THE EEBAN ON EXPRE VOL. III. LEBANON, OREGON, FRIDAY. OCTOBER .18, 1880. NO: 32. , HOOlHi'f V NOTICBB, LEBANON tOItflK. NO. 44, A. V k A. Mj Miwta rttlwlr uw hall In MM..11I0 lll.wk, 011 Saturday . ...ang.unorbofor. '"' 'H0N w, . LKBANON I.ODOK, NO. 47. I. 0. O. K.: H Hat unlay H.Iiik of cli , t Odd Fllw Hh II, Min ulrrnt; vLIUug brethren mm lly Invited lo uttaiiil. J. J. UUAKI.ION, N. U, HONOR LonOK NO. 3. A. O. tr W, IIi.iii, Or.,,: 11. vr,(lr.l .ml tMrj Thudy.n. Ino ill th month. t- H. ""Hi MK. " RELIUIOUS NOTICES. H. R. ( HllHCII. Walton Hklpwnrth. paittor-HervloiMi each Nil day Hi 11 A. M, and 7 P. M. Bundiiy. school at 10 A. M. each Sunday. pnr.HIIYTBRUM CIH'IICII. 0 W (lllmnv, tnwlor HorvUw each Pnnday at U A. Himday Hcliool 1U A. H, Service, each Sunday HlKlit. (WMSKKMNI 1'IIKMIIVTKRIAK CHUHCH. J K. Klrkimtrlrk. pntor--Hervli!Mi the 2nd Anil 4tli Holiday, mil, m. and 7 r. m, Knwlay Hl'llOllI I'licll MinliV Hi in V M. K. WEATHER FORD, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Oflloe over Flint National Hank. AI.HAW - RKOSI DR. J. M. TAYLOR, t 13 iv rr 1 rr , Will I In Lebanon the first week of every nionih. second week In Sclo; third in Stuyton, mitl the fourth week In Jefferson to perform all operation appertaining to Dentistry in a skillful manner. L. H. MONTANYE, ATTORNEY AT LAW ANW ISO JVVItY IUBLIC AL1IAXY. ORKMIS. Will practice In all CurU of the State, W. R. BILYEU, Attorney at Law, ALU AW. OKKiiOI. II. R, K. Bl.Al KHI'HU. Illlll, W. WHKIHT. BLACKBURN & WRICHT, Attorneys at Law. Will praotlce in ail the Court or the Htate. Prompt attention given to all buHinew en txuiited to our oare. Offlee Odd Fellow' Temple, Albany, Or. O. P. COSHOW & SONS, HEAL KHTAT13 AND INSURANCE AGENTS, BHOWNNYII.E. OKKGOSf. Collection, made conveyancing and all No Urlol work done 00 ahort uoUce, SPECIAL NOTICE. II1. V. C. NEGUH, Graduate of the Royal College, of London, England aleo of the Bellevue Medical College. rpHE DOCTOR HAS SPENT A L1KETTMK X 'of atiidy and practice, aud make a peo laity of chronic dliwaaea, remove canoer. orofuloii enlargement, tumor, and wena without pain or the knife, lie alno make a peclilty of Ueatment with Huolrloltv. Ha prMtkied in the German. Krenoit and KiikHbIi liuapltal. (Jail promptly attended day or night. HI motto is. "good Will to All." Utile and roHirioiice, ferry street, between Tiiird and Fourth, Albany, Oregon. J. L. COWAN. J. M. RAIjn-ON. BANK OF LEBANON, LEBANON, ORECON. Transacts a General Banlcin Business ACCOl'NTH MKPT Kill J KIT TO IIK.1K. Exchange .old on New York, San Francisco, Portland and Albany, Oregon. Collection made 011 tavorablo tarmi. J. MYKK8. R. BHKLTON. SGIO LAND CO. SCIO, ORECON. Buy and fcieil Land, LOAN MOlVE Y AND Insure Property. ' NOtARY PUBLIC. I Any information in regard to the cheap er Land In the garden of Oregon furnished . FAIRY'S GOLDEN PROMISE. A l.eg.ml of flermany. A thrifty farmer lay at length upon hi dying bed, And culled to him hi boy and girl, and gently to them auid: You nr 10 young, I can but dread to loave you all alone, Hut the farm will keep you without need when I am dead and iionn." Tliflo kinHlng ilmm. he blu d thcra both, and cloiod hi. weary eyon, And nnvor opened tbcm airain on thl aide Puradlao, Now Hum (he wm but twnnty-one, and Oretetien anventeen) Hold pretty Frida Fridolln ahrlned In nil beurt a queen; But the farm frrew only tblitlei, that choked the tender wheat, While Hunt, he ial -tlghing at pretty Krlda'a feet. Bhe gravely thonk hnr Rnlden bead, and to bi. love .aid: "No." While Iiit tuny little linger flushed the nuedlo to and fro. One evening little Gretohon at tlgblng at tb door, A-mouruIng lor the pretty thing that be could buy no more. She envied Frida Fridolln her ribbon freah and nfw. While hnr own flaxen ringlet were tied with failed blue. Up to the cot tage door there came, with weak and faltering tread, A woman, bent und gray and old, and tbu to Gretcben aald: You onvy Frida Fridolln her ribbon bright anil new; She buy. them with a fairy gift, like thl I bring to you;" And out from underneath her cloak the took a rrvat white ball Of woolen yarn: "You'll Dnd the rem when you have knit It all; And here' a apaile for Hani, who ha no luck bowe'er he trie. Yet in bn land, one pude' length deep, a golden treasure He. And then the fairy turned away, and eager Gretcben flew To Snd b"r needle and begin the task h had to do ; And Ham began before the dawn -earctln tiirhl Rold; From morn till noon, from noon till night, b overturned the mold. " Since It I dug, 1 11 ow the tned," he told; "becauae I fear The neighbor may (uipect that I've a treas ure hidden here." Bo all the day of lummer-tlme he worked with all hi might, And Gretcben' knitting-needle flew from early mora 1 11 nlgbt; And i the pile of (tocklngi grew the big ball wore away. And ihe told the (locking in the town and bought the ribbom gay. 