Lebanon Express. CITY OFFICIALS, MAYOR , M. A. MILLER. TRKAtUKER J. A. ROKKKT8. MARSHAL P. W. MORGAN. fED.KKLLKSREKOER, OOVNUILMEK (los, 'S. S. DAUIUJliM. City Council mwu on the tint and third Tuesday evenings of each montii. Dr. 8eooe;le Again At Liberty. A telegram from Fresno, Cal., to which plaue Dr. Simiiogle, the Browns ville rnvisher, had Bed, contains ft story of how the stupid authorities of Fresno alb well the wily doctor to escape after the sheriff of Linn county was on the way after Jilm witlt a requisition frnui the governor for his arrest The dis patch says: Dr. J. D. Sponogle, of Brownsville, Oregon, was arrested ou a telegram received from Sheriff Jack win, of Linu county, Oregon, charging Ihe doctor with rape. )unogle has been here about a week, and Bays It was bis intention to locate here, hav ing sent bis effects to Fresno in ad vance. The prisoner apieared before judge Holmes this afternoon on a wril of habeas corpus. It was asked thai defendant be discharged on the grounds of illegal arrest, as no officer has a right to arrest a man from an other state merely ou a telegram from an officer In that state. The judge dismissed the prisoner, and be walked out of court a free man. The sheriff arrived from Oregon this evening, but so fur all search for.Sponogle has been fruitless. He is accused of committing oriminal violence upon Mrs. Wyatt, ol Brownsville. Hue was bis patient, and he committed the crime wbile visiting her professionally. Bponogle left town immediately thereafter. Spouogle's story is that the charge is a scheme of Mrs. Wyatt's husband, to whom he owes $190 and w ho wants to get bilu back to Oregon on that account. Bee "Work on The Side." J. E. Adcox, the Watchmaker, will use bis spare time to your benefit. See "Work on The Side." A good light second-hand buggy ant harness for sale at a bargain. In quire at the Expbehs office. All persons know'.ng themselves in debted to M. A. M Hler will please call auu settle at once. Uiu guiu or saver uiuue iuto new rings, plus Olc, Htuuy's. ii you waul to gel uioe (resh areuu go to reeuicr's. Oats, hay, bran, ulioyt, and aii Kinua Ol teeu, at fcttuler'e. '. 1. CuiUiuii Co. iiave just it ceiveu a huge euipuiein of ijutu coiu atuves auu mugte. 11 yuu nuve ttuy Jiiuu of painting or paper-lmugiug lo ue uoue, uou't tail tu can ou Jf.Ji.Aeisuu, tutpaiuter. riri class work, at iiaru Uuie prices. Leave orueis ul b. M. Uouaca's grocery. becretary of .Asnculiure ilurtou is being "roasted" by the grangers and the populists because iu a recent ad dress he said: "Aniuug the most dan gerous aud iusktiuua foes that the American farmer had lo contend with are the granges aud the alliances. The tiroftssioual fanner is always a menace to the practical farmer." Photographs. You can get better cabinet size pict ures at Crawford & Paxtnn'a in aii.o. ny for f 1 50 per dozen than at other gallrieafor any price. Our work is guaranteed. Permanent gallery es- 1 nn - uiuijsiieu tor m years, .no poor work allowed to go out. Come and see us. Albany, 1st street. Next door Masou ic Temple. , Mew Shoe Hhop. Having opened una shoe and renair nop in iietianou, 1 respectfully solicit share of your patronage. I warrant all my work to be flraMlass, and make specialty of fine work aud ladies' shoes. M. D.Vauohan. Executrix' Hotloe. Notice is hereby given to all whom it may concern that I have been duly appoint ed Executrix of the last will of T.E . Htretth olf, late oflinn County, Oregon, deceased, by the Hon. County Court of said county, and that I have filed my bonds as such execu trix, and that the same have keen duly ap proved by said court; therefore all persons having claims against the estate of said de cedent are hereby notified and required to present the same to me with the proper vouchers at my residence in thecityof Scio, Oregon, within six months from the date hereof. Babah 3ivi Abbott, Executrix, Sated this 13th day of October, 1883. "TtlEVi FBA ANARCHISTS. -Hew Tetfeeie WaeMIre Watekua to F toes TbeUr 14mm ud MlUioas. Then are . now four time as many watchmen and detectives along Fifth avenue ia the vicinity of the residences, of the money kings as there were a few' months ko and before the anarchistic element became noisy. So said one of the watchmen I found guarding the new million dollar palace of Cornelius Yan dcrbilt. Be told me that the owners of palaces aloug Fifth avenue have uot been taking any chances in letting an archists piace bombs under their front Stoops. He estimated that at least 500 new watchmen have secured employment since the anarchists began their recent noisy meetings on the east side. It was his fond hope that the reds wonld con tiuue their barougne, as it gave employ ment to a good uiuuy "dayceut feilerg who ueeded a job powerfully bad." "Since this recent anarchist talk and racket on the east side we have done a laud office business," said the manager of a detective bureau. "We have sup plied over 100 men to wealthy but timid New Yorkers within the past few mouths. One of the odd things about the rich men of Gotham is that they pretend to never fear trouble from the poor chisses. I know one of the wealthiest men in the city whom I have provided with watch men and special detectives for different purposes. "The day after the arrest of this hm ma Goldman, the anarchist, he called at the office and employed five men to guard bis million dollar home up in Fifth ave nue. I asked him if he feared the