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About The Lebanon express. (Lebanon, Linn County, Or.) 1887-1898 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1894)
volviii; . i s - - I "V " - LEBANON, OREGON, JUNE 29, 1894. NO. 18 TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION, One year.... W (If paid In advanoo. 1 llli pur year.) . ' BH mouth , 1 SS Three months Single opi4w BTTE OFFIUEHB, I.H.Polnh, I John II, Mitchell,! ...Senators Blngor Hermann Congressman Sylvester Ponnuynr, (Jovornor George W. McMridu,.. BBorotnry (if State Phil Metsohan, '. Treasurer J5, B. MoElroy,...',..8upt. Tubllc Instruction Prank 0. Raker,..,.?..!... State Printer K. S. Ht-nhn. i ' Win. I', liord, V ). Supremo Judges R.B.Bcan, ) COUNTY OPPluERS. .Judge J-N. Dunoon Olerk P. Payne Uecorder E- & vi :Bherlff, C. C. Jackson .School Superintendent G. H. Wilkes Treasurer, Brlce Wallace .Assessor W. F. Deakins '.Surveyor, ..K. T. T. Fisher -wCnroner i FranK 1'arren I iWm ltutntmitf'h Commissioners, ..... ... jjujn- pugh CITY OFFICIALS. MAY OH ZTc. B. MONTAGUE. RECOK'DEIt. A. F. BTOWE. CITY ATTORNEY S. M, OAKLAND. rUBASUBEU J. F. HYPE. MARSHAL,.. P. W. MORGAN. - fBD.KEI.I-KSBKUOER, J. . itKHI. I T. C. UOTTOX. COUNLTLMEN ' Ui a.m,!EWH. . ... S, H. JIYEKB. a. w.iucio. lly Council meets on the first and third Tuesday evenings iii'each month. Secret Boidetles. LKBANON LODOK.N0. 47, 1,0. O.F--il every Batnrday evcnlimat Odd Follows Hall, al o'clock p.m. ,. w. MENZlffl, K. Q. B. U. OAKLAND, Boot'y. PKAKI.RE1IKCCA U)DK, NO. 47. 1. 0. 0. F. Hoots at l.O.O.F Hall lint and third Wednes day evenings of enoh month. HUH. 0. W. CK1I80N, N. u. mm HATTIE BIMPHON, Boot'y. ' "LtJ. ,oLol.No.44 A. K. A. M.-Moets S,wrilavovonhig,onorliororotho hill moon in eMUjoonth. K. S. Hammack., W. M, T. H. VlUllR. Bee, , H. T. KiaKPAtaK1' RW!' Ba.ur.lay or each month, wf la, instead. All brother, ot tW-t" eran. and eomradesof the . A. R. ai! "HU' Invllod to moot with tho Camp. JS, 0. Cabb, Ci?."'- , A. Tknnby, First flegt. PROFESSIONAL ' SAM'L M. GARLAND. ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. LEBANON) OREGON. John M. Spmbrs, ttoniey-at-Law- Will pmotlo." 5 11 the court, ol the state. LEBANON. OREOON. A. F. STOVK, Attorney t Law, TITLES XAM'INED. Will traolloo in all too courts oi OFSIM H courtssVs unicK. Lehanon, Obkoos. Weatlierford ft Ijatt, ATTORNEYS - AT - LAW, ALBANT, OREGON, W.B BILYEV, , ATTORNEY - AT - LAW, AUUNY, OREGON. Be Sure d Ooll on HOPKINS KROS., . -0F- , Albany, Oregon, FOB HeatingStoYtJS, CookStoYes, &c. K J BEST GOODS, JgM f-BK8T PRICKS, "hi 61. '69 theliills'ttrjil never ewU e3. u'Mt and proven'," i8thevBict: of millions.! Simmons Liver Regu Ti . ' ' lati lator is the . tPftP "only Livar XLZ-C and Kidnev medicine to which you can pin your faith for a cure. A mild laxa tive, and purely veg etable, act ing directly on the Liver ' and Kid neys. Try it Th Pills So ld hy all Druggists in Liquid, or in Powder to be taken dry or marie in to a tea. The King of Liver MAdiclnci. "1 Imvo iiiou jourKliumtitiNljlvf Ittru Intoi ..ti cut, coiiHcluntlMiHl) my II Uie kiiuM't ft.t liver lno(lli,ln ok, 1 consider It a nio'lli'liit-ohi'si in liaeif. am, V,. Jack son, 'J'U'tumu, WuKiiiiiijtuu. JKMTUtr rACKAOK-t . Has the Z Btainy la red tin waiter. . East and South VIA- THE SHASTA ODTE -OF TliE- Sonthern Pacific Co, Express trains leave Portland daily: (1:15 p. . l.v... Portland Ar. 10:2!l r. M. Lv...Alhuny.. ..Ar. Kt:ln A. M. I Ar.Huo Francisco Lv 8:20 a. m, 4:2Sa. m. 7:00 P. M. The above trains stop at all stations inim Portland to Albany inclusive; also Tangent, Bhedd, Ilalsry, Harrishurg, Junction City, Irving, Kngcne and all stations from Kose burg to Aajiland inclusive. Iloseburg moil daily: -' S:SOa. . I liv. ., Portland ...Ar. 4:20 p. H. 12:30 P. M. 7:00 A.M. 12:46 e. . Lv... Albany Ar. 6:60 r. . I Ar...ltoeburg.. Lv. Local passoogcr trains daily (ejeept Sunday. 