Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Lexington wheatfield. (Lexington, Or.) 1905-19?? | View Entire Issue (Aug. 23, 1906)
V it I t, MISS LEOPOLD, SECRETARY LtEDERKRANZ fc, Writes: "Three Years Ago My System Was In a Run-Down Condition. I Owe to Pe-ru-tfa-My ;IteWtation to 3 Health and Strength V : ; 1 all jVlISS flCKA LEOP Miss Ricka Leopold, 173 Main street Menaaha, Wis., Scc'y Liedeikranz, writee: "Three y-arn ago my syetem was in a terrible run-down condition and I was broken out all over my body. I began to be worried about my condition and I was glad to try anything wkicE would relieve me. ''Pcruno was recommended to me as a fine blood remedy and tonic, and I soon found that it was worthy of prnice. "A few bottles changed my condition materially and in a short time I was all over my trouble. "I owe to Pcruua my restoration to health and strength. I am glad to en dorse it." Pe-ru-na Restores Strength. Mrs. Ilettie Green, K. K. fi, Iuka, 111., writes: "I had catarrh and felt miserable. 1 began tho UBe of Teruna and began to improve in every way. My head does not hurt me so much, my appetite is good and I am gaining in flesh and strength." A Lnsnry. Two gentlemen dining In a New York restaurant were surprised to find on the bill of fare, the item, "green blui- fish " '"Walter," one asked, "what sort of blueflsh are green blueflsh?" "Fresh right from the water," said the waiter, offhand. "Nonsense!" said the ninn. "You know well enough they do not take blueflsh at this seaon." The waiter came up and looked at the disputed Item. "Oh, that, sir!" he said, with an air of enlightenment. "That's hothouse blueflsh. slr Why It Didn't Show. "Has that new friend of yours any business ability?" "Oh, yes." "Well, It doesn't show on the sur face." "No, he's an official of the under ground railway." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Won of the Home Hunter. "Mrs. Newcome, have you shot the chutes since you came to town?" "Not yet. I've put In all lny time flat ting the flats." Chicago Tribune. A Danish -colony of 500 families is seeking a location In Mexico. If the col ony prospers, it will receive large acces sions later. COULD NOT KEEP UP. Broken Down, Like Many Another Woman, With Exhausting Kidney Troubles. Mrs. A. Taylor, of Wharton, N. J.. ays: "I. had kidney trouble in -its most painful and severe form, , and the torture I went through now seems to have been almost unbeara ble. I had backache, pains in the side and loins, dizzy spells and hot, feverish head aches. There were bearing .down pains, and the kidney secre tions passed too fre quently, and with a burning sensation. They showed sediment.. J became dis couraged,: weak, lanquid and depressed, o sick and weak that I could'not keep up. As doctors did not cure me I de cided to try Doan'S Kidney Pills, arid with such success that my troubles were all gone after using eight boxes, and my strength, ambition and general health is fine." Sold by all dealers. . 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. TV. ' Ithubarb Cream I'le. Chop enough rhubarb fine to make t cup. Add 1 cup of sugar, a pinch of suit and a grating or two of yellow lemon pnl. Dissolve 1 rounding table unoon of coniKtiirch In 2 tablespoons of cold water In a cup; fill the cup with tolling water and stir well. Heat the yolks of 8 eggs light; add to the rhu barb, then the cornstarch and water. Line a plate with good paste, jKnir In the filling and hake In a moderate oven. Cool and cover with a meringue made with the stiffly beaten whites of 8 eggs and one-half cup of powdered sugar. Set in the oven to color lightly. Tripe With Cream Saai-e. . Cut cooked tripe Into pieces about an lrwrh wjuure, and dry them on a nap kin. Melt a tablospooiiful of butter in a saucepan, and put It In one and a half pints of cut tripe,; stir gently, and fry for five minutes, then cover it nnd set It on the side of the range to keep warm. Melt, In another saucepan, one tablespoonful of butter, adding a heaped tn'olespoonful of flour, stir and cook for two minutes, add one pint of milk, half a teuspooiiful of salt, then stir, and cook it to a smoofh