4 I- 5 I r. t '( t. Si 5 H tr1 Notice. " W linvo Hi wral parties who are 1 xkinp for In instead locations r r linqmshiiienlu also some good tiinl'i r claims If you know of any pood liome H'ial or timlvr claims it will pay ymi to write us Address, Aetna Realty Company, ll'2o Failing Uuil.ling, Portland, Oregon $25 Reward. We will pay a reward of $2" for information leading to the arrest! Iind conviction of the persons who' have Ik-oh twisting and cutting or in any way maliciously interfering' with our telephone lines between 1 Klk City and Harlan Lincoln Co Land & Investment Co Py J. F. Stkwart, Secy I We are dealers in Farms and Land. If you want to sell your farm send us full description, terms etc., and we can do it. T. 1L Ackers & Co. Washington Lloek, Portland, Or. Apsley's dry shod rubbers at Stewarts Store For Sale or Trade. General mearchandis store, well stocked, good location, near Port land; also 7-room house, rustic, i acre of ground in Eastern Oregon grain district, in town; also hotel of nbout 20 rooms and property close to railroad depot What have you? Address 11.' Tasskll, Boring, Oregon THE NEW YORK WORLD Thrice-a-Week Edition. The Thriee-a-Week World, now Hint H great Presidential campaign is fore shadowed, hopes to 1e a better paper than it has ever been before, ami ii has Diade iis arraiiKfiuents accordingly. Its news service covers the entire globe,! aud it reports everything fully, prompt y and accurately. It is the only news paper.not a daily, which is as good as a daily, and which will keep you us com pletely Informed of what is happening throughout the world. A Rpeoial feature of the Thrice-a-Week World has always been its serial fiction, It publishes novels by the best authors in the world, novels which in book form sell for S1.50 apiece, and its high standard in this respect will be maintained In the future as in the past. The Thriee-a-WeeU World's regular sntif-cription price is only - $1.00 per year, and this pays for 150 papers. We otter this iiuequaled newspaper and Tim Lea nun together for one year for 1.70. The regular subscription price of the two papers iH $2.1.0. , Call For County Warrants. Notice is hereby given that I have funds on baud to pay all County War rants drawn on the General Fund, and endorsed; "Not paid for want of Funds" up to and including Deo. 1, 1907. Interest on snid warrants to cease on and after said date. U. B. McClubkev, County Treasurer Dated at Toledo,. Or., this 20th day of May, 1KB, : . A TRAVELING MAN'S EXPERIENCE. "I must tell you my experience on fln East bound O. R. & N. train from rendletou to LaGrande, Ore,, writes tfuni A. Oarber, a well known traveling man, "I was in the smoking depart ment with konie other traveling men when one of them wont out into tne c ouch and said, 'There is a woman sick nnto death in the car, I at onoe got no and went put, found her very ill with cramp colic, her hands and arms were drawn up so you could not ftriughteti them, and with a death like look on hr face- Two or three ladies were working wlih her and giving her whiskey , 1 went to my suit case and got a bottle of Chamberlain's Colio, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy (I never travel without it), run- to the water tank, put a double dose of the medicine in the glass, poured some water into It and stirred it with a peuoil; then I hud quite a time to get the ladies to let me give It to her, but I succeeded. I oould at once see the effect and I worked with her, rubbing her hands, atid in twenty minutoi I gave her another dose. By this time we were almost Into La Grande, where I was to leave the train. I gave the bottle to tbe husband to be used in case another dose should be needed, but by the time the train run into LaGrtnde the was all right, and 1 received the thanks of every passenger n tbe car.'' For sale by Otto O, Krog. mad. Important Messages Delayed. All this week the telegraph and telephone lines from Newport have Ikhmi interrupted, presumably by the transmogrification of the aerial electrical current caused by the con junction of the comet seen by the Newjiort correspondent of the As s:ciated Press last week, with a fluid extract of Shaws Malt from the old K-C drug store at that place. The up-to-date telegrophonical correspondent of the Leader, strict ly onto his job to gather the news, caught these messages as thev were wandering around through' void and blankness, and put . them on cold Htorage in George Hall's near-beer dugout and saved them nice and fresh until we could present them nico and fresh to our readers. We herewith present such of them as we have space for: Newport, Or., Sept. 