Toledo Hon. k e- has 1.4 ' aPplicm, We hasit 'guarani,. atch." f arrival Co J.... L. Volume V. DIRECTORY. LIMOLN COUNTY. int Senator J,it Representative, mntj Judge lerlt eeritT isuoitT iool Superintendent trrevor kroner Tol. Carter E. R. Lake J. O. StearnB B. F. Jones George LandiB J. h. Hyde 8. O. Irvin Z. M. Derrick Hurley Lutz T. M. Coombs ChH8. WtlllaniB F. A. Godwin jmmlfflloners J lonny Commissioners Court meets on Wed JVdsy after the first Monday In February, yrll June, August, October and December. CIRCUIT COUKT. n. J. I i. C. Fullerton, Judge i ,e. Yates "os: Attorney mnnmi on 4th Monday In July and lJurtli .Monday In January of each year. CITY OF TOL,ttiy. F.Jone ...Mayor V. Stewart Recorder , A. Arnold Marshal B. Crosno 1 L.Gowell ) LTjlloUon I Aldermen M. 8urr I Mer Waiigh I. reterson j 'ouncil meets on the first Monday evening in ttcb month. TOLEDO PRECINCT. utlM of the Peace J. A. Hall suitable C.Altree NEWPORT, ntlce of the Peace Geo. F. Sylvester unstable W. II. Crutchneld YAQU1NA. tire of the Peace, J. 8. Booth unstable W. L. Watkins ELK CITY. lotttoe of the Peace A. B. Clark olliwuie, LITTLE ELK. mil of the Peace Chas. Henderson oottable Z. 8. Derrick NASHVILLE. uitlce of the Peace I. 8. Huntington onsttMe . . tawaras ! IIKAVER CREEK. liMlieeof the Peace Ram'l Hill i onitabte Joseph Gourley TIDEWATER. ijstlreof the Peace N. J. Goodman ' mutable W. a. Vldito LOBSTER. iiirticeof the Peace L. A. Feek i jktalile W. PTaylor LOWER AI.SEA and YACHAT8. instlce of the Peace Win. Wakefield 1'iinstKble.. John Early SALMON RIVER. 'iitlceof the Peace Chas. Read ('onMable , ....M. llerton ROS8. Jmtlwof thePcnoe W. H. Cook i'oii table Geo. E. Croxford CHURCHES AND SOCIETIES. ..TIIoniST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Services -'I at Toledo on the first and second Sabbath if each month, morning and evening; services t Slietzon third and fourth Kabbath of each month. Kev. W. II. MYERS, Pastor. V". JOHN'S CHURCH JProtestant Episcopal.) O Invine service the third Sunday of every wnth, at 11 a. m. All are invited to attend, rfev. chas. Booth, Missionary. Residence, Rectory," Newport, Or. I 0. 0. F.-Tnledo Lodge, No. 108, Meet "even tiaturdav eva'iliiir At their hall tn this "nil. J.T.EWING,Seo'v. J. R.TURNIDGE.N.G. 1 0. 0. F.-rtny Lodge No. Iin, of Yaqntna Cltv, a meets flVArvVDf1,aUf1nv ariml,, ViulHnir brothers are always welcome. . . s. A. i ncu r, ft. u. R. J. BCRHOW8, Secretary. I1?' ' Newport Lodge No. 8it, meets everv SatnrdlVAvanlntp uloitf,... Kn,1.i. aeon..,.. 1lllllv illVltftfl t.t attanri I l Ol V ' tl J. W.OI.IVKII, Secretary. ' ' I i'1.0, ?--Klk Lodge No. 1.14, meets every vi '""'"y evening in Its hall at Elk City. ilMttllff brilthnra nlit'ut.a n.Wm. M. Mays, Secy. A Ti' M NcwPort 1-odgo No. 85, regular Inii ' mi utty uii or ueitire encu mli. i1, Vi"ltln? brothers are cordially J0HN BUCKLEY, Sey HAMPTON, M. W. ,lllnttBy Council No. 74.1 National Union. th.S .on '" ad fourth Friday nlghtsof '7, 5;, Traveling friends are welcome. "Hi . See. N. SNOW, 1'res. I)01??1DJ'unoE No- - Keliekah Degree, thi. Mi.. i' ' me una renews nail in city on Tuesday evening of each week. HLUF. STEWART. SK,XlN-- "0. A.''V.AJ,'e Lincoln Post No. fi8, meets in tneGood Temnlara on lha ,.t H Saturdays of each month. T p t0.,,VjJ-8TlRUEVAN"i Post Com. Jlp- , Adjutant. A. ,w rWe",orn 8t' I-odge No. 73, meet. In thA tA I?-,, , l 1 . , 1 iuHr ,.n" Jhlrd Saturdh. evening In each . x.uw rK IMW. Ultll. IHUU1I1H. 1 umng hrothen are always welcome. 1 H. I.. Tn a via .. H. K.LLtiotR.M.W. tyOODMENOF THE WORLD.-Pocahontu. '.h., .pJLM?' Toledo, Oregon, meets on MwikM V v, nlra 1 nurBdayn in each month in "Ci'tt1"11' V"'tlng ne'0"'1- . AK.NOLO, Consul GEO. BETHERS. Clerk. firrlnff. Rrn... W . 13 n .' " wumeu circle, meets on me fco'elJck K ay' ' each mumh at Mr. ititw.. . Mra.jKKNig Arnold, W. G. ""Eosici Auk, clerk. -Jy, 5 CABK LINCOLN WOMAN'S RELIEF Si !'