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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1916)
LINCOLN COUNTY LEADER, FRIDAY, JANUARY 21st, 1916. MANY CHILDREN HAVE WORMS Worms are a common child hood ailment. They make chil dren irritable, nervous and rest lefifi, besides robbing the body and mind of proper nourishment Watch your child. Examine the Btools and at- first signs of worms give you child a treat ment of Kickapoo Worm Killer. They kill the worms, act as a laxative and expel the worms and poisonous waste. . Tone the system and help' restore your child's health and happy disposi. tiori.. Only 25c. at your drufc. gist. . 0 LAUNCH FOR SALE Standard size Columbia River Fish Boat; equipped with 5 h.p. Doinan engine, fully equipped, $250. Also" 16-ft.,: row boat. Carpenter tools Chiap 'for cash if taken at. once. Address Leland Wright, " ' Yaquina, Or. o - - PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER ' Mrs. Ethel Bateman will do all kinds of public sten- ographlc work. At J. Stewart's law office. F. HELP YOUR LIVER IT PAYS When your, liver ge"t$ torpid and your stomach acts queer, take Dr. King's New Life Pills and you will find yourself feel ing better. They t purify the Mood, give you freedom from constipation, biliousness, dtzzl irci and indigestion. You feel fine jur.t like, ycu want to feel. Clcir the complexion too. 25c. at druggists. ..,.,. -o- GUARDIAN'S SALE N :tlce Ih hereby given that the un- rs!i;ned Guardian ot the person and' km of William Robert Harrison, I'oViln Louise Harrison and Minnie I'arrlson, minors, by virtue ot an or tr and decre of the County Court or the comity of Lincoln, state of Ore gon, made and entered on the 6th day of December, 1U15. duly authorizing tlie sale of the land hereinafter set eut, will on and at:cr Saturday, the t'Ji day of January, 1!16, duty offer t; I ipwe'rt to sell at private sale at the Inw office of O. n. MoClnskey at Ti-i-'do, Lincoln county, Oregon, the f ir,v.lii? deucribed real property, to rn M I ;t Thrpe (3) in nioek six (6) In Kir'riiH nd'.Htlon to the Town of Weld ed'. Lincoln conntv, Oregon. T- T's of sale, cash In hand. Maudo Hamilton, Cnn-d'an of the perT'ii and estate of William Robert Harrison, Portia hotline Harrison and Minnie Harrl- n, minors. - . ORDER AND NOTICE OF MEETING lu the County Court of Lincoln county siae of Or gon. Petition of W. J. Amann and Joseph Sweiirtu-en. To I.au.-n llrooks, A. E. Brooks, I. B. ItcJonklii, Fred McJunkln. Joseph ktwnon, J. O. Young and W. J. Aniapn: You are notified V ti based upon the wnrn petition of the above named pe titioners, the County Court has this i(e appointed a b ,urd of County llinwo.rs to meet on Uie 16th of Janu ary. lAlti. at 8:00 o'clock a. m at the Ouurthouee at Tole-M, Or gn, and pruned to view out and locate the proposed road to that farm and timber fciniU of the respective petitioners In rton Sixteen, Townsh'p Eleven.' 8., Jl. Ten Weft of the r.Mlamette Mer M'.an in LlnLofn county, Oregon, and 61 af tUtl proposed road crosiies land wuimI by enth of the several per sons to whom this order and notice b above directed, and R Is further orded that this no tice and ord)r bo "-erved upon the ve Brut above nnm-i by publlcfltiot thereof for four cunnKHlve weeks In tn Lincoln County Leader, a news paper of general circulation In this nunty. beginning with the Issue of ffc-cemlM-r Ith, 1911,, and ending Jan cry 14, 1916, said live perrons being on-reldi-iits of thU county, and that a copy hereof be nerved forthwith rrsonally upon the others , above aiied. I"hi; in open Court this 11th day I W.nmbor. 