6. (Special to Ass. Press) This is Sunday at Newport. Your correspondent looked in the almanac and asked Pete Ablxy and Major Hopkins if it was not Sunday this morning, and these two gentlemen expressing some doubt they in company with your corresjxmdent inspected the front doors of the booze forts and found them locked. Yes, it is Sun day in Newport. message two i Newport, Or., Sept. 7. (Special to Ass. Press.) The man who seen the comet at Newport in the middle of the day last week was brought to town and examined by' a board of physicians consisting of Simon Lendten, Fred Olsson and Charles Winant. It was found that upon close examination the. man wore one glass eye and was cross-eyed in the other, and his good eye caught the reflection from the sun off the glass in the other eye, which reflec tion he naturally mistook for a comet. In fact since Newport went wet several of her good citizens have been able to see comets in the mid dle of the day. message three Newport, Or., Sept. 7. (Special to Any old Press. ) The applications for enrollment in the high schixil at Newport still continue to roll in. Prominent among tlie pupils from Kemville who are expected to at tend are Jimmie Robertson, Joe Sijota and Johnny Lloyd.. From Laid Mountain, Willie Smith ex pects to come for a business course, and others " are also expected. While among the young ladies from over the county1 who are expected to attend are Cory Smith of Wald port, and Ix)u Fuller of Siletz. message four Newport, Or.; Sept. 8. (To the Associated Hay Press. ) The narrow escape of the heliograph man on Table Mountain from cougars as told by your correspondent in a special dispatch last week, was far excelled by a blood curdling affair in the north part of the county this week. Lorn Stratton, a stalwart homesteader who is holding down a homestead on Euchre Mountain was attacked one day last week by a desperate and hungry horde of mountain Ixiomers. Mr. Stratton had just' killed a fine deer the clay before and had it hanging in his woodshed. Just at noon while he was eating his dinner of sour dongh biscuits, known as "sinkers," and sow belly, ho heard a deep, fierce growling in the edge of the clearing near his cabin. With every hair standing on end Stratton grabbed his trusty rifle and started for the door. Imagine his horror to see not loss than 49 count 'em 49, fierce mountain boomers, not squat tors, coming from all directions in the forest toward his cabin and smokehouse, ' One glance convinced Stratton that he could not repulse them' in the . open and ho hastily entered the house and barricaded the doors and windows . Fortunately the fierce and hungry Ixiomers Htopped long enough to devour the Ml :v ....-:. fflr . .. . f it D I :k "1 kJ , MARVEL. UNIVERSAL Implements NEWTON & NYE launch Supplies' Stoves and Ranges (Successors to E. L. chiittleld) Harness Tinware HARDWARE Cutlery - V Separators Guns TOLEDO, - - - OREGON Plumbing deer hanging iu the woodshed, and also the pile of stove wood Mr. Stratton had cut, or he could never have had time to barricade the house. The horrid crunching of bones of the deer and the stovewood came to his ears as he propped the door shut with his bootjack and stuffed his overalls in the window rendering entrance impossible from that source. All to soon the deer and stovewood was devoured and the boomers made a fierce onslaught on the house. From loopholes in the wall Stratton fired shot after shot from his rifie until his cart ridges were exhausted. He then took his muzzle loading shotgun and fired buckshot into the awful horde, but the attack did not cease. With despair tugging at his heart Stratton poured the last of his shot into his gun and fired at the old gray boomer, the leader of the band. The shot rattled harmlessly on the tough hide of the boomer, but the only effect was that it seemed to enrage him more. Unless this old boomer . could be killed or crippled Stratton knew his life was forfeited. He had plenty of powder but no shot. Ilis days seemed numbered. A gleam of hope! Hastily pouring a charge of powder into both bar rels of his gun and putting a copy of the Newport Mail on top of each charge as wads, he crowded a sour dough "sinker" into each barrel and made for the loop hole. He was none too soon. The boomers, headed by their leader, were massed for the final charge. With a prayer on his lips Stratton aimed the gun and pulled the triggers. . A deafen ing roar was followed by two terriffic explosions . and an awful howl of anguish; and Stratton fainted. INHERITED INDIAN LAND FOR SALE AT SILETZ, OREGON Sealed bids will be received for the 0W(,KR