough Places. The"'farm Is the place to give ' boy a good start in life. .It is there that he learns Independence of thought and action. He Is not coddled nor helped over the rough places as the city boy Is. He Is forced to de-. pend upon himself; and at the age. when the city boy is tied to a nurse's apron strings! the country lad not only takes care of himself, but often assists materially In the farm work. He rides horseback, goes afield with a team, investigates the habits of birds and animals, acquires a thirst tor knowledge. I ' The city boy moves in grooves that have been cut out for him by custom; he is herded in the city cars; he must follow the crowd in the streets. His vision is "bounded by the lines of high buildings; he never sees a sun rise, or set; he Is bound down by prejudices; dwarfed by mannerisms and consumed by customs. " The farm boy dreams of the outside world which he has never Seen, strains at the tether of bis hum-drum duties and sighs for bigger world b to conquer. He is fight his dreams come true. He Is used to hardships; does not whine when be Is knocked down In the strife of the big city; he has learned to depend on his own re sources; he has physical power and Intellectual elements to win over ob stacles that would down the city boy. 'The country Is Inspiring; the city is dominate the affairs in the big cities came from the farm. It Is stated aa a fact that seven-tenths of the men who control the banks and railroads 'and other great Industries of Chicago, New York and other great centers of business, are farm-bred. But the demand for good men on the farms Is also Insistent Boys who remain In the country and make the most of their opportunities cannot help but succeed In the calling as honorable and useful as any other. DIFFICULT PUZZLE TO SOLVE Square of Sixty-Four Cells Must Cut Into Four Parts With Num bered Cell In Each. Be Cut the square of 64 cells Into four Darts that are exactly alike In size ! und shape. Each of these four pieces must con- t 2 3 Difficult Puzzle. ialn within Ub borders one of the tour numbered cells. The second diagram shows how cu riously the 64 cells may be cut Into 5 O O G O O Ol Solution of Puzzle. four parts, exactly alike In shape and size. Each piece contains one of the num bered cells. '''axA'rttcitcia;"'-'' "'