Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Lexington wheatfield. (Lexington, Or.) 1905-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 11, 1906)
Weak Lungs Bronchitis For over sixty years doctors have endorsed Ayer's Cherry Pectoral for coughs, colds, weak lungs, bronchitis, con sumption. You can trust a medicine the best doctors ap prove. Then trust this the next time you have a hard cough. " I had an awful cough for over a rear, and nnthluK Minmed to flo ine any K"0('. 1 tried Ayar's Cherry i'eotoi-Hl anil wan norm cured. I recommend It to all my friends whenever they have a coiikIi." MlHH M. MtYKIls, Washington, 1). 0. Mado by J. O. Ayer Co., LowaU, Uui, u luauuiauiiurarB ox I A I 7 SARSAPARILLA. fl O HAIK VIGOR. 1 Ayer's Pills keep the bowels regular. All vegetable and gently laxative. lie Spoiled Ma's Scheme. VV. Caryl lily of Buffalo tire presi dent of tho American Street Hallway Association, was talking at the con vention In Philadelphia . about motor men's and conductors' adventures. "A conductor came to me with a smiling face the other day," he said, "lie wanted to tell me what had hap pened on an Incoming car. It seems that a middle-aged woman and her little son, a lad of 6 or 7 years, got on the car, and as soon as they were seated the woman took a half-dollar out of her pocket and handed It to the youngster to pay the fare with. The boy held the coin In his small, fat hand, and examined It closely and sol emnly, The conductor appeared for the fares, and the youngster gave him the half-dollar with owlish solemnity, The money was pocketed and 40 cents In change was put in the small, ex tended hand. As soon as he got this change the boy laughed, wriggled In Ills seat and shouted gleefully: " 'Oh, ma, he's taken the bad half dollar!'" Ilefereed a Fight. "Pop!" "Yes, my son." "What do you think? Our minister lias been acting as a referee at a fight!" , "Don't talk nonsense, my boy." "I'm not, pop. The fight was la the choir." Make sure a yield of quantity and Quality. When your father planted Ferry's, they were the beat on the market, but they have been Improv ing ever since. We are experts la flower and vegetable seeds'. 1900 fired Annual, beautifully Illus trated, f rue to al 1 applicants. 0. M. FERRY & CO., Detroit, Mich. LiisM Positive, Comparative, Superlative. " I have used one of your Fish Brand Slickers for five years, and now want new one, also one for a friend. I would not be without one for twice the cost. They are just as far ahead of a common coat as a common one is ahead of nothing." (Nuns on application.) , ( HTfinEST AWARD WORLD'S FAIR, 1904. Be sure you don't get one of the com mon klnd-thls la the rfjWEfrf mark of excellence. A. J. TOWER CO.,., 7V TJ BOSTON, U.S.. 'EgA' TOWER CANADIAN do., Limited, TORONTO, CANADA, ' 35' Makers of Wet Weather Clothing & Hats. rfL rtlUlieMlBJ To be Given for Reliable Information We have set aside , ; r . , , $1,00042 to be spent for information and will give five dollars for a Postal Card giving the first reliable news of a chance to leil a horizontal stesm, engine of our styles, within our ranee of sizes. We do not want Inquiries at this time for vertical, traction or gas engines. ATLAS ENGINES AND BOILERS Ballderiof th moit complete Una of engine, and boiten made by any one manufacturing concern in the world Atlas Encine Works Sailing, aeanciai In all cities INDIANAPOLIS Corllis, Tour Vain, Automatic, High-Spaed, Com pound and Throttling Engines. Water Tube, Tu bular and Portable Boilers Atlas Engine In aarrloe 8,000,000 H. P. Atlas Boiler, in aerTice 4,000,000 H. P. CURES WHERE ALL LSC FAILS. I Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Uood. Use In time, eoia or druggists. T.l.lJMII.'ll.TJT-p Flxh Sullld. Take, two eupfuls of cooked fish, half an ounce of home radish and chopped cooked onion, a Quarter of a slice of fresh cucumber, three cooked potatoes cut in sinull pieces. Sprinkle with a few drops of lemon Juice and pour over the following sauce. Serve with lettuce and tomatoes. Put the yolks of two raw, eggs In a basin, pour In the oil very slowly, stirring gently at the same time till It thickens, then add two sultspoonfuls of salt, one spoonful of mixed mustard, a good sprinkling of pepper, a dessertspoonful of vinegar and two tablespoonfuls of thick cream. The Ingredients must be added In the order In