1 :20 P. M. 2:09 P. M. S:10A. m. 9:00 A. u. Lv..;Allmny Ar. j 10:21 a. m Ar...lA!bnnou..,.Lv. 9:H0a. h. 8:2o p. H. 2:39 P. M. Lv...Alhaiky Ar. Ar...ljbanon ...Lv, Dining Carson Ogden Route. Pullman Buffet Sleepers AND ' Second-Class Sleeping Cars At tached to all Through Trains. AVeet Slide llvllon. Bktwben Portland ash Cohvallis. Mall train-daily (excpt8nndoy): 7-an. u. I Lv...Portlantl...Ar. o :ao a. n. 12:16 p. M. Ar.Corvallis. .Lv. 1:00 P. M. At A limn v and tlorvallis connect with trains of Oregon Pacilic railroad. Express train dally texwptBniHiayl'-'4-40 P. M.'l" Ev.7. t'urtlnlld ..ir. ' 8:25 A. M. 7:1(5 p. . I Ar.MeMinnvillc Lv I 6:60 a. m. nda and Europe cau be obtained at lowest rar.es from I. A. Bennett, agent, Lebanon. K, KOUHLKlt, Manager. K. P. KOOKUS, Asst. U. F. Pass. Agt. To Advertisers. If you wish to obtain the best returns from youv advertisements . Don't Forget the important fact that The Lebanon Express will give, the desired results, os it Is The Best Advertising Medium in Linn County. STATE AND COAST. Clipped From Our Exchanges Throughout the West. 4 T . . i- . ' ' Pendleton has one messengar boy 65 years old and another 60. , Bert Benton, of Cove, has just killed four bears on the Minam. '. La Grande will save about $1200 by reducing teachers salaries the eomiiigyear. , . .. The big Salem : flouring1 mills have started up again on a hig order from China. The Rock Springs, Wyo., coal miners use up a carload of La Grande hogs every month. Wholosale robberies of Chinese placer camps by white men are reported from Baker county. ' A bill of $700 for printing the "ballots for election in Marion county is exciting considerable discussion. Some say it is too much. ' . Three miles from Macleay, Mon day, Jack Fatten killed a large cougar which has been terrorizing the community. ; Mrs. Case recently awarded the brick hotel at Junction City by a divorce decision, is being sued by its owner for possession. T. C. Stahl, of Yoakum, Uma tilla county, has 600 acres of vol unteer wheat which will acreage over 20 bushels to the acre. At Pendleton Mrs. Ella Wagner has been granted a -decree of di vorce from John P. Wagner. Mrs. Wagner is now at her former home in Schuyler county ,fNew York. 'The Laue comity grand jury met and adjourned for the term without finding an indictment, a statement readily understood in the light of the great Republican gains there. James Burgess, who lives just north of Hillsboro, has been sen tenced to a year's imprisonment for throwing down . a fence not his own. It oomes through a" neigh borhood quarrel over a thorough fare, Alf. Kelsey has left Antelope with 5000 head of two and three-year-old wethers. They brought $1.00 per head and are as fine a lot of sheep as ever left Eastern Ore gon. Their destination is Fargo, N. 1). . It is thought, at Corvallis, that wheu the circuit court holds its adjourned sitting there, July 20, a new sale of the Oregon Pacific will be ordered, at whatever price it will bring, without regard to creditors or court costs, The residents of Ross slough, Coos bay, are putting in tide boxes t the mouth of the slough, to keep the water out. The boxes are 40 feet long, 12 feet wide, and will reech to the bottom of the slough. W. L, Brown, who was arrested last week at Deer creek with three horses in his posession, that had been stolen from Albert Adams and Charles Decker, had accumU' Awfii'dtd Highest Honors-WprW Pair, 'Dal' MOST PERFECT MADE. A pure Crape Cream of Tartar Powder. Free from Ammonia, Alum or ny other adulterant f YEARS THB STANDARD, mmm lated various other articles that are being gradually restored to their rightful owners. Brown's list included everything from a pair of dog skin gloves to a quan tity of groceries. In the Skipanon river at War renton, are a large number of spruce logs, brought down the canal from the lake. They com prise about 300,000 feet, and are for the Clatsop mills. The Milton strawberry crop will net $25,000, according to the esti mate of the local fruitgrowers' association. Most of the berries were shipped to Denver, Omaha and Salt Lake. The Lakeview Examiner denies the rumor that there is small-pox in Lake county and says that there has been no authenticated cases there. The nearest case is in Modoc county, five miles inside the California line. A runaway team, belonging to D.iW. Johnson, ran over the youngest child of Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Kent at La Grande Tuesday. The little fellow was considerable bruised but not seriously injured. About two acres of ground on A. C. Goodrich's Marion county farm is thickly strown with kindling wood. A 40-inch tree was struck by lightning last Saturday and thus reduced to Bmithereens in the twinkling of an eye. The, house and barn on the ranch of Xavier Arzner, in Auger valley. Lake county, was burned to the ground one night last week, the inmates barely escaping with their lives. The loss was about 51500;.insurance $850. Four hundred head of mutton belonging to P. Avery and John Richard, driven to Portland from Corvallis last week, netted their owners about $1.90 per heath It was one of the finest lot of sheep ever driven out of Benton