-yr- 1 iLJ----' '?'"- injiim!..iMiMij- 'HE owl" aid.; 1. ;i I f he: i eu; toi. I 0" lot, i If::' - u ! ,i St'f lid j wt . if .'S H 1bO0TH'S CASH - Yaquina City, Oregon. i Staple and Fancy Groceries, Hardware, Gcpcls Sold at San Francisco Prices. J. S. BOOTH, IProp., YAQUINA CITY, OREGON. C. B. CROSNO & CO, U h aad Abstracters, HAVE BARGAINS IN Farm Lands, Tide Lands, Coal Lands, Town Property in single Lots or Blocks IMPROVED OR UNIMPROVED. Lbstrct of Title to any property in Lincoln County furnished "Toledo TOO LATE ! It is too late to get an Abstract of Title to a piece of land after you have bought it S judgements and tax liens agaiust it. The proper thing to J do is to have the LINCOLN COUNTY ABSTRACT COMPANY, 'x of Toledo, make you an Abstract of Title before investing !JJ your money. A business man now days never buys real y estate without first obtaining evidence of a good title. jj We warrant our work to be absolutely correct. Address. '5 Crosno & Peairs. PETER TELLEFSON, DEALER IN General :-: Merchandise, Flour and Feed, Staple and Fancy Groceries, !' 1 Pino T? ti KTiq a SOOTS AND SHOES, "CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE. Cigars and Tobacco, Fruits and Confectionery. Yaquina City, Oregon. "Save My Child!" is the cry of many an agonized mntrier fer4P- whose (- little one S writhes in croup or whoop ing cough. In such cases, ur. Acicers .cngiisn rem edy proves a blessing and a godsend. Mrs. M. A. Burke, of 309 E. 105th St., New York, writes : " Dr. Acker's English Remedy cured my baby of bronchi tis, and also gave instant relief in a severe case of croup." 3 sizea. JSC.) SOe.i . AU BmrrUtt. AcKtx Jl nulcms Co., -U Cliaiubcrl St., NT STORE Tinware, Etc. on demand. Oregon TOO LATE ! ! and touwl out that there are ! - rtA ftil C.t rlvtr Great Toledo Blade Offer. We have made ariangements with the Toledo Blade to furnish that paper and the Lincoln County Leader for the remark ably low rate of $1.60 per year, payable strictly in advance. The Blade is one of the leading family papers of the United States. The coming campaign will make it particularly interesting to a great many of our readers. This low club rate is only for a limited time and is liable to be withdrawn at any time. If you want the Toledo Blade and the Lincoln County Leader for $1.60 per year sub scribe at once White Leghorn Eggs! I have pure blood White Leg horn eggs for sale for $1.00 for setting of fifteen eggs, delivered at nearest express office. These eggs are from pure blood chickens im ported from the east. Address, T. A Miller, Chitwood, Or. 5 Sores In combination, proportion nnd process Hood's Sarsapurilla is peculiar to itself, and unequalled in true merit. No other medicine ever possessed so much curative power, or readied such enormous sales, or made such won derful cures, as Hood's Sarsaparilla. It is undoubtedly the best medicine ever made to purify, vitalize and en rich the blood. That is the secret of its succefcs. Read this statement: " When my son was 7 years of age, be bad rheumatic fever and acute rheuma tism, which settled in his left hip. He was so sick that no one thought there was any help for him. Five sores broke out on bis thigh, which the doctor said were Scrofula ores. We had three different doctors. Pieces of bone came out of the sores. The last doctor said the leg would have to be eut open and the bone scraped, before he could get well. Howard became so low that he would eat nothing, and one doc tor said there was no chance for him. " Cun uy, a lifewapipor rccommocJIn; Hood's Barsaparilla was left at our door. We decided to try this medicine. Howard commenced taking it the last of February, after having been sick tor a year and a Cured half. He hadn't taken it a week before I saw that his appetite began to improve, and then he gained rapidly. I gave him five bottles, when the sores were all healed and they never broke out again. The crutches he had need for four years were laid aside, as he had no further use for them. I give all the credit to Hood's Bar Baparllla," Mrs. Ada L. Moody, Fay Street, Lynn, Mass. This nnd many similar cures prove that Hoods Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. AUdrugglsts. tt Prepared only by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. wj ntti cure Mver Ills; easy to 1.00(4 S PHIS tjk.nsy to operate. 