sauce. Drain the tripe, add It and serve. The Secret of lloilinir Water. To boll anything well It Is not nec essary to boil it hard. The average kitchen servant thinks that the more commotion In the water the hotter it In, and In order to produce this she burns a grout deal of fuel und ruins the stove by keeping it red hot. Water plured in a stewpim directly over a red hot lid will, of course, boll more ve hemently, yet it will not cook meat or potatoes any quicker, and not so well as water that just keeps at the boil ing point and quietly simmers. ( heeHe Cutlet. Put two tahlespoonfuls of butter In a saucepan, and, while melting, add four level tahlespoonfuls of cornstarch, a saltspoonful of salt and a dash of white pepper or paprika. When blend ed add one cup of rich milk; stir until smooth, then add one cup mild Ameri can cheese, cut Into small pieces, and a nan cup grated Parmesan. Mix thor oughly, spread in buttered cutlet molds or pat Into shape with the hands, and, wnou stm, egg, crumb and fry in deep 1U. Smothered Potatoes. Pare the potatoes and cut Into small cubes. Put them into cold water for n few minutes, then into boiling water anu jet tneni Iwil about ten minutes Then drain off all the water and put the potatoes Into a double boiler, ureuge tliem with a tablespoonful of flour, add about the same amount- i,t butter and two cupfuls of milk. Cover them, and cook gently for twenty ml.i utes. Season with salt, pepper and ceiery salt, serve in a hot dish. ' Plain Cake. Cream one-half cuDful butter! arid t It one cupful sugar and beat well, then tne yolks of two eggs, with one tea- spoonrui any flavor. Add one-haif m,n ful milk alternately with two cupsful uour m wnicn nns been mixed one tea- spoonnu uukliig powder, and Insf- nf m add the whites of the eggs beaten to a sua irotn. ualie one hour. Marnh Mallow Cake. A most delicious cake is n m finch mallow cake, and it is as tempting to the sight as It is to tho tflsto Tut, cupfuls of sugar, one eunfnl nf hntt. one cupful of milk, yolks of four eggs' mm wmtes or three, four cupfuls of flour, two large teasnoonfnls nf Hal? In T., . " iuHuer. unite in four long layers. Oatmeal Roll. To a vegetable dish of eoM nnfmi left from breakfast, add one tnhio. spoonful of melted butter, one egg, one pint of hot milk, two tea- spoonruls of baking powder. nn,i flm, to nutue a stiff batter. Bake In gem Irons or muflln rings In a brisk oven. Catniip Withont Se.i. Boil half an hour brlsklv wprasea irom rive pounds of un-stemmed-currants, . three nnnniia nt brown sugar, a pint of vinegar, a table- BiMjonrui eacn or allspice, cloves, pepper, and a half of cinnamon, a tnhiwnnnfi of salt,' with one nutmeg grated. -' r Spice, Cake. .,. Two CUpfllls of brown suenr. nrm-riMf cupful of butter, two and one-half cup- IUI8 Of: flour, One CUDful of anvtr'rnlllr one teaspoonful of soda, one teaspoonful or grouna cioves, one-ha f teasnoonful each of ground allspice and mustard, two teaspoonfuls of cinnamon. , 1 . Sauce Tartare for- Fish.'.: Make a cup of mayonnaise dressing and beat gradually into it a, teaspoon ful each of French mustard, chopped pickles and minced capers, a 'dozen ds.ops cf oolopuice and a tablejpoon ful of minced parsley. Beat hard and rrW9,. . "';! jmi i ,'. ' , ThC Poltl'-Horman. ' ' 1 In the dtles of .Burma, where the na tives have been long In contact with Kuropcans, says the author of "Burma. Paiuted und Described," they have lost ,spme of their traditional politeness; hill in the country districts old-school cour tesy Is still the custom. An Kngllsh gentleman who had bought a new pony was trying him out on a Iturinan road, when the animal bolted, and ran at top speed down a narrow road. In the way ahead was a native cart, In which was a family party out holiday-making. The pony dashed Into the back of the cart, threw his rider Into the midst of the merrymakers, and severely injured the Biirman who was driving. Before the Englishman bad sn oppor tunity to explain his unexpected on slaught the Burman picked himself up and bowed low. "My lord, my lord," he said, apolo getically, 'the cart should not have been there." Found lie Wn a