anarch ists. " 'Oh, no, not at all,' said he. I am afraid of burglars, and 1 have recently imported a lot of valuable plate.' "Well, after I furnished him the men one of them came to me aud said he called tip the entire force of watchmen and said he had reason to believe that the anarchists intended blowing np a number of mansious along Fifth aveune. and that his residence was among the number. He ordered the men to not wait to arrest any one whom they thought a suspicious character, but to shoot them down and be wonld stand the consequences, besides rewarding the watchman. "He was so nervous about anarchists that he used to get np in the middle of the night and saunter out himself to see whether the men were all trn post or not. Yes. he belongs to one of the fam ilies of the largest millionaires in Nev York, but I am not at liberty to divulge his name. I merely mention him to show you how nervous our millionaires get whon there is talk of mob violence or a bomb plot. "1 have no doubt but that they have some very good reasons for anticipating trouble at tiie present time from the an archistic element in the city. There is generally some crank willing to be made a martyr of for any cause. I have no hesitancy in saying that I believe some one of these anarchists who have been made so much of in the newspapers will use the deadly bomb on some capitalist's home in the near future. He will expect and be prepared for arrest, and death it self will have no terror for the crank if his fellows will only proclaim him a martyr for the cause." Jiew York Herald. VICTIMS tar lAAftina. .ynohers and Lynohins. The report of the killing of many lynchers by the military force called out in Virginia shows that there is one region in the south alive to the importance of this, and with the resolution to teach the bloody lesson that we fear alone can be effective. Unfortunately, however, even in this case the display of resolution was only transitory, and the lynchers claimed their victim within 24 hours. But while all this is said it would be wrong to omit a word as to the ununited charac ter of the portion of the population ot the south with whom these lynchers nn dertake to deal. Nothing can ermw their act, and it is a fearful mistake in every point of view. But the disregard of life on the part of many of the colored men of the south and the savage passion they evince mother respects are social evils that call also for serious attention. In addition to the crimes against women there, it is a terrible fact that there are negroes who murder constantly for money, even in small sums, and appear entirely destitute of moral sense. One has to be in the south to know the ex tent to which this prevails; few at the north realize it. There is a call for mis sionary work among this class that is louder than that which comes from any other heathen on the globe, and the more intelligent colored people themselves may well turn their attention to it Boston Herald. Bound More Merely Then by Morphine er AdoeeoL "Is the cocaine habit growingr "I ahould say it was. Why, about six years ago cocaine was 85 cents a grain. There was none of this widespread habit then. It has all grown up in recent years. How thedrugcan be purchased at retail at 8 cents a grain, and three or four drug stores in this city sell it to its victims in quantities to suit. Most of the reputa ble drug Btorcs will not do this, notwith standing the fuct that the trude is very profitable. They don't care to have such s class of customers about thein. But the habit grows and grows and grows." "Is it very degrading?' "Dreadfully so. Now, here is a liyno dornuo syringe I recently took from a West Point graduate, the sou of au old general of tlie army. When he was brought here, I added it to the collection there in the case. Look at that syringe! The point of the needle has been broken and filed down, because the victim couldn't get money enough to buy a new one. Why, it's enough to poison a man's entire system to inject that dirt iuto his blood. But this West Pointer told me the hist time he used the syringe he took a penknife and gashed his arm uud thun stuck the syringe iuto the wound. That's the condition they got into." "What is the effect of cocaine?" "It has a local effect of numbing or paralyzing the tissues immediately around the place where the injection is made, so you can cut those tissues with out the patient's cnwrieucing the slight est pain. So it is used in suuiil surgical operations. But in addition to the local effect it has a general effect of exhilara tion. People under its influence can do a great deal of work and go without sleep. But the effect wears off in about aqunrterof nu hour, requiring additional injections to maintain it. Morphine, on 'the other hand, has an effect lasting from six to eight hours." Interview With a Physician in San Francisco Examiner GIGANTIC COMPLICATIONS. The Lombard Investment Comitenv'. Troubles Ouly Just (lectin. Now that the Lombard Investment company has passed into the bauds of receivers, its methods and the way in which it was excluded from doing busi ness in Massachusetts will be interest ing to the timtiy people who have had dealings with the former concern. Be sides investors in New England mm;y mortgages also were taken in England and Huiiaud, and the consul general of Holluuil in New York bus been in re peated communication with Mr. J. Rus sell fteed, the stute conimissiouer of foreign