25c 0 regon Central & Eastern Ry. YAQUINA BAT ROUTE Connecting at Yaquina Bay with the San Francisco and Yaqnina Bay Steamship Company STEAMSHIP FARALLON, A I and first-class in every respect. Sails from Yaquina for San Fran cisco about every 8 days. Pas senger accommodations unsur passed. Shortest route between the Willamette Valley and Cali fornia. Fare from Albany or points west to San Francisco: Cabin, $12.00 Steerage 8.00 Cabin round trip, good 6odys. 18.00 For Sailing days apply to H. L. WALDEN, Agent, Albany, Or. EDWIN STONE, Manager, Corvallls, Or. Notice for Publication. Land Office at Oregon Citv, Oregon, February -20, Img. Notice 1 hereby given that the following-nam-ed settler has filed hi Intention of making fin al proof In support of his claim, and that said Eioof will be made before the County Clerk of incoln County ,at Toledo.Oregon, on May 2nd, 1896, vis: P. N. LATHROP. n. E. No. 9,42fi, for the southeast 'i of the northeast yt, east U of southeast of section 6, and southwest V. of southwest i of section 6, town 12 south, range 9 west. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation of said land, vis: J. E. Dixon, W. H. IJanlels and Harvey Parks, of Elk City, Oregon, and Jesse Craft, of Halado, Oregon. ROll EUT A. MILLER, Register. Teachers' Examination. Notice is hereby given that for the purpose of making an examina tion of all persons who may offer themselves as candidates for teach ers of the schools of Lincoln coun ty, the County School Superinten dent thereof, will hold a public ex amination at the county court house in Toledo, Oregon, beginning at one o'clock Wednesday, May 13, 1896. Teachers eligible to state certificates, state diplomas, or state life diplomas, must present recom mendations and make application at the same time. An applicant who is a stranger to the county sup erintendent must present satisfac tory written testimony of good mor al character from two or more per sonsons of respectable standing. Applicants not present at the open ing will not be permitted to take the examination. Dated at Toledo, Oregon, this 29, day of April, 1896. Geo. Bethers, County School Superintendent. For Silver or Gold What Tom Tongue Thought of Free Silver in 1894. NOW IT'S "GOLD STANDARD." Two years ago Tom Tongue did not have the nomination of any par ty for congress so he had an opin ion of his own on the money ques tion. It was a good one. Here it is: ' Hillsboro, Or., Nov. 3, 1894. To the Editor: I have read with some care your editorials in today's Oregonian, as well as the one of a few days ago, in which you depict the terrible consequences of either the free coinage of silver, orcoiuage of the product of our own mines. It is to be inferred from these articles that the Oregonian favors the present coinage law of the United States, and is ready to wield its powerful influence in favor of their continuance. L,et us look at those laws squarely and see what they are and where they are leading us. Heretofore our silver mines have been a vast source of wealth; they have furnished em ployment to thousands of men, who became consumers of the products of the labor of others, and have furnished a good share of the in creased circulation needed by a constantly expanding population do its increasing business. Nearly all of this has been overthrown by legislation in the last year. We have reached a condition unknown to our previous history. Our silver mines are absolutely worthless to us as producers of money metal. If run to their full capacity, not one ounce of their products could pass through the mints of the United States, or get into circulation among our citizens as money. Not a dol lar of additional silver can get into circulation as money, except by redeeming a treasury note. When the silver is got out the treasury note is redeemed and destroyed, and the circulation remains the same. A vast amount of silver money is lost and destroyed every year by abrasion and by accident, and there is no way to supply the loss. Constantly increasing popu lation demands increased silver circulation and the demand is ignored. On the contrary, as the population increases, the silver coin, by abrasion and destruction, con stantly decreases. This will lead inevitably, if long continued, to gold monometalisni. With tariff laws designed to increase our im ports, while exportsare diminishing enormously in value, the products of our gold mines, inadequate even to pay the interest on our public, private and corporate indebtedness to Europe, what will be the end? And where will the supply