115. R. R. Miller, County Judge, ? W. F. Wakefield. "iKsloncr, O. V. Hurt, Commissioner. Caw. J. Clark, Attorney for Petitioners. I An Optimist , a man wxio ' . nu-ni 9 Fiili Brand Reflex Slicker $3.00 when Old Prob eavt rain. Waterproof, . abttduUly ' . -rfftVEfie A. i. TOWER CO. BOSTON tfomomhpr when vou want abb, edging or block wood and aee Johnny f wi, . ., .. WORLD PEACE , . WILL NOT COME :To the Editor: While the world is reeling at the spectacle of civilization going to pieces under the blow of a cataclysmic druggie, and while "the pro gress of mankind" is taking up toward destruction at an appall ing rate, there are some relig ious leaders and statesmen who uei-sist 'in talking world peace and predict the beginning of the millennium at the close or tnis war. This Utopian s aream win never be realized. Lasting, uni versal peace will never come be tween the nations of this world. 'lue word "millennium" sig nifies a thousand years, without any reference whatever to the character of the period, whether good or bad. It means simply and only a thousand years. In six verses In Rev. 20, this expres sion, "a thousand years," is used. It Is a period in which Christ will reign with the Just of all ages after they have bem raised from the dead at the first resurrection. Destruction,- not conversion, awaits tho world at the very time when - popular religious l teachers cherish ' the delusive bot)e of the Rood time coming, They sue no danger, and brand ns fanatical alarmists those who obey the prophetic Injunction, "Plow ye the trumpet in Zion, and Bound an alarnt In iny holy mountain; let all the; inhabitants of the land tremble; for the day of the Lord cometh, It Is nigh at hand." "But," says the Apostle Paul, "when they shall say, beace and safety, then sudden destruction cometh upon them." The millennial reign with Christ brought to view in Rev. 20. is not on this earth, but In heaven, for when the righteous dead are raised at his Becond coming ( lCor.15: 22-24), at the last trump (1 Cor. 15, 15:51- 54), -they are caught un to meet the Lord In the air (l Tness. 4:15-17). and are taken to heaven, where ChriBt Is (John 14:1-3). "Thus the saints snail live and reign with" ChriBt In heaven during the thousand years after the first resurrec tion, or the resurrection of the lust.' But It should be remem bered that when Christ cotnes the second time and gives lire to the righteous, at the same time the brightness and glory of his presence consume all the wicked, bo that the earth is de norulated and left desolate. This will be clexrly Been by a comparison of 2 Thes. 1:7-9 with Rev. 6:14-17; Rev. 19:11-21: Isa. 13:6-9; Isa. 24:1-3; .Ter. 25:31 33; Zeph. 1:14-18; and Jer. 4 :19- 27. wnen me uvmp wu-ncu we consumed by the burning glory of the coming of Christ, and the "blessed and holy" are taken to heaven to reign with Christ a thousand years, the earth, left desolute and uninhabited, is called "the bottomless pit," into which Satan is cast and con Ined. In this 'desolated earth he remains bound for a thous and years. In the beginning the earth was "without form and void," that Is. It was In a chaotic, empty, desolate condition; and this will be its condition again during the millennium. Satan, confined In this earth enuring the millennium, and having no one to tempt and deceive, is said to bo bound with chain. This chain is a chain of circumstan ces, circumstances which not only limit his operations, but ab solutely take away nis oppor tunities to deceive and destroy souls. Hut when the wicked dead are raised at the end of the thous and years, as we are Informed in the first clause of Rev. 20:5, Satan Is Bald to be "loosed out of his prison, and shall go out to deceive the nations which are In the four quarters of the earth," as In verses seven and eight. After Satan and all his rebel host meet their fate In the lake of fire which envelops the earth, a new earth appenrs, with the New Jerusalem as Its capital city, Rev. 20:9-15; Rev. 21:1-5. This will fulfill Isaiah 65:17-19, to which Peter refers In 2 Teter 3:10-13. 