'Two. autumn when the ball of yarn wm knitted ail away, And Gretchen wept, for in ita heart no gleam ing Jewel lay. H The fairy told me f alie," ihe cried ; "the yara I knit, and aee, O! Hani, where I the treniure .he proml.ed you and mef That night Hana came In laughing, and erle J: "My wbeat I .old," And out Into her lap he poured a chining heap of gold. And to her mind there came a light "O, Han.! I underatiind; Thl. It the gold the fairy gold you found it In the laud) " And. yei, there wa a Jewel In the ball of yarn forme; I've bought alt th'.. X can buy more, by thrift and Industry." And when to Frida Fridolln Hun took the heart to go And aak her love again, the (railed, and did not tell htm "No." I would not wed an Idle Kan," (he (aid, "tho' I loved you." And 10 to ail in napptneii the fairy worda came true. Abbe Kinne. In N. Y. Ledger. TRAPPING ELEPHANTS. An Afrioan 8 port Not Without an Element of Danger. Dut the ProflU More Than Counterbalance the ferlls-How a Hlood-Tlilr.ty Kneiny Vi Converted Iuto a Devot.d N.rvant. Four, days' march inland from Quilou, which is on the east coast of Africa and two hundred and fifty nillos above Madagascar, we came Into the elephant country and made a permanont camp. My orders from the Hamburg house were to secure at lettHt five eluphanU alive and deliver them on board ship at Quiloa. Our party consisted of three white men and forty-two natives, and we had even horses and six teams of bul locks. Amonjj the natives were sever al fellows who had hunted the big gAtne with white men, and who were protty thoroughly posted as to the creatures' habits. It would have been almost as easy to shoot an elephant as a buffalo, but to capture one alive and get him down to the coast was a differ ent matter. We had our camp la a thick grove about two miles from a forest through which we knew elephants ranged, and orders wore pi von against firing guns or moving about more than was necessary. An elephant will take the alarm as quick as a door, and when once frightened he may not cool down for hours. After a 'couple of days four or five of us made a scout to the forest, and we, were delighted to find evidence that it was a favorite resort. Aiue iortji was & Bvrip about nine rajles long and two miles wide, thrust ing itself down into a great plain like a tongue. About opposite our camp It narrowed to a width of half a mile, and further down cut short off, though there wore groves scattered all over the plain. j We were rejoiced to find that this strip of forest was a veritable highway for the elephants passing back and forth, while the foliage was their choicest food. We spent two whole days getting the lay of the forest for levcral miles, and we finally selected a particular spot to work on. It was in tho narrowest portion of the strip, and here we dug two pits and con cealed them so nicely that the sharp est native would have mistrusted nothing. When all was ready we re tired from the forest and posted a native in the nearest grove to act as sentinel for the remainder of the day, This grove was about an acre in ex tent, with the trees standing very thick, and we were about moving off, after instructing the natire, when we heard a trumpet blast and a mighty rush. The blast of a mad elephant In his native wilds is a sound never to be forgotten. Each one of us instantly realized that we had come up on an old "ropue." and that 'we were In deadly peril. An elephant who has become a crank and deserted his troop or been driven away is more dangerous than any othar living thing. His sole thought is to destroy, and he loses all sense of fear. Had we been mounted we could have scattered and outrun him, but we were all on foot, and our only safety was in sticking to the erovo. W hen we heard him com' ing we dodged right and left and hur ried deep into the grove. The old fel low had the eyes of a lynx, and, wheel ing from his first charge, he seemed determined to hunt us all down. Each one of us dodged on our own account, thus distracting his attention, but he finally pursued one of the natives so closely that the man had to take to a tree. He . didn t have his choice, either, and was unfortunately driven to shelter in a tree about as large around as a man s body. He was barely out of reach when the mad brute arrived at the trunk. " I was in a much larger tree about forty foet away, and could plainly see the move ments of the beast He was an old bull, carrying a large pair of tusks, and he was mad all over. He tried hard to push the tree over, and though he could not succeed, he shook the native around so as to give him a bad fright In order to call the brut off I fired at him several times with a revolver. Each bullet hit him, but cf course did no damage. He, however, refused to leave the tree, and after standing for a moment in thought he putr his shoul der against it, surged forward, and. after swaying back and forth half a dozen times, the tree broke short off about ton feet from the ground. The native was expecting it, and as the top crashed through the trees he caught at a limb and pulled himself into a large tree. The elephant soon became aware of his escape, and like wise recognized the fact that all of us were out of his reach, and, after