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About Lincoln County leader. (Toledo, Lincoln County, Or.) 1893-1987 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 31, 1896)
Paper Leader; :::::: Winter Is coming on and you will want Something To read during the long Winter evenings. You can get any Or Magazine of any note in the United States at reduced rates when clubbed with the W ;V&trv wAm4- ft W W l 4rV IrrK WALL, AINU fcfcti AKUU1 11. mnn Toledo Market Report. E8gs fresh 30c, packed 25c. Butter, ranch, ..I5C t0 25C creamery.., 55 per roll. Potatoes, 4oc to 50c per bu. Cabbage to ic per lb. Flour $4-6o per bbl. Bran- $i percwt. Shorts $1.10 percwt. 0ats ' 45cperhu. WheB $1 per bu. Parsnips , $1 per cwt. Carrots.... $i0 per ton. Hay -$to per ton. Chittem ' 1.50 per cwt. wanted; One hundred bush els of good Potatoes on subscription. "VTill allow the highest market price when delivered at any rail road or river point. OTTO O. KROGSTAD, Reg. Pharmacist. DRUGS, BOOKS Etc. Toledo, - Oregon JJ, A. PARENT, M. D., C. M., Special attention given to Dis eases of Women, and Surgery. Toledo, Oregon Two Good Papers FOR THE Price of One. We have made arrangements by which we can offer THE WORLD FAMOUS I Weekh Detroit Free Press -AND- The Leader ONE YEAR for $2.00. The Weekly Free Press la a Large Twelve Pace Weekly, and baa the Largest Number of Special Contributor! of any Weekly Punished in America Hereafter the writing of "M. Quad," the Fa moui Humorist, will be published Exclusively in the Free Press. It also has a special "Merry Times" Department for the Children, and a Special Woman's Page. SPECIAL CLUBBING OFFER. The Oregon SUteaaaa Till March 1st for Only 8 Cente. Every taxpayer ahould read a Salem paper thli winter. She Oiegon Weekly Statesman la the blggei, brlghtrat, cheapeit and beat paper puqllahed at the capital. The legislature meets In Janhary. Needed laws are to be paased and aO. 8. aenator la to be elected. Everybody will want to read a good paper this winter from the aeatofwarand to all we cheeifully recom mend the Statesman. It Is fearless and free spoken. Itnrgea economy along all lines of state government, and la waging war in tke in terest of the taxpayers. Taxation must be re a.,u k. .hnii.Mn all nseless oommlsslons and correcting abuses. The Statesman is the only reliably republican Aasociatea rna paper i it Min.u of twelve rages weekly Its suqseriptlon price Is 11.50 per yeai , but by a special arrangement wun mo pu.im.uo.. 1 . ts. nr.lv It to our subscribers from this date nntil the adjournment of the legislature-three months good readlng-for oit .. vnrs.rd all subscriptions to the STATESMAN, SALEM, OB. Send in your or- ders light away the sooner you senu, m ., you will get f t o ey. Dudley township in Haskell county,. Kansas, was the torily cycl ing precbejt in.ithR, ynited,nStates that ave a majority jor Palmer and Buckner. The total .vote cast in the,precinet numbered six; of these Palmer and Buckner received thiee, McKjnley.twq and Bryan one. As, a reward for their "patriotism" in returning a, majority for the gold btanaajcd,. democrats Buckner, the vice-presidential candidate on- that tickets sent them $50 in, money, and ten . gallons of best Kentucky Bour bon whiskey. if . 1 t . ScOtt's S on, is made p of the most essential ticxntnJt.that. t to. nouriih the body. . Where the appetite u wuylug or Luir., in creases it, and where digestion is weak, it aids it to perform its function in a more vigorous way. It enriches the blood, $3&c healthy flesh and cures enronic coughs and colds by making it possible for the body to resist disease. Our friends tell s "IT Works Wonders" but we never like to over-state the merits of our remedy even when it has been tested and tried for over twenty-five years. If you will ask for it, we will send you a book telling you more about the subject than we can put in a few words. Go to your druggist for Scott's Emul sion. Two sizes, 50 ds. and $UW. SCOTT A BOWNE, Nw York. Communicated. The correspondent of the Yaquina Post of the 19th inst. from this section, who signs himself "Re former," ought to reform himself before trying to reform others. If he had ever reformed any he must have been bad indeed, to try to get someone the homes of our worthy citizens that have come in here when it