DESCRIPTION Petor Bobb, w' ne, section 29, township 6, range 10 8usan Marshall, bwJ sw, wV$ sej-i wJi section 26, and.Lots 35 and 86, section 27, township 9, range 10 Mary Harding, Lots 22 and 23, soction 6. and sw4 ne section 7, township 10, rmige 9 James Warner, Lots 9, 10 nnd 11, section 11, and Lot 16, seotion 10, township 7, range 11 ' ' NOM-COHPITINT LANDS Mary narding, Lots IS and 21, and nwJ4 sej, sec. 6, twp 10, rng9 Emma John, Lots 8 and 14 and ne'i nejseo 10, tp 10, rang 10 Charles Button, M seotion , township 10, range 9 Sealed bids will be received up to 12 o'clock, noon, of thev various days upon which they are listed to bo opened in above schedule, and must be directed to Knott C. Egbert, Superintendent, Siletz, Oregon. Envelopes containing such lllfla climil.l ..of l.n.. . . . . J At..n 1.1. a JxnAHlnllnn f .1... I ..... . I . . l . ouuw.u nova uuwa tuorouu uic uooei iptiuu ul ba wuus m Wilicu M! bids relate, but there shall be noted on such envelopes the date upon which the KI1 la trh ,.nnA T- i ild 1 l. 1 m .1 1 . nc a. io m'oiicu. . ancmae cernueu bid. Checks should be drawn payable When he came to about two hours afterward Jie was lying on his bunk and one of his neighlxjrs was pour ing water and things down his throat. When able to walk Stratton and his neighbor went outside and viewed the awful slaughter. Where the sour dough sinkers had ex ploded there was a hole 1 1 feet deep and the mangled remains of 48 count 'em 48 dead Ixiomers were found nearby. But the old leader boomer was not there, and with a sinking heart the settlers returned to the cabin and propped the door. Aftei a restless night search was again made and the old boomers' corpse was found in Vhe limbs of a fir tree 319 feet, 44 inches from the ground. .Stratton upon returning to the house and looking into the glass was horrified to find that his collar had turned white in a single night. " , MESSAGE FIVE Newport, Or., Sept. 8. (Special to the Clothes Press. ) A most dele cate surgical operation was per formed by two of our local surgeons this week that will no doubt attract the attention of the medical fra ternity at large. A prominent cit izen of Newport has for years been , troubled with a wart in a prominent place. ' He wished the wart removed but did not like to lose anything, being a little "near." So he was placed under anesthetics and the surgeons removed the wart from its regular place and grafted it onto the back of the neck. The operation was fully successful and after the second day the citizen has been using the wart for a collar button. Tu N. Quad. Go to H. E. Peterson for your Speo tacles and eve glasses, , following till noon, November 9, 1908. ACRES ALLOTfcES 80 ' Emma Williams 86.67 William Lanjr 80 Samuel Harding 80 Catherine Skelley 80 Mary Harding 80 Emma John 80 Charles Sutton 80 Frances Sutton uueua, lor oi lentn, i.u per cent. 01 your to the order of KNOTT C. EGBERT, Shoes! Shoes! Shoes!!! A fine line of shoes of the latest styles Fall and Winter just ar rived atT. P. Fish's. 8-1' 1. Tor Sale. , 15 acre ranch quarter of a mile Jrom town. Enquire, Jonx Carlson, Toledo. FERD BROWN SHOEMAKER Boots and Shoes repaired Work Guaranteed Shop at residence ueiiiCoiiritioiise, Y F. SWOPF, Attorney-at-Law. Will practice in all courts in the stale. Probine in niters and col leu lions promptly attended to. 0lice in Courthouse, Upstairs, TOLKDO. ORKtiOX. iiiiSl V. O' PKURN. ORFnov Fruit Trees, Ornamental Trees, Shrubs, Etc. V. C. IIARDIXG. AgeDt, Toledo, Or Leave orders at Resideuce. TOLEDO LIVERY STABLES I M. N. ANDERSON', Prop. Good Ris nnd well-broken Smtdlii Horses. Spet'iHl attention given to Traveling .Men. Hories Boarded and given Oood Cure City Draying in Connection G. B. McCLUSKEY NOTARY PUBLIC Toledo, Oregon OSCAR MIDDLEKAUFF ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, REAL ESTATE, INSURANCE Yaqu,ina, Oregon THE PHARMACY DRUGS and MEDICINES School Books, Stationery Paints, Oils, Glass, Wall Paper, Phono graphs, Musical Instruments, . Garden aud Flower Seeds Mail Orders given Prompt Attention OTTO 0. KR0GSTAD THE DRUGGIST WHITE IS KING Born 50 Years Ago. Made in both VIBRATOR and RO TARY styles. The latter machine sews both a lock and chain stitch, making two machines in one. Ball-Bearing. Light running. Greatest range of work. Sews the heaviest and lightest mater ials perfectly. Full set steel attach ments. Simple and durable. A child can operate it. Guaranteed by the maker. Maoy styles. Sold on easy payments. ' CAMPBELL, FELLMAN CO. Eugene, Oregon. Paoiflc Coast Branch Offloe. White Sewing Co., Van Ness and Market St.. 'jrwf San Francisco, Califorpia.