trumpeting his disappointment, he slowly retired and gave us opportunity to come down. We left the grove as quietly as possible, and made haste back to camp. We must move at once. The "rogue" elephant does not travel about much, aud his being in the grove was a menace to us. Should he discover our camp he would attack us offhand We at once hitched up our teams, struck our tents, and removed to a grove four miles away. While not entirely saie here, we might es cape observation. On two sides of us the approach was marshy, while on the others it was rather broken. Next day after our removal it rained, and none of us left the grove. On the morning of the second day, just as we were i oiling out of our blankets, a cry from half a dozen natives alarmed the camp. As I rose up aud saw them looking to the west, I turned my eyes in that direction, and beheld a sight which made my hair stand on end. That "rogue" elephant was on the plain about half a mile away and making a bee line for our camp. Ho was swinging his trunk in an angry way, and his speed was sotnothing terrific? Ihree or four of us sprang to our rifles, but he would have been among us before we could have fired a shot had not an ac cident happened. He charged at us over the marshy ground, and two hundred feet from the wagons the ground i grew bo soft that he sun it to nis Knees, floundered ahead a few feet and then rolled over on his left side. He was out of breath with his run and his fall, and then was the time to take him. As he lay there roaring his dismay and anger, we got out the ropes and chains and dashed for his legs. We got nooses over both hind legs and carried tho free ends to the nearest tree, and then we had the old fellow for sure. He was so mad that he actually shed tears, and he trumpeted until he tired his machine out After we had him fast every man cut a stick, and for two hours we beat every part of tho beast we could reach. Moreover, we walked on him, kicked him, called him names, and degraded him in every possible way. This was by the advice of the natives, who said It would soon break his spirit and cause him to give up. All day long the monster lay on his side in the muck, boiling over with rage, but helpless. He put in the night there, too.and next morning his spirit was broken. We cast the noose free from one leg, got a pry under his hip, and after an hour's hard work put him on his feet and got him to solid land. The fight had all been taken out of him, and he would cower whenever any one shook a club at him. When the natives washed him up a dozen great scars were revealed on his shoulders and flank as proofs that he was a fighter, and my head man, who had lived in the elephant country all his days, computed the beast's age at one hundred and ten years. No animal becomes docile and tractable as quick as the elephant He must first be conquered by fear, and when once he gives in you have only an occasional tantrum to look out for. We kept right at our captive, flogging and bulldozing and giving him to understand that we were boss, and at the end of three days he was as humble as pie. We could make no use of him as a hunter, as we had no rig. and as none of the men had had and experience in driving an elephant; but we should have no trouble in get ting him to the coast, and he was worth several thousand dollars. It 'was ten days after his capture that one of our scouts brought word that a troop of elephantshad appeared lo the forest We had suspected this by the uneasy movements of our cap tive. It did not seem possible that he could Bcent his kind four or five miles away, but his actions went to prove that such was the case. We had him securely fastened by one hind leg, but he did not try to break away. On the contrary, he acted vexed and out of sorts, and now and then uttered a blast of defiance. It was easy to see that he would have a hostile greeting for any elephant that came our way. The troop of elephants reported by the scout numbered thirteen, and were five or six miles above us. Mr. Will iams, my assistant took a portion of the men and made a detour so as to strike in behind the troop and drive them down, and five or six of us sta tioned ourselves at the southern limit of the forest It was hoped that in driving the beasts back and forth along the narrow neck at least one of them might get a tumble into a pit and it was with great anxiety that we waited their coming. It was about four o'clock in the afternoon when we caught sight of them. After they had crossed the neck we closed up and sought to drive them back, but they had become frightened, and the job was too great for us. They broke off to the right and left the cover of the woods for the open plain, and we felt some anxiety as we saw that they held a straight course for our camp. The three of us who were mounted pur sued at a gallop, and we were wit nesses of a curious incident The troop were headed for the grove in which we had encamped, and were aboat half a mile away, when our captive "rogue" uttered three or four shrill blasts and suddenly