!?' No- 9- "miliary to the O. A. R. month E,'.h.e2.na nd tn Thursdays In each month In the I. o. O. F. hall, at i o'clock p. m. Mn r... M- Ewma, President. U M iP ARTIBAN8 RIVER DELL A8SEM indi u? JW'U.nlte1 Artisans, meets on 2nd 0.0.DALABA.8ecreuryJ:CDIXO,i'MA- inaependentin Tnlorls I , u.m Why wear wool ? To keep out cold? No. To kep in heat. If the body Is supplied with plenty of fresh air oxygen and proper food, it will gener ate sufficient warmth to pro tect you on the coldest day Scott's Emulsion of Cod liver Oil, with Hypophosphites, is the best warmth-food. Thin people, people with poor blood who are easily shaken by a cold wind take Scott's Emul sion and it makes good blood, improves the appetite, in creases flesh, furnishes bodily warmth, and prevents the ill results from colds, coughs, and exposures. SCOTT'S EMULSION bat been-mioruj by Ibi mediealproftuionforiwtntyytarl. (Aik your doi lor.) This it bttauie it it tlwayi palatable alwayt uniform alwayi contains tnepuritt Noruxfian Cod liver Oil and Hypophoipbitet. Put up in to cent and fit .00 lirtj. Tbe small tire mtay be enough to cure your cougb or btlp your baby. D. J. CH1TWOOD, Painter and Paperhanger, TOLEDO, OREGON, Will do your work at bard time prices, money Give us a call and save Satisfaction guaranteed. I 1 I OTTO O. KROGSTAO, Reg. Pharmacist. DRUGS. BOOKS Etc. Toledo, Oregon. No Air, No Life. Pneumonia suffocates, because the swo lien tubes get solid, and keep air from the lunes. Dr. Acker's English Remedy reduces the inflammation, so the patient breathes freely, and is soon well. MissR.Ray,354W.22dSt.,N.Y., says : " When threatened, with pneumonia, I took one bottle of Dr. Acker's English Remedy, and the pain and cough disappeared." 3 sizes, 25c.; 50c. !$ I. All Dmgfflsts. Ackib M idicihi Co., 16-U Chambers 81, K. T. itmif WWWWWWWWWWW!ad heir frie,lds had sathered and jobprintinoi they began to shout, "hang him," .M ........ . . . r. .. JS Of all kinds neatly and promptly m executed. Prices reasonable and all St: work satisfactory. We make a specialty ol .printing ea PnmnhletR. Catalogues. g Letter Heads, Bill Heads, Statements, s, statements, I at Envelopes, Etc., Etc. Etc., Etc. v prlres and Estimates furnished on all kinds of printing. zz 3 St THE LEADER JOB DEPARTMENT. m Toledo, Oregon. Z. M. DERRICK, County Surveyor. Solicits all work in his line. Cor rect work and reasonable prices. P. O Address, Eddyvije, Oregon. all things, IsTeutretl m 1 . uounty, uregon, Thursday, September 23, 1897. THE HOP YARD ROW. Further Particulars ol the Killing of Enoch Sylvester Near Inde pendence. The further particulars of the fatal row at Hedges' hop yard near Independence, in which Enoch Sylvester was killed, have come to hand and it makes it appear much more favorable to the young de fendant, Allen Logan, than the first reports were. The particulars of the case, as we have been able to learn them, are as follows: The feeling had first started over an old horse, owned by one of ,the crowd of pickers from Lebanon. Both crowds, the Lebanon crowd and the Toledo crowd had been guying each other, and the horse had been the principal topic, and the Lebanon crowd had sent word that they were coming over to clear the Toledo crowd out. That night it had been agreed by some of the Toledo boys to go to a dance at a neighboring hop yard, and one of the pickers in the yard was to furnish the horse and take Allen Logan's buggy and they would go to the dance! The young fellow had gone after his horse, and some of the Toledo boys looking up the road saw him return ing without it, and he remarked to one of the boys in the camp that "there comes the man, but where is the horse." The camp of the one of the Lebanon parties was only a short distance away, and one of the Lebanon men happened to hear the remark about t!'e horse, and he ' iumoed to the conclusion that thev referred to the Lebanon horse. He at once began to abuse the Toledo boys and calling tbem vile names, and a whole crowd of the Lebanon people came over to the Toledo camp to "clean it out." After