'This In brief. Is the llible doctrine concerning the millennium. Sincerely yours, E. N. Whitlaw. DR.J.H.JESSEN rhyslclan and Surgeon TOLEDO, 1 OREGON SO DOES THE OSTRICH , We have all read of the os: trich, that extraordinary bird of the desert, which dines on scrap iron, lunches on - stones and when danger threatens thrusts his head in . the sand and be lieves himself Bate, from harm, because he cannot see the dan ger. Picture to yourself this gigan tic bird, taller than a man, rest ing in fancied security because his head is hidden from view, al though his body can be seen for miles around. There are too many of us who adopt the tactics of the foolish ostrich." We are told of an im pending danger and think that we can escape it or avoid it by refusing to face It." - - ' : ' We are informed that there is great danger of restriction of our facilities for local trade if our local business men are not given better support; that we may find ourselves deprived of the opportunities for marketing our farm produce in our home town if our store keepers find themselves stocked up with goods, but with no adequate volume of local business. What is more natural than chat this may be tho case if we do not stop sending our money away from home to the mail or der houses in the big cities? We must realize such possibilities and take steps to prevent them. If we don t, we will find out, in all probability; that our local merchant will look for other lo cations than in our town. Which is the wisest thing to do to look . the conditions squarely in the face and take the necessary steps to counter act them or shall we, like tho foolish .ostrich, refuse.. to .face the conditions and decline to take cognizance of . them? We can permit matters to drift along until the inevitable occurs, or we can thirk things over, carefully ' and with Judgment, and take the steps necessary to protect our Interests the In terests of ourBelves and those who will come aUer us. Our community is built up as the result of various interests, not the least of which 13, the tributary farming population. Our town was created because of the various interests that center here and because this is a natural point for the distribu tion of farm products and mer chandise. The sale of the farm products brings the money for the buying of the merchandise, while the merchandise supplies tne necessities of those who raise the crops. It therefore follows, naturally, as one of the unfailing laws ot i civilization, that if it were not . . , . -.v I "ii tin? icuuicio auu UlilClB wuu produce things for the market, there would be i.o occasion for this community, there would be no necessity for the stores and shops. On the other hand, were It not for the stores that are the med iums fpr the marketing of the crops, there would.be a lack of facilities for marketing and farming would not be as profit able as we now find it in our community. If the business men of our town do not afford the requisite acilities for marketing such crops as must be handled locally in order to give full advantage to the farmers, then the farmers will find out that they must look for a market elsewhere or ac cept a much smaller profit on that which they have to Bell. ' On the other hand, ir tne farmers do not -do their share toward the support of the busi ness men, by spending their money locally and keeping It In circulation In our own town, in stead of sending It to the mail order houses, then the local storekeepers will find It neces saiy to restrict their invest ments in goods for the local market, thereby resulting in a diminishing of the facilities ror getting what we need at homo. This is a point we must not. fair to observe. . We must look the condition squarely In the face and arrive at a conclusion as to what steps are necessary to preserve and to maintain the conditions which make for pros perity. If we fall to do tnis, or ir we temporize and let matters drift, we will find that we emulate the silly ostrich, until the worst hap pens. Spend tne money at nome. Patronize the , local business men. Keep tne money in circu lation In our home town. We need every dollar at home to help the community. , Let the ostriches do as they will and send their money to the mall order bouses, but let us J O. - R. HOLLINGSWOSTH I Complete Home Furnisher ' J. S. 