of money be obtained? A continuance of this legislation means constant contraction. Scarce money means dear money, with in creased purchasing power; it means a decrease in the price of every other species of property, real and personal, in the country, and in the city; it means decrease in the wages of all classes of labor, skilled and unskilled, manual and profes sional. But worst of all it means an enormous increase in indebted ness of every class, puolic and private, with diminished power to pay. It means confiscation of the property of the debtor, for the bene fit of the creditor. It will make the United States a paradise to the class of people who are exclusive creditor, but it will make it a hell for everybody else. Even the most generous and less exacting creditors will suffer with the rest. Having loaned his money on prop erty with only a fair margin at old time values, when the power of the debtor to pay is taken away, he finds himself compelled to take property robbed of its value. That it would be downright dishonesty to legislate to enable the debtor to re-, pubiatejust financial obligations, is not disputed, but it is equally dishonest, and productive of much more hardship, to increase by legis lation the obligations and burdens of the debtor for the benefit of the creditor. It is easy of comprehension why England the creditor nation of the world, should favor contraction of the world's money and a limitation of money metal. Having no silver mines of her own, and being a pur chaser of both silver and food pro ducts, it is equally easy of compre hension why she should use every effort of diplomacy and legislation to diminish the value of both, but why the United States, a debtor nation, with extensive !ver md vast stores of food products to sell, should voluntarily assist in car rying out the same policy, and diminish the value of her own resources, "passeth understand ing." Unfortunately for the wel fare of the country it contains too many people who, surrounded by huge blocks of well secured, inter-,: est bearing obligations, are intes-" ested in legislation that makes money dear, and everything else cheap; who, not engaged in pro ductive industries themselves, are anxious to secure the product of the toil of others at the least pos sible outlay. Unfortunately, also in these "evil days" that have befallen us, these men are power ful in taking lessous of a hard schoolmaster and are acquiring some valuable experience. This is about the only valuable thing we are acquiring. When the change comes, and when the American producers supplying the American markets when we cease to buy of Europe what we can buy of our selves, the same beneficial legisla-1 tion that brings about this result applied to our silver mines, will make of them hives of industry, fill them with an army of men who will purchase supplies at fair prices, from men who are now standing idle, while their families are hun gry. As business and population expand, our monetary needs will be constantly supplied from silver mines on American soil, owned by American citizens, worked by American miners, who in turn supply their needs from the pro duction of other American work men. How this result, if accom plished, placing in circulation the entire product of our silver mines, not needed for other uses, and will not exceed probably 50 cents per capita, will disturb business or com merce or prove detrimental to our financial system, I am at loss to see. In this contest it is greatly to be regretted that the Oregonian, right upon so many questions, should, in the opinion ofmanyofitsstaunchest friends, be wrong upon this, should throw the vast weight of its vast influence upon the hand that, while oppressing other people, bears with equal hardship upon the proprietors of the Oregonian. The heart of the editor is generally in the right place and sympathizesJwith those who are wronged and 'oppressed, and it ought to be so in this matter. With the Oregonian on the right side of this question, this entire west would present a solid front against those who are doing us financial wrong and laying weary burdens upon those least able to bear them. Thomas H. Tongue. The McKinley club of Newport had a red-hot debate at its last meeting as to the advisability 01 putting Binger Hermann's name on their tickets next June, whether or no. We understand that the club finally adjourned without decisive action in the matter. 1 " ' n :, .