which they are written. , I'reaerveil Ulntrer I'o.ldliiir. Beat to a Cream four ounces of but ter and four ounces of sugar, break one egg into It, and throw In two ounces sifted flour, lSeat for five min utes, then break in another egg, and add two more ounces of flour. Beat for a few minutes longer, add two ounces preserved ginger chopped small, and two tablespoonfuls of the syrup. When all Is mixed and the mold well buttered, quickly stir Into the mixture half a teaspoonful of baking powder, pour the battef Into a mold, cover with buttered paper, and steam for one hour and a half. A Good Soap, Slice very flue one good-sized Span ish onion or three ordinary' onions; cover with a pint of cold water; add a teuspoonful of salt and a saltspoon ful of pepper; cover and simmer for twenty minutes. Press through a col ander. Put one quart of milk In a double boiler; rub together two table spoonfuls of butter and two of flour; add to the milk and stir until smooth and creamy. Add tho onion mixture; press through a flue sieve; reheat and serve with croutons an Inch square. RalNln Bread. Into a pint of scalded milk stir a teaspoonful of melted butter and one of salt. When lukewarm add a half yeast cake dissolved in a gill of lukfr warm water and beat in enough flour to make a good batter. Set to rise for eight hours, then beat hard, sjir In a cup of flour, and knead in a half cup of halved and seeded raisins, dredged with flour. Set to rise again until light, then bake. Fig- Jelly. Prepare the figs by stewing. Chop very fine. Have ready half a box of soaked gelatine, put this over the fire In a cup of r boiling water, add the sweetened flg'syriipi stir until the gel atine is thoroughly dissolved, take from the fire, add a wine-glassful of sherry and stir in the' minced figs. Turn Into a mold wet with cold water to form. ; Pickled Cncnmbers. Select cucumbers from two to three inches In length and handle them care fully, so that the little projections on the skin will not be broken off, Pack the cucumbers as closely as possible In quart fruit jars, then fill each jar to overflowing with pure cider vine gar and add a tablespoonful of salt to every Jar. Seal tightly. No cooking or boiling of vinegar is necessary and the pickles are good. . Silver Cake: Cream half a cup of butter with a cup of powdered sugar and beat in the stiffened whites of four eggs and , a gill; of cohl waten. , Add gradually a pint of flour that has been sifted with a heaplng .teaspoonful of baking pow der and "when; Very light stir iu a tea spoonful of rose water. ..Covet, with a white: icing, .flavored with .rose or bitter almond. ' '' : ' ,.- ;Brow reppcrnnt,' I .-ff,;; , Cream' a half-cup of butter, with , a cup of brown sugar, add a. cup' of molasses,' a -half-cup of butterinllkvpr of sour milk, a. teaspoonful of baking sodft.ahd' a small teaspoonful, of cinna mon and ginger mixed.., Stir-in enough flour to make the dough, of the desired consistency; roll out,. cut and bake as you would white peppernuts. ' Velvet Sponge Cake. Beat two eggs very light, whip in a cup of sugar, then a cup of flour, sift ed with a teaspoonful of baking pow der. Lastly, beat In a gill of boiling water and a teaspoonful of vanilla. Bake immediately in a buttered tin in a well-heated oven. The batter is thinner than ordinary cake-batter. Doughnuts. Beat two eggs light with one cupful of sugar, add four tablespoonfuls of melted lard, one cup of sweet milk, a pinch of salt and etiough flour sifted with two teaspoonfuls of baking pow der to make a soft dough. Roll out, cut Into shapes and fry in deep, boil ing fat " TTnenthnalaatlo. "Be studious, my ion," said the ha bitual adviser, "and you may have a tablet In the Hall of Fame." "Yes," answered the cautious youth, "and be pointed out as an example of What ordinary people get In while real genius is excluded." Washington Star.'' 'V'4V .., , TITO Permanently Cured, Nofltsornervousness Jlentorer. Hend for Froe WiS trial bottleand treatise. Ti- li 11 lrn r ... ..... a Li iji.i . . .7 u, aiiu. ubu., vol aii-u ... x uiiaueipnia, few Sisterly ILerret. "That convention of dressmakers de cided that waists must be fmaller this aeason." "I'm so sorry." "For yourself?" "Mercy, no! For Jane Puffelgh and Lucy Waddles." Cleveland Plain Deal en y You Can Oct Allen's Foot-Ease FREE. Write Allen 8. Olmsted, J Roy.N. Y., for a free nam tile of Alien ' Foot-Kane. It cures sweating, hot swollen, aching feet. It makes new or tight shoes easy. A certain cure for corns, lnKrowingnails and bunions. A) drug gists sell it. 