'AKXN The Dry Goods Man HAS A FULL LINE; Ladies' and Genl's Furnishings, Crochet and Erubroiderle Ma terials ALSO A full line of JEWELRY which is Guaranteed. " Smile at Yourself in The Mirror ; And probably several Important ; things will be suggested to you. ; I Your teeth may be decayed bad ; ; enough to Interfere with' your natural expression when j ou ; ; talk or laugh. Some of them ; ; tnay trouble you wlren you are eating 'or drlnkinfg. ' Again, ;;they may keep you awake ; ; nights. If you recognize any of i ' these conditions as being part of ; ; your experience, I wish to sag ; ; gest that you ask yourself these . questions: . First Considered from a business standpoint, would not your, time be worth more to yourself or employer If your teeth were good? . Second Is It toead of pain or on account of the expense that you neglect your teeth? Patients of my office know that dental operations are not so painful, after all. They know that I eruarantee mv work to h he Best, and they know that my charges are the lowest. , R. JAY GREER, Dentist !' 1 11 mil I iii t i Milium i loom hairbrushes, nail brushes, r manicure sets, sponges, soaps, perfumerey, etc., are a few of the articles we carry In our Toilet Depart ment You get everything . first-class at second class prices, as also in our regu- ' lar Drug and medicine de partment. You will be Bur prlsad at the preparation we have made for pour comfort. TOLEDO DRUG COMPANY f We are Going out of the HAT BUSINESS 500 Mens Hats AT LESS THAN HALF PRICE .They are on Display Now. Come and get one, at a prico that will Surprise You. We are also CLOSING OUT o . Shoes. You Big Bargains Remember, we still have lots T nels, Etc., that we are closing ( I u hope that we have but a few of these iooiisn birus in our com munlty, Bays an exchange. o WANTED TO RENT A dairy, farm with about 12 to 20 cows and farm tools. Give full particulars and terms. Address, R. Hungerford, Dole, Clark county, Washington . 'o TO EXCHANGE WUlametts Vsllev farm, 100 acres, to exchange for small ranch In Lin coln .county. .If Interested Investi gate. ' John Bradbury. m'jATS.l I ' IL Aurora, Oregon. f . T Brushes your?, upturn , H ! 1 1 1 in ur Ladies and Children's will find some at OurStor of Ginghams, Outing Flan- f out at less than cost. w; FINAL ACCOUNT OF ' ELIZABETH GRAHAM Notice is hereby given that the un derslirned, the executor of the estate ot Elisabeth Graham, deceased, tins filed his final account In the Countv Court of the State tf Oregon, for Lin coln county, and that Tuesday, the 18th day. of .January, 1916, at the hour of 10 o'clock In the forenoon of aald day at the court room of said courthouse, has been appointed by said court as the time and place for the hearing ot objections thereto and settlement thereof. Date of first publication, December I7tn, i76. W. 8. Hufford, Executor of the estate ot Elizabeth uranam, deceased. SUMMONS ,n the Circuit Court of the state of Oregon, for Lincoln county. Hans C. Nelson, Plaintiff vs. Mahala Cloake and Alfred Cloake, her husband, J. H. Crawford and Mary F. Crawford, his wife, Dufendanta. To Mahala Cloaka and Alfred Cloake, her husband, J. H. Crawford and Mary F. Crawford, his wife, the cbove named defendants; .... In. the name of the otato of Oregon: You and each of vou are hnruhv ra. quired to appear and answei the com plaint died against you In the above entitled suit now on file In the office of the County Clerk of the above en titled Court on or before the lust day named In the Order for publication of this summons, towlt: On or before six weeks from the 1st day of publication hereof and you are hereby notified that it you fall to appear and answer said complaint as herein required, the nlaintiff will apply to the Court for he relief prayed for U. safd complaint, .owit:. For a decree of said Court that plaintiff's. title to the following des .ribed real property, towlt: t Beginning 2406 V et south and 1732 eet east of the section corners of sec tions9, 10, 15 and. 6, T. 11 8. R. 10 West, thence west 1732 feet to section line; thence siuth on section line to section corners of sections-15. 16. 