some talk back and forth on both sides the row was started by one of the Lebanon men, a young man of 22 or 23, striking Geo. Chambers ;n the face. George and the fellow went at it and at the same time Ralph Van Cleve and another of the Lebanon fellows started to fight. Fred Burns then came up and started to part George Chambers and the man he was fighting with. It was then that Sylvester, the man who was killed, got into the row. He rushed in and struck at Burns to keep him from separating the fighters. Burns then let George and his man go and turned his at tention to the man who had attacked him. The fight became general, and it was at this time that Allen Logan struck the blow with the hop pole. Sylvester dropped to the ground and Logan stepped back and dropped the pole. Meantime a great mob of the Lebanon pickers "kill mm, ana took aiter iogan, and the latter seeing that he had no chance with such a mob ran towards v.. f t, mun wrlir. nurnprl . . , . , i itneyara, some iwcuiy-uvc jmw away, rne crowa ionoweu aim there, and two grown men took him by the hair and dragged him back to where the fight had occur red. The crowd quieted down, and m. jf j 1. : j Logan was released. Sylvester, ! still unconscious, was taken to hi3 own tent, and a doctor sent for. The doctor examined him and said that nothing serious had occurred, and that the man would be all right in the morning. The Toledo boys went to the dance as first planned, and it was at the dance, about n o'clock Tuesday night when Logan in ISTothLing. was arrested. He was taken to Independence and put into jail, and was confined there until Thursday. The man died at 1 1 130 Wednesday morning, but Logan was not told of his death until the next day. On Thursday Logan was arraigned on a charge of manslaughter, and was held to the grand jury, which meets in December. His bond was placed at $2,000 which was furnished by his father, S. A. Logan, and Lester Waugh. At the pre liminary hearing the defense was thnt the blow strv.ck by T2n was on the back part of the headand neck, and the doctor testified that the blow that caused the death was on the right temple and cheek. Of course there was some conflicting testimony regarding the fight, but under the examination of the grand jury this will be pretty thoroughly sifted. It seems to have been one of those hop yard tows that are liable to occur in any yard, and the Lebanon people were clearly the aggressors. The fight took place at the Toledo boys' camp, and the others had come there for a row. r . 1 . M I . . . a vji me xoieao Doys tnat were in ine ngnt none were over 19 years of age, Allen Logan being only a little past 16. Tbe Lebanon par ticipants were all grown men, two of them young men. Sylvester is said to l'ave been man nearly six feet tall, and a strong, stout man. The affair is a very unfortunate one, and no matter what the ter mination is, it will probably teach all of the participants therein a severe lesson. When the school board meets they should take steps at once to shut the festive town cow out of the basement of the school house. The unpleasant odors arising from the "cow roosts" under the school house will not be conducive to the comfort or health of the tending school. pupils at- J. J. Boone was yesterday, on complaint of chief of police, fined $5 in the city court for selling fish without a license. Mr. Boone owns his own seines at Yaquina and hauls his fish out by his own teams and has thus been able to supply fresh salmon at a very low rate, which may be the explanation for the airest. Corvallis Times. The school board of the Toledo district seems to be a little slow this fall about making arrangements for the fall and winter term of school. No meeting of the board has been had yet, and no teachers have been hired. It seems to us that the board 6hould hold a meet ing at once and set a time for the school to start, and hire the teachers, and then all interested could govern themselves accordingly. "My boy came home from school one day with his hand badly lacer and bleeding and suffering great pain," says Mr. E. J. Schall, with Meyer Bros. Drug Co., St. Louis. "I dressed the wound, and applied Chamberlain's Pain Balm freely. All pain ceased and in a remarkably short time it healed without leaving a scar. For wounds, sprains, swell ings and rheumatism, I know of no medicine or prescription equal to it. I consider it a household necessity." The 25 and 50 cent sizes for sale by O. O. Krogstad, druggist. t"Iu me Your Hi'ivi'li Villi l'nriirrla, Cir.'