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Dead IUtftat. "What did you quit that good Job for?" "The boss called me a fool." "But he dldu't fire you? You quit for that?" "Yes, sir." "Then the boss was right" Cleve land Leader. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward tot any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, ha?e known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transac tions and fl nanclally able to carry out any ob ligations made by their firm. Wbst & Tboai, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0. W albino, K iNNAM & Marvin, Vi holesale Drug gists. Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, act ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Price 75c. per bottle. Bold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Smoked Three Miles of Tobacco. Statisticians have figured out that Daniel Kelleher, of Wilmington, Del., who died at the reputed age of 105 years, smoked 17,883 lineal feet of to bacco In his lifetime. He was an ard ent smoker, consuming three large plugs of the weed of more than ordi nary strength every, week of his life since he was a youth, and it has been figured out that the plugs would ex tend three and one-half miles if placed end to end. . Appropriate. "That organist played the wedding march so fast that the bride and groom In trying to keep slep, almost danced up the aisle." "Well, my dear, a wedding march is something of a two-step; now, isn't it?" Baltimore American. " BLOOD POISONS The black flag is an emblem of horror and dread. When it is hoisted by an army, the order has gone forth that " no quarter " will be given, ev erything must be destroyed. Helpless women and children, as well as oppos ing soldiers, meet the same fate, and a trail of desolation, suffering and, death is left behind. Con.tagious Blood Poison is the black flag of the great army of disease. ,.This vile1 disorder is known as the blackest and most hide ous of all human afflictions, overthrowing its victims and crushing out the i:r- ti i - " . " .j". i n : i i ' . . me. it is no respecter oi persons ; no matter svv.pure ue Diooa may Dq or how innocently the disease is contracted, when this awful virus enters the circulation the hideous, hateful and humiliating symptoms begin to appear, and the sufferer feela that his very presence is polluting and contaminating. Usually the first sign of the disease is a little sore or ulcer, but as the blood becomes more deeply poisoned the severer symptoms are manifested, the mouth and throat ulcerate, the glands in the groins swell, a red rash breaks out on the body, the hair and eyebrows come out, and often the body is cov ered with copper-colored spots, pustular eruptions and sores. In its worst stages the disease affect3 the nerves, attacks the bones and sometimes causes tumors to form on the brain, produc ing-1 put on them would do any go My hair and eyebrows fell out and I ? "a fright." lay mouth was so sor Several years ago I had blood poison and my flesh was in an awful condition. Great sores would break out and noth- rood. was aors T had to live on milk and water. I took Mercury for a long- time and instead o getting better I continued to grow; worse and my arms and hands became solid sores. My legs were drawn so X could not walk and I felt that my time was short here if I did not tret some re lief. I began to use your S. S. S. and it helped me from the start. After taking ing insanity and death. Not only those who contract the poison suffer, but unless the virus is driven from the blood the awful taint is handed down to offspring, and they are it3 innocent victims. Blood Poison is in deed a "black flag." Mercury and Potash, so often used, never can cure the trouble. These minerals merely drive the symptoms away for awhile and shut the diseaseuo in the svstem. ' awhile the sores, all healed, my rheu- i . 