21 ind 22. T..11 S. It ,0 West; thence last on section line to meander cor ner; thence following tli a urn at hanl or the Yaquina river down stream to lime oi Damning. All In section 15, townshlD 11 srm'ri nf nnn in of the Willamette Meridian, Is good and valid; thst you, the said aofendants, and oath of you have no right, title nor Interest whatever in or to said lands or any part thereof and that any end all claims that you may "lnlm aralnst said lnnrf la and without right whatever; that you the said defendants, and each of you' be forever enjoined crd debarred from asserting any claim whatever lu or to said lands or any part thereof adverse to plaintiff, and for such other ant further relief as muy be equitable and just. . " , y , . . This summons Js srved noon you bv order of the Honorable n. R- MWer County Judge of Lincoln countv, Ore gon, which said order Wfll m carl a mwA entered on the 17th dny of December. 11915, directing; nnlill'rat ' .... aS , UIITJUl once a week for slu consecutive and successive weeks beginning with the ssue of December 17th. 1915. and end- w.,th tthe ,8BUe of January 2Sth. 1916. in the J.nmn fn,.ni. t ' - urnuur, at weekly newspaper u! general clrcu- anon ana printed within Lincoln county, Oregon. Date of 1st publication, December 17th, 1916. date o: last publication. January 28. im ' Hawkins 4 McCli-'key, Attorneys for i-ialntlfT. 0 SUMMONS In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for the county of Lincoln. AUeen McCluakey, Plaintiff, vs. J. II. Kempthorn ans Pearl B. Kemp- w.utuo, uib wire, oyivesier P. Ktrn and Lucinda Kern, his wife, T. S. Everett, R. H. Sparling, Minnie A. Vlckers and J. M. Vlckers, her hus- Hum,! n , ,4 A M 1 1 ! ... ... w"" "iuium o. ijiiiam aaa Ida M. Olllam, his wife, Defendants. To J. H. Kempthcrne and Pearl B Kempthorne, his wife, Sylvester P. Kern and Lucinda Kern, hie wife, T. 8. Everett, R, H. Sparling, Minnie A. Vickers and J. M. Vlckers, her husband, and William 8. Glllam and Ida M. Glllam, his wife, the above named defendants: rn the name of the state of Oregon, You and each of you are hereby re quired to appear and answer a com plaint filed against you in the above entitled suit on or before the expi ration of six weeks from the date of the first publication of this summons, exclusive of the date of said first pub lication and If vou fall and answer for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the above en titled Court for the relief demanded In plaintiff's complaint, to-wlt:. For a decree of this Court fore closing a certain mortgage executed by J. H. Kempthorne and Pearl B. Kempthorne to SylveBter P. Kearn on the 1st day of July, 1912, which said mortgage was thereafter and on or about the 12th day of December, 1911, assigned to the plaintiff herein, on the following described real property sit uated in Lincoln county, Oregon, to wlt: The north half () of the South west quarter (14) or Section twenty two (22) in Township tu (10) south, Range eight (8) west of the Willam ette Meridian, in Lincoln county, Ore gon. and that the above described real property be sold by the Sheriff of Lin coln county, Oregon, as provided by law to satisfy the amount due and owing to the plaintiff on said mort gage and further that each and all ot yon and all persons claiming by, through or under you or either of you may be barred and foreclosed of any estate, right, title, lien, or Interest la or to said mortgaged premises or an part thereof and for such other and further relief as may be equitable and This Summons In snrvorl unrn by publication In Ar.titrAnntm writ!. m order by the Honorable R. R. Miller, County Judge of Lincoln County, Ore awn wmcn saia order Is dated De cember 13th, 1915, and which requires that this summons be publlnhed in the ..n.um v ouniy lcnaor nt least once a week for six consecutive and suc cessive weeks, the ate of the first ,lon ot lnli December 17th, ivlo. . Hawkins a. McCiuakau. Attorney for Plaintiff. ' '0 ' G. L. PERKINS Shoemaker and - . Harness Repairer Water Front . TOLEDO, OREGON 1