appeared in sight, having broken the rope which held him to a tree. He made straight for the troop, challenging as he came, and the beasts no sooner saw him than they exhibited fear and con fusion. They halted, turned to the right and the left and were all mixed up when the old chap came down upon them like a landslide. The first one he struck was a half-grown elephant, and he knocked him flat on the grass and rolled him over and over. Then I he sailed in to clean out the shanty, and the blows from his trunk could be heard a mile away. Such a cloud of dust was kicked up that we soon lost aiffht of a.tnniaM but in a few minutes the troop bolted off at right angles und soon entered a grove, and we drow near to find the old "rogue" standing over the one he had rolled over. He seemed to be waiting for us to come up, and after a little the native who had most to do with him ventured close up.' I rode off and got a rope, and this was made fast to the captive's legs and he was encouraged to get on his feet Then tho old chap steered him straight for v.mp while we followed, holding to the ropes. Once or twice tho kid showed a disposition to bolt but the big one gave him a resounding whack with his trunk and curbed his am bition. Wo made hfm fast to a tree, and the "rogue" then tool: his old place without a hint being given him and was refastened. It was next morning before we could examine our pits, and then we found another captive. A big bull Jephant was lying on his side in one of them, while the other had been avoided. We got him out of the pit by digging around him, and then using a block and tackle to lift him to his feet He had been three days without food or drink when we got him out, and his spirit was pretty well broken. Our three captives were got down to the coast without the least trouble, and our luck in making three such captures in the short space of twenty days has never been equaled by menagerie men in any kind. The old "rogue" who set out to annihilate ua brought all our good luck. N. Y. Sun. MAPS BY TELEGRAPH. 1 i One Can bow Send MnnucrlpU or Picture by Electricity. The fac-simile telegraph, by which manuscript, maps or pictures may be transmitted, is a species of the auto matic methods already described, in which the receiver is actuated syn chronously with its transmitter. By Lenoir's method a picture or map is outlined with insulating ink upon the cylindrical surface of a rotating drum, which revolves under a point having a slow movement along the axis of the cylinder, and thus the conducting point goes over the cylindrical sur face in a spiral path. The electrlo circuit will be broken by every ink mark on the cylinder which is in this path and thereby corresponding marks are made in a spiral liae by an ink marker upon a drum at the receiving end. To produce these outlines it is only necessary that the two drums be rotated in unison. This system is of little utility, there being no apparent demand for fac-simile transmission, particularly at so great an expense of speed, for it will be seen that instead of making a character of the alphabet by a few separate pulses, as is done by Morse, the number must be greatly increased. Many dots become neces sary to show the outlines of the more complex characters. The pan tele graph is an interesting type of the fac-simile method. In this form the movements of a pen in the writer's hand produces corresponding move ments of the pen at the distant station and thereby a fac-simile record. Scribner's Magazine. AVtinttf to Bacndce, As we route along the highway out of Qolds boro the owner of the team pointed to a half finished churcb building alongside the road and said: "The colored people have been building that for the last ten years." "One struck me in town last night for a dollar to help finish some edifice, and this must be the one," answered the colonel "No doubt of it, and that may be the .one Just coining out." "So it is. Hold on, and let's see what be has done with my dollar." The man approached, bowing and smiling. and the colonel saidr "Is this where you are going to put that dollar I gave you lost night?" ' Oh I Hul Den you ar'degem'len who gin me de big dollar!" "I am. U hut are you going to do with il" "Ize already dun gone dun wid it, san. See I'm shingles ober darn" "Why, there isn't two bits worth In that pile.". "Jist exactly two bits, san." "And the rest of the money I" "De rest jist settles my charges for brintr- bV de shingles up, sab., an Ize obleeged to walk home fur nothing. Detroit Free Press. Dashley Queer thi'ugs people' discover when they are living In boarding houses. At dinner at my boarding house yesterday 1 stuck my fork into a piece of pie and brought up a collar button that I lost a week ago. Snaggs That's nothing. I lifted off the top of my strawberry shortcake at my boarding house yesterday, and what do you suppose there was in itf" ' Dashley I give It up, A silk umbrella, perhaps. , Snaggs No, sir; strawberries, j Dashley (incredulously) Aw, what are you. giving tuer Boston Beacon. f f.' jL t iiti.t i -