was a wilderness and made all these roads and other advanta ges he speaks of, to turn them out of their homes they have worked so hard to make because times are 90 hard they cannot raise the money to file or make final proof. If he bad reformed he would have tried o get the government to give them their homes rather than try to get someone to take them from them. , We will be . glad - to have the vacant land settled up. But we extend our invitation to men not theives. , i; Drift Creek, Dec. 29, 1896. YATES & YATES, LAWYEES, CORVALLIS, OREGON. Aregon Central u & Eastern Eyi YAQUINA BAY ROUTE Connecting at Yaquina Bay with the San Francisco and Yaqnina Bay Steamship Company STEAMSHIP FABA LL ON, Sails from Yaquina every 8 days for San Francisco, Coos Bay, Port Orford, Trinidad and Humboldt bay. Passenger accommodations unsur passed. Shortest route between the Willam ette Valley and California. Fare from Albany or points west to San Francisco: . . Cabin, $6.oa Steerage 4.00 To Coos Bay and Port Orford: Cabin, $6.00 To Humboldt Bay: 4 - Cabin ...... $8.o Round trip good for sixty days Special. River Division.1 Steamers "Albany" and "Win. M. Hoag" newly furnished;, leaves Corvallis daily except Saturdays at 7:00 a. m., arriving in Portland at 4:30 p. m. the same day. Return ing boats leave Portland at p. m. the same as above at 6:00 a. m., arriv ing at Corvallis at 9:00 p. m. Edwiu Stone,' Manager. J. a Mayo, Supt. River Div. Wm. Schmidt, Agt., . ... Occidental hotel, Corvallis tatai teunpie Protsot your Ideaai thw may brtn ja wwlia. Wrtw JOHN WBUOUUIUitM ft OO, fMMl AUor. tin. WMbUctoo. D c, fur th.tr 10 prise ar aaduat at two kaadrea In.eaUoo waste. Wantei-An idea The Election of Judges. Ex-President Harrison writes of "The Judicial Department of the Government' in the January Ladies' Home Journal, and , says , with reference to the general, mode of selecting judges in the majority of states: "There has been much dis cussion as to the proper tenure for the judicial office, and the tendency, as expressed in the later state .con stitutions, has been in favor of limited terms. , The earlier state constitutions gave the appointment of the judges to the governor or the legislature, but along with the de mand for limited terms for the judges came another for their elec tion by the people, and in a majority of the states they are now nominated in the party conventions and elected by popular vote, just as a governor or sheriff is chosen. I do not think that either sf these changes is a reform. , Limited terms, of they are long, may be supported by many considerations; but short terms, combined with popular elections, have not, in my opinion, secured as high a judicial standard as prevailed before. A judge who must go a: short intervals before a political convention for a nomination, and before the people for an election, cannot have the same sense of independence and security that he would have if his term were long or during good behavior. The judicial office should be so organized that men of the best abilities end attain ments would enter it as a career, and give their lives and ambitions wholly to it." Reports of a suspicious disap pearance of a Salmon river settler has reached this place. Some (wo or three weeks ago this settler, whose name we did not learn, started from Charley Reed's place near Devil's lake, with one of Reed's horses to take some goods up to his ranch on the north side of Salmon river, , He was seen to start on his return with the horse by white settlers, and to get as far as Saginaw Bill's, an Indian living on Salmon river. This wa. the last seen of him, but five days after his hoise was found by Saginaw Bill tied to a willow on the bank of Salmon river and standing in water about belly deep. ...AVord was paved around among the set tlers and search was made for him in the river, the supposition being that he had drownded. After a thorough of the river without sue cess, the house of Saginaw Bill was searched, and hidden iu the. bed were some clothes which the miss- i ing man had carried on the trip in bis saddle bags. Some other things were also found that, had t been missed by settlers at various time. There is a strong feeling tbat,,,tbe man has been foully., dealt-, with, and suspicion rests very strongly on the Indian referred to,