. y ( t; in I". euro cr.r.mtrilon fnro'er. tO.-.L-'i-. II r.C.C.f!iil,ilruin;iKur.tund!noiier Mo-To-Bm for Fifty Ceata. Guaranteed tobaeeo habit ears, makes weak men strong, blood pure. He II. All druggtiu. Number 28. THE HEAL TROUBLE. The Corvallis Times says ihat the state is in need of a reformatory for the care, correction and salva tion of a certain class of young girls, and refers to the girls who elope, fall from virtue, and who commit all kinds of Indiscretions. We be lieve that an institution of the kind asked for by the Times would be powerless to arrest or curtail the evil mentioned. The fault lies with the parents and with society. It has become so common that it is an universal rule now for mothers to impliedly teach their girls that they are better than their parents. In how many homes today can one find the mother and tbe daughter toiling side by side ac the wash tub or other house work? In some homes you can, but in homes of this kind you will find the girls quiet and well behaved. It is fioni the home whe-e the molher toils and sweats to do all the horse work and drudgery in order that "Gwendoline" may have beaulllu! hands and a pink, pale complexion that the wayward girls come f.om, as a rule. The girls, just the same as the boy, that is keDt busy at study or healthful recreation, does not find time to ruin mind and character by reading demoralizing books and papers and parading the streets with loud and evil compan ions. Again, parental care as lo associates is entirely too sla?!:. Many a mother would be woefi'Hy shamed to have her daujjh er upon the street in a soiled sk! ., yet will let her associate in publ'c and private with soiled companion , both male and female. Until there is a radical change of public senti ment; a change from the present moral laxity regarding such as sociations, it is useless to talk of reformatory institutions. In nine cases out of ten the reformatory i institution should be for the parents instead of the children. When parents awake to the terrible fact that it is an injury instead of a kindness to raise children to idle ness, and to surround them with worthless, trashy dime novels and cheap, sensational papers; and when parents learn to exercise the same care and prudence in the associations of their girls as they do in the environments of their stock, then the necessity or desire for such an institution as the Times calls for will have vauished. . W. R. Bryan, the gentleman from Michigan, who went to the beach last week to inspect the black sand, states that' the sand there is richer than he expected to find it. According to his estimate the sand contains $5 in gold and $2 in plati num per ton. The objection he finds is that there is not a sufficient body of sand to justify working it by the methods which his company uses. Mr. Bryan has become inter ested in the gold ore from toe Dut ton district, and in company with B. F. Jones, went to Little Elk today to inspect the ledge. If it is satisfactory to him he will forward an amount of the ore to Tacoma where it will be thoroughly tested. It Saves the Croupy Children. Seaview, Va. We have splen did sale on Chamberlain's Couch Remedy, and our customers com-in-j from far and near 1; sak o" it in the highest terms. Many have said that their children would have died of croup if Chamberlain's Coi-h Remedy had not been given. Kel lam & Ourren. The 25 and 50 cent sizes for sale by O. O. Krogstad, druggist.