1. ... ' matism was cured and to-day 1 am a ana when they are left off it returns strong, well man. it got all the mer worse than before. This treatment nrout of my system and it .cured me ,f i r;i M , . sound and well. ADAM SCHNABEL, not only fails to cure blood poison Evansville, Ind. No. 211 Mary st, but eats out the delicate lming of the stomach and bowels, produces chronic dyspepsia, loosens the teeth and fre quently causes mercurial rheumatism to add to the patient's suffering. S. S. S., the great vegetable medicine, is the conqueror of this vile disease. It goes down to tne very root of the trouble and cures by cleansing the blood of every particle of the poison. S. S. S. does not hide or cover up anything but clears the entire circulation of the virus and puts the system in good healthy condition. It (cures safely as well as certainly, because there is not a particle of mineral in it. We offer a re-, ward of'$i,ooo.oo for proof that S. S. S. is not purely vegetable. When the blood is purified and strengthened with this great remedy the symptoms all pass away and no sign of the disease is ever seen again ; nor is there left the least trace to be handed down to posterity. Special book with instructions for self-treatment and any medical advice de- Bired will be sent without charge to all who write. THE S WIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, CAm 03 OKLOKZSQ PURELY VEGETABLE. A Good Guesser. "I understand there is no eminent humorist in the Hall of fame." "Well, I guess the humorists are not dying to get there." Cleveland Plain Dealer. MotheTBwill find Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup the best remedy to use for their children during the teething period. He Hadn't Improved, Mother Hiram writes from college that the football team will make good. Father Well, mebbe so; but he's been on it for two years now an' I don't see no appreciable improvement in his morals. New Orleans Times-Democrat In a small shop in New York City, managed by a woman, flowers of wonder ful coloring are made from the scales of various fish. For coughs and colds there is no better medicine than Piso's Cure for Consump tion. Price 25 cents. A Way Out. "I cannot accept your affection," she said, "And yet I don't feel I could spurn it." "In that case," he answered, "I'll bs If only you'll kindly return it." Baltimore American. w JSP ilw ' :Jm T-rinsnify,yiiiirrrrsr S5 ;.'iW , yttnt.-rtMsirtias.T.iiiJ -!- ;. .... v' i;:V. -Nv v... i i,, . ., ftt',st;....,.H..j:iiff lift"- r v .V. " (atkis USsjsiaS I,'.' sV f ' m : TheWinningStroke If more than ordinary skill in playing brings the honors of the game to the winning player, so exceptional merit in a remedy ensures the commendation of the well informed, and as a reason able amount of outdoor life and recreation is conducive to the health and strength, so does a perfect laxative tend to one's , improvement in cases of constipation, biliousness, headaches, ' etc. It is all-important, however, in selecting a laxative, to choose one ot known quality and excellence, like the ever pleas ant Syrup of Figs, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., a laxative which sweetens and cleanses the system effect-' . ually, when a laxative is needed, without any unpleasant after . effects, as it acts naturally and gently ori the internal organs,., simply assisting nature when nature needs assistance, without EriDinp;. irritatincr. or rlphilitatincr trip intpmnl . ; as it contains nothing of an objectionable or injurious nature. , no uic pictuis wiiiLii are comDinea wun tne ligs in tne manu- ,, facture of Syrup of Figs are known to physicians to act most beneficially upon the system, the remedy has met with their .... general approval as a family laxative, a fact well worth con sidering in making purchases. . , .."It is because of the fact that SYRUP OF FIGS is a remedy of known quality and excellence, and approved by , physicians that has led to its use by so many millions of well ' informed people, who would not use any remedy of uncertain quality or inferior reputation. Every family should have a bottle of the genuine on hand at all times, to use when, a laxative remedy is required. Please to remember that the genuine svrun or risrs is tor sa e in nnttips of onf kW only, by all reputable druggists and that full name of the company California Fig Syrup Co., Is plainly printed on the front of every package. Regular price, 50c per bottle. ir;' msiiissm 1 1 1 si 1 Brwsaeaajiii , gt'FQRNiAncs Syrup (q? r,.:,.ll.iv:..-Vxft, ...,.vuiA.'.u;i .'v..-Si n SB IS 9. ..'v.'. 1.. : TTew !'-V.'A'?...-f'vyJ PUTNAM FADELESS DYES