mortgage corporations (foreign meaning merely outride of Massachu setts) regarding the iuterests of Dutch mortgage holders in this much adver tised company. AU summer there has ueeu au effort to find trustworthy men among thnxe interested who would Like hold of the corporation and make the best of its as sets for the benefit of the holders of the mortgages. About $;I2.0M),(IIH) in guar anteed mortguges are now in the bunds of purchasers from the company on wluch the company hud a contingent lia bility. It is the belief of Mr. Kced that up to the day the company was put iuto the hands of receivers it might have been continued if the right men could have been found to go into it. Mr. M. B. Whitney of Westfield. who has held the presidency of the company since tho forced retirement of the Lom bards, regarded himself as an ad interim incumheut, put there becuuse he woa acceptable to both sides, and he did not wish to hold the place permanently. But as the necessary men were not forthcoming the receivership was brought about, and now it is likely that the business of closing np these compli cated relations, where so many persons and subordinate companies are con cerned, will not be ended for several years. Boston Transcript. Dublin's Mayer end City Polities, The lord mayor is fine looking, about SO years old, rather stout, has curly hair just turning gray, mutton chop whiskers and mustache, a ruddy face, and wore a dark suit. He is here as the guest of Chicago and the fair commissioners. Said he: "I have visited your city two or three times heretofore and admire it greatly. I had hoped to call upon your mayor today, but we got in too late. Mo, I have never bad the pleasure of meeting Mr. (iilroy, though he came from County Donegal, so I am informed, while I was born in an adjacent county. I presume politics do not figure to any great extent in your municipal governments queried the lord mayor innocently. New York Times. Dullness In the Theatrloal Business. In theatrical affairs at present the ex tremes of adversity do not meet; but, ou the contrary, they lie a whole continent apart. California aud the New England states are the hoodoo vicinities this year. In the small towns of New England the situation is deplorable. Thirty dollars were the gross receipts which several good combinations have earned in towns of from 10,000 to 25,000 inhabitants. In fact, many of the local managers are can celing their dates in sheor despair. After all, it is the local manager who is the biggest loser in a front of this sort. The manager of tho combination usually geta as his share 80 per cent of the gross re ceipts. Out of the remainder the pro prietor of the theater has to pay the ex penses for light, fuel, ushers, etc. The theatrical manager cuts down the sal aries of his company, but the lessee of the theater can't adopt such methods with his coal and gas bill. Whet Cfaeuneey M. Depew Reeds. The sum of the whole matter is that the railroad man as a rule takes all the newspapers, reads about everything there is in each of them, acquires a fac ulty for doing it very rapidly, and then peruses the leading editorial in the paper of opposite political faith to tone him up and the one in the journal of his own faith to tone him down. No practical journalist knows more of what is in a newspaper than a practical railroad man. New York World. Keep Your Eye Open Fo - BARGAINS, h Leader I v ? js n i Low MjmBi Prices, mik . The Place for Bar- gams. HIRAM BAKER, The leading Dealer Iti Dry Goods, Ladies' Cloaks, Boots and Shoes, Gives Great Bargains ot his Well-Filled Store. Ladies' and Gents' Furnishing Goods. Beys' and Men's Clothing, Hats, Cas, Gloves, Groceries, (. rockery, iimvare, hte. LEBANON, - - - ORECON. Albany Collegiate Institute ALBANY, OREGON. Infill Term Hegrim Sopleiiibor 13, A Full Corps of Experienced Teachers. J5r$TATE DI TLOMAS TO NORMAL GRADUATES Eour Departments of Study Collegiate, Normal, l.usincBs, Primary. Type-Writing and Shorthand are taiiglit. For tsiitnltiuc address Rev. ELBERT N. C0NDIT, A. M., President. Great Clearance Sale! zr-ftd Owing to the general stringency of the money market and low price of grain we will make a Sweeping Reduction nn nil efMwk. Wft nutftn ImtiinefiS and will save vmi mnhftv. O 4 Buy While Prices Are Low. Read. Peacock & Co., Lebanou, - - Oregon. IBALD HEADS! What Is the condition of vouri? Ii vour hair drv. harsh, brittle? Does it split at the ends? Has it a lifeless appearance? Does It fall out when combed or ! brushed ? Is it full of dandruff? Does your scalp Itch ? , Ia It Arv ne In e hmitffH mmlitlAn 9 If tluB ere Bum. nl your symptoms be warned in time oryou will become bald, i SkookumRootHair Grower! tawtaitiroDtieeil Reproduction If not an mcI rettwrcb. KnowltdKe ot Ue dlactwea of tbo hair anil tcalp led to the riltwov- l ery of bow to treat ilium. ',Hkookiiiit"oODin!tunettltormlDalanroi)s. It i unots.Dye.buta(ifligtitrniijrooo.iuit and tr.mmng Topic Hy stkmuiatinR , Lis the folliciw, it (t Jaliing hurt imrw dunUrutf and yrom haxr ou ii L . t" Kp the sKalp oltnn, bMlthy, ant. tret from trrltatlnir 1 (be use of Skookum 8km tiuap. IHlstroyi jjtiitwtKo inaacia.v i ii your uruKui.L cannot BucmT you "abu a 1 rear in I prepaid, on rpwiiitol price. uroweri9UttperUrH.fi pr Jar; r (or 12.50, THE SKOOKUn ROOT HAIR GROWER CO.. '"Bfrrf AwMt, Kaw York, N, Y, om haw on bald J rlaar ernptioni, by o ne, and wn will forward lie i 6 for 90.UU. ttottp, five.