county, If cents per pound being the price paid. The Corvallis Times is at consid erable pains to deny as absolutely false and ridiculous stories which have been in circulation there for some time to the effect that Dr. Applewhite is not dead; that he was spirited away, and the coffin supposed to contain his body was really filled with stones. ? In Klamath county the unpre cedented high water upon the meadow lands will make the hay crop very short this seasou. At Swan lake many of the claims located by homesteaders within the past few years will be under water all summer. Sheriff Endert, of Del Norte county, Cal., last week seued a package of deer hides which had been sent from Curry county to Cresent City for shipment to San Francisco. There were 100 skins in the box, some of them being fawn, The malefactor is as yet unknown, Last Friday the safe ot Mr. Nolte a saloon keeper at Pendleton, was broken into and robbed of $200. The safebreaking was the work of experts. This is Mr. Nolte's see ond experience with thieves, R cently they came in broad daylight and tapped his till. Independent Evangeical Services, First Sunday iu each month at Brownsville at 11 A. M. and 7:80 p. H. Second Sunday at Waterloo at 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M. Third Sunday at Brownsville at 11 A, at. and 7:30 p.m. Fourth Sunday at Sodavllle at 11 A. U. Middle Ridge at 8 P. H. Waterloo at 7:30 p. M. All are cordially invited to attend these appointments. C. N. Plowman. Pastor. jr. Price's Cream Baking Pot!r World' Fair Hhjhert Award, WATERLOO NOTES. Health report. ' Ball and Bat. ' Council Doings. ' Fourth of July. ' Buggy wheels and Beer. Granny bundown. Social Dews gathered from our neigh bors. ' ' Soda can now be obtained and the sick are convalescing. . The Calapooia nine played the Wa terloo's a game on the dlatuotrd Bun day. Score, 20 to 13 in favor of the vhjiting nine. Jumbo deserves special mention with his all round playing. Bice has stepped down and out and the council have chosen Mr. J. C. Hutton to bold down the office of police ludge. ' , The boys removed a wheel from the conveyance of a repeating bridegroom, in our city recently. The cause was beer. The gent not having the collat eral (or for some other reason which we fail to learn) borrowed a wheel and left town with flying colors. The hoys had all the fun but no beer. When a man allows a buggy wheel to be taken from the yard In daylight, he should diipense with glasses and get a little dog with a string to lead him. Pity is akin to love and on account of his sorrowing parent the wheel was re turned. , Boys, if you had taken the bride be might have redeemed her if you had only asked two glasses instead of a keg. Aunty Sunshade seems to be moving closer to civilization, and learning to write about great men. She could not take a better text and one that would please more people (in "Soda," than the one rendered a few days since, Keep right along siBter, you will tell what little you know In a few items. How long since you discarded mocca sins? Hey? ;, School has closed for the present. Mr, Wirt has accepted a call from Hamilton Creek and will teaoh them J school to be proud of. A good teacher is required here this fall. Some one with more brains than this section possesses, wanted. Anyone who thinks he or maybe she has that article on an enlarged scale please call. (A good opening for "Sunshine," or "Cal.") Pardon our silence, but in truth It was a great rest. We have been "worritln"' over the probability of walking forth with a roll of blankets, after the mortgage that sits enthroned above our beautiful country palace (and In fact on top of all Waterloo) has been foreclosed. If anyone has saved 75 cents out of the Lebauou bank be Bhould purchase this one-mule place aod turn it iuto a branch asylum with the stock right qu hand to start business with. We pause, something the majority of readers did before reading the news by D. O. Littlr. Should Be Improved. The steamer Eugeue arrived here at 11 o'clock this morning, after a slow trip up the river on account of being heavily loaded with freight. This trip of Eugene demonstrates the feasibility of river navigation the greater portion of the year on the upper Willamette. She left Corvallis with 140 tons of mer chandise and feed, the largest load ever carried by a boat above that point. Eighty-three tons were brought from Harrlsburg to Eugene. After leaving the Meeks landing, eight miles below Eugene, considerable lining had to be done to get over riffles, but as