Cannibal. A new arrival In the town entered a restaurant and ordered his dinner. He had just been served when a large, ro tund person entered and seated himself at the same tuble, and finully reached over and helped himself to his neigh bor's bread ; seeing that the other man's boiled potato had not been touched ho took that and ate It without removing the skin. A piece of chicken followed. By this time the waiter reappeared and handed the bill of fare to the newcomer. "Roast beef; roast pork. Which shall I take?" said he. "Well, I guess you can bring me roast beef, a double or der." "Thank heaven," said the man oppo site. "Eh? What did you say, sir?" "I said 'Thank Heaven" I was afraid you were a cannibal." Pittsburg Press. riVQ H. V tns IHin-e una ail Nervous filarawi 1.1 1 0 P'Tmiiuently curort by Dr. Kline's Cri-al NervH KcK.oror. Hond fur FKF.E ?2trlat hnttl'! and treatise, lit. it. lLlilln , lA.Mil Arch Ht.,Pulla.,l'. Met OTien. "Why are you bowing to that man? Do you know him?" asked Madge, in surprise. "Yes," said her chum. 'He walked over me so many times getting out be tween acts at the theater last night that we got real well acquainted." Detroit Free Press. Reciprocity. "I declare," complained Mrs. Duzzlt, "I shall certainly have to punish the children !" says a writer in Life. "What have they been up to now?" inquired her husband. "They have simply upset my sewing room. Nothing is where It should be. Needles, spools of thread, scissors, darn ing balls, everything I have has been poked away Into the most unexpected corners. It is perfectly exasperating." Mr. Duzzlt surveyed his wife with a benignant air. "That wasn't the children, dear," he said. "I did that" "What possessed you?" "It was kindness of heart. After you straightened up the papers and books on my desk so beautifully, I thought It was no more than right that I should return the compliment by putting your sewing room In order. So I did." AVegctoble Prcparatiotifor As similating ihcFoodandRcgula ting (he Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes DigestioaCheerful ness and Rcst.Con tains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. Not Nahcotic. fiKyxofOldDrSWUEUmmn n i r. r ' JTmpkui tita jilx.vaina JinlolU Salts' stniit JM Jitfiaminl -BiCailioitaltSida iSied- AperTect Remedy forConstipa llort, Sour Slomach.Dlarrhoea Worms ,Convulsions,Feverish ness and Loss of Sleep. Fac Simile Signature of ' ,, NEW YORK. ffilflflffiTiMMNHiiM uijini it irirlijiiiiiin'iiii'"i nliiMMTrTTf'hT mv Q, EXACT COP OF WRAPPER, i f j SIhik Not All American. ' " Is "fired out" an Americanism? This question Is put by a London paper In discussing the use of the expression by the Vienna correspondent of the Times in connection with the dismissal of the American embassador to Austria-Hungary. Anything that seems slangy Is generally stamped as an Americanism, but in this case, as in so many others of a similar nature, it is shown that the phrase can be found Imbedded in the classics of the English language. "Fired out" an Americanism? Well, in one of Hhakspeare's sonnets, as one of the London papers says, you may read : Vet this shall I ne'er know, but live in doubt, Till my bad angel fire my good one out. An American school teacher and this Is another illustration that comes to mind decided that his pupils should drop the word "say" because it was in elegant. The tendency to begin a re mark or a question with "say" may cer tainly be overdone, but, as a bright pupil pointed out, if "say" is vulgar, how should we regard the use of it in the first line of "The Star-Spangled Banner" "Oh, say, can you see?" To Break in New Shoes. Always shake in Allcn'e Foot-Eare, a powder. It cures hot, sweating, arhing. swollen leet. Cures corns, ingrowing nails and bunions. At all druggists and shoe stores, iV-. Don't accept any substitute. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Dlsconraa-ed. Shcrloe.'t Holmes had announced his in tention of abandoning detPctivc work. "My dear Holmes," said Dr. Watson, "you don't mean it '" "Quite so, my dear doctor," he said. "Those Philadelphia detectives have made me lonk like a bungling amateur." Shooting another charge of dope into his arm, he asHumed a William Gillette pose and slared moodily into the fire. Mothers will find' Mr-, Vt'inilow's Soothing Syrup the best remedy touse for their children during the teething period. In Confidence. "I knew," he declared, "that we were meant for each other from the very mo ment I first saw you." "I knew it," she replied, "long before that." . "Yon did?" "Yes. I may tell you now in confi dence, since we're engaged and it's all settled, that mamma had been mapping out our accidental meeting for three months." Judge. Catarrh Cannot be Cured with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years, and is a regular pre scription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood puri fiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces The perfect comblna'lon of the two Ingredients is won prouuees sucn woncieriui results in curing Catarrh. Bend for testimonials free. F. J CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. Sold by druggiBts, price 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. Able to Retaliate. Byron was writing his "English Bards and Scotch Reviewers." "They'll find I'm no Keats!" he ex claimed. "I'm a ba-ad man from the headwaters of Bitter creek, and I can hit back darn 'em !" Regretting that his lame foot was not a real club, so he could use it on them, he dipped his pen in the vitriol again and confided some more of his burning thoughts to the sheet of paper before him. The Kind You Have Always In use for over SO years, All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment, What is CASTORIA Castbria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium. Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Fevcrishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALYAYS Sears the The Kind You : Hate Always Bought lVtUsQlror Over 30 Years v ' .' Ta emtio otansr, tt Murray sTatrr. new voaa erTY. .V-. j UK I Dressing Nearly every one likes a fine hair dressing. Something to make the hair more manage able; to keep it from being too rough, or from splitting at the ends. Something, too, that will feed the hair at the same time, a regular hair-food. Well-fedhairwillbestrong,and will remain where it belongs on the head, not on the comb! The best kind oi a testimonial "Sold lor over sixty yeora." aarmi'iwiuwwi ii . mn .mmmmmmmmmmm JUdc by J. O. Ayor Co., Lowell, Utw aio maDuiaciurers ox SARSAPARILLA. PILLS. CKERBY PECTORAL. Egan Dramatic and Operatic School Season 1906 and 1907 Opens Sept. 15 Prepares for Dramatic and Operatic Stage and places Graduates. Recog nized by leading thea-rical managers. Send for Catalogue and list of gradu ates and their success. Egan Dramatic and Operatic School Egan Hall Arcade Bu: -"!n?, Seattle. FRANK C. EGAN, Principal. "20-MULE TEAM" Saves Its Cost in Time Labor and Starch, . , Ii Absolutely Uninjurious to the finest fabrics, never causes discoloration, make the clothes snowy white, and hy gienicaliy clean, unlike ordinary laundry soaps, keeps the hands soft and white. Free Samo'e for top from round CHrtonn 20-Mnle-Team Borax and dPH.er'n name, your name and ad dress and 5f. In stampH including Free a riouvpnir Picture 7x14 inches in 10 colors. Address PACIFIC COAST BOKAX CO., Oakland, Cal. CLASSIF1EDADVERT1S1NG Portland Trade Directory Name and Addresses In Portland of Repre sentative Business firm. CKKAM BKl'AHATUKS-Wn guarantee ths U.S. Separator to be the best. Write lor free catalog, linzelwood Co.. Finb aud Oak. MEN'S CLOTHING KnlTum A Pendleton, sola agents Alfred Benjamin & Co.'s correct clothes. Kverythfng in men's furnishings. &lorrlsoa and Sixth streets. Opposite unstoOice. PIANOS A ORGANS Many fine Instruments re vert to us account s'cknens or removal of buyer Write for description of p anos now on hand: terms, etc Write today. Ullbert Co., Portland' P. N. U. No. 34 -06 w HEN writing to advertisers please mention mis paper. Bought, and which has been has borne the signatnre of 9 A iMjers and has been made under his per Sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Signature of . ' '' ' i& fir? ttt f , V'v .'.It ''''MK''i .