the steamer bad plenty of time to make her return trip, no chances were taken of injuring the boat by endeavoring to make better time. This should en courage our people to presistently de mand liberal appropriations for Im proving the upper Willamette. A steamboat bringing over 80 tons of freight ta Eugenet the last of June is a weighty argument In favor of river im provement. Guard. To th Ladlas, I will sell regardless of cost for the next thirty days my entire stock of trimmed and untrimmed hats. Those wishing anything In the Hue of mil nery will find It to their advantage to call early at (Mrs. uteo. Rice's. "Many of the oilizeus of Painsvllle Indiana, are never without a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy In the house," says Jacob Brown, the leading merchant of the place. This Remedy has proven of so much value for colds, croup and whooping cough lu children that few mothers who know its worth are w(iHug to be without it. For sale V w. pniiui) oruggiH, ' FOSTER ITEMS. fOTHl KOITOI OP THE EXPRESS: Mother nature still weeps, nice sun shine wears her cloak when she gathers garden vegetables. School dosed last Friday at Foster. Prof. Grimes of the Lewis district ana his school visited the Foster school and took part In the closing ex ercise. Everything weut off harmo nious and everyone enjoyed them selves nioely. Mr. A. H. Yost and two sons were up on their homestead last week and returned Saturday evening. ' Jno, Gllllland is quite poorly. Mrs. Levi McQueen Is but little, If any better. ' A force of hands are at work on the county road. 1 Mrs. O. B. Whitcomb and children think some of visiting her mother in Glendora, Cal., this summer. Mr. Whitcomb will stay In Big Bottom. More next week. . ... ,. Mart. A Bloyole Race. At Medferd last Saturday an Inter esting bicycle race occurred between Lyle Bice, the well known Ashland operator and a former resident of Albany, and .George Parker of Med fold. Rice Is a heavy man, weighing about 225. The race was between Jacksonville and Medford, a distance of five miles, and won by Parker in 16 minutes and 8 seconds. Considerable money changed hands, and had not Rice fallen at the end of a mile would have stood some show of winning. A Jail Break. Ed Scott and George Hall, who have been in the Benton county jail several weeks, awaiting the action of the grand jury, broke out about 6 o'clock this morning by cutting away a portion of the arched door at the entrance to the jail, with a pocketknife. The alarm was given by a passer-by and soon after the departure the sheriff and posse were in hot pursuit. About 8 o'clock this afternoon, the fugitives were overtaken in wheatflel(l sl1 west of town, auu uopturcu wibuoufr reaiBieuoe Governor Pennoyer. has more fun than any man In Oregon. The telegram gives the following, another evidence of the fact: Governor Pennor has been very reticent sine the late election but the news from Gallfoniahai thawed him out. When seen this morning he was glancing over a newspaper while a broad smile played over his face. "I have just been reading the criticisms of the country press on what they call "defeated Penuoyeristn," he said, "but it is only another case where all the asses think it is their chance to backup and kick at the dead lien-" The regular subscription price of the Express is $1.60 a year, and the regu lar subscription price of the Weekly Oregonlan is $1.50. Any one subscrib ing for the Express and paying one year in advance, can get both the Ex press and the Weekly Oregonlan one year for $2.00. All old subscribers paying their subsoriptlens for one year iu advance will be entitled to the same offer. Spring shades of kid gloves, Centem orl regular Hue 'and with large pearl buttons, Foster hook, Biarritz and gauntlet atS.E. Youno, Albany, Ore. These hard times we want to save all wetsau, but of course we have to eat, still you will save some by getting your groceries at 9. P. Bach's. . Bach Is not selling his clothing at cost, but still you cau get a better suit therefor less money than anywhere else, LEBANON PRODUCE MARKET. Changed Every Week. Wheat-38o. Oats 28o Hay-$9 per ton. Flour-$0 60.7fi per sack. Chop $1 00 per owt. Bran 75o per owt. Middlings $1 00 per owt. Potatoes 25o, Apples Dried, 7o per lb ' Plums Dried, 4o. Onions Sc. Beef Dressed, 6o. Veal 45e. Pork Dressed, 5. Lard-12". Hams 12J per lb. ' Shoulders 10c. Bides lie per lb. Geese $5 per dos. Ducks $4 00 per dos. . ' Chickeiie-42 253 50. Turkeys 8c per lb. Eggs---10c w doi. Butter 10 15c per lb. Hides-Green, lo; dry, Se,