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About The Lebanon express. (Lebanon, Linn County, Or.) 1887-1898 | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1895)
Lebanon Express. FRIDAY, APRIL , IR95. IN UNION THERE IS STRENGTH. Let All Pull Together, and tin Future .' it Oure. We publk-h lu full the letter of Hon. C. B. Montague Id respouK to the Oregon ion's Invitation to give his views oo the future prosperity of the state. The letter has been widely read and uulveriully complimented. LEBANON, Or., April -.(Editor Oregnnian.) In reply to yotir letter of 27th utt., asking for an expression as lo the uinel t-Beotive means of prouiot lnir industry throughout the state, I would say: First Encourage home nianuntet urea. Let each and every OregoniaB give the preference to the home uiauo fnulurvd article first, last and all the time, We have the raw materia! in great ahuudancr; magnificent forests, Iron, eoul, wood, wisil, plentiful water power; cheap binds, labor at a moder ate it; the finest farming lands In the world capable of supplying abun dant fond for a bust of employes. Why should not Oregon be the greatest manufacturing center in the United ritates? We should be large manu facturers and exporters of nearly everything that goes hi make up the nee usuries of life, Let the fadt tie heralded t the world tliat Orepiliian are iiitenw ly hijal to Oregon and t" Oregon prodUiis, and capital will toon Ik rem timid about making invest- luentK; manufacturing industries will lie inaugurated, the laboring claaee will find steady and profiiahle em pbn uietit, and tlie farnier, Instead of seeking a market at Livermol, sixteen thouand miles away, will sell his surplus producti at h a own door at remunerative prices. Second What is the grateat draw back of the stale? And how can it be overcome? The timidity of capital. caused primarily by the demonetixa- tiun of silver and the utter demoralisa tion of all values, more especially of the products of the farm ill conse quence then f. There cau Ik iio re storation of confidence until the ques tion in tiled. It is, I think, conceded by all that restored confidence must precede a prosperous condition of our people. . ...- i .. -Bow should agriculture be di versified or made more profitable? As the growing of wheat baa become un profitable, the fa, meat f this section of Oregon are very gravaly considering tbi queelion, and we hope It will be fully and intelligently answered by some of the successful farmers who have tried experimental cultivation in that direction. ' Hfreliifnre. wheat was the principal cereal grown. Every thiru year the land -was summer fal lowed, thus be'ng one-third nf. the time idle. This Dial bod Of cultivation was, I think, ciinderhed by the pro fessor of agriculture at the United (Stales experiment station at Corvallis, who holds that rotation of crops Intel ligently planted will never impoverish the soil, but will act rather as fertili zers, and that all agricultural land should produce some kind of crop coin tinnously from year to year, as say, wheat, potatoes, clover, oais, root crops, etc., in rotation. The professor dwt It largely on the advantage of feed ing cattle, sheep and swine on the furro, and on the fact that, with im proved breeds of stuck, farmers eould even now at the present low prices of Iwef. mutton and pork, make good money on their Investiuetiia. My own ; Impression la that his ideaa were i worthy of a fair trial. Our farms in Linn county are loo large for that careful cultivation which is the rule In . England and on the continent of Eur ope. The state will I more prosper ous when farms arc cut down to from leu i. fifty aremeach. We have with in u rachuaof ix miles of Lebanon as tine fruit laud as can be found any-uik-h ... 'limit crops along the rich laitiUuf (he&inliani bottom yield so largely that I would lie afraid In men tion how ninny loot of carrots, beets, ttiriiltw and potatoes they produce to the acre, a hit pniiipkina and squash grow to ennrmoua proportions. Il takes but a few acres of such land to produce a supply of food for a uuniber of animals. There is always good omrket fir fat cattle, sheep and hogs, ' and the products uf a well coudneted dairy huve always found a read sale in Oregon. Are there III Oregon material and a murk t for manufactories? To the Bret part of the query I answer uti- . hesitatingly, yes, and, if Oregiilaus will lie true o their stale, true to tin iiiK'lveK, iiud true to each other I might safely answer yes to the Utter part of the question. Portland on the Willamette should rival Glasgow on the Clyde lu shipbuilding. Demoust- rale that Oregon's forest can furniab at a moderate cost the beat timber in the world; that your Oswego iron works and the mountains of iron in otuer accessible portions of the slate have an unlimited supply if that Val uable metal jtlia! your weter-powsr at i)uji!yjiielisuitlble. . Let such men sb DdirhM Mscleay. or Captain George Pojie, or three or four hundred others of your Intelligent and brju'd-niinded oitlxeus reflect that It was through the indomitable pluok of the merchants of Glasgow that the little inland town of 1700 has become the second commer cial city in the United Kingdom of Great Britain aud Ireland, and I be lieve the greatest shipbuilding center in the world. Tour merchants can, If they will, do a great deal lu this direc tion for Portland, and thereby do a power of good to the entire state. We need clothing manufacturers. Woolen mills we have. Their product it excellent, am1 Oregonians should wear Oregou goods. We need tanner ies. Butchers and farmers realise but little from the tale ot hides. Manufact ories for boots and shoes should be established. Millions of dollars are spent annually by the people of Oregon for footwear. They can be made In Oregon as well and. as cheaply as else where, sad by buying from Orego nians goods of Oregon manufacture we keep the money at home, to be re turned to the farmer consumer when he sells the operatives the necessaries if life ratted on the farm. We need sugar refineries, machine shops, wagon shops in fact, we need to have everything we now import, manufact ured in Oregon. Desirable Immigrants will seek our prosperous state and gen ial climate. These, with the great In flux of people from the lees-favored states of the Union, will give us a per ibj Bent d contented pnpUlaUou who will.aasist materially In developing a horns market for our" manufactured products, and create good homes for themselves on the five to forty acre tracts into which the large (arms of the state will then he subdivided. While in favor of granting all reas onable concessions towards the pro moting of msnufaoturing Industries, I doubt that the wisdom of granting subsidies to them, although that ques tion might very properly be left to the communities effected. Industries al ready established should most cer tainly be encouraged; but this encour agement should not prevent us from iuviting all the capital into our state state which our great resources, al most wholly undeveloped, warrant us in believing could be n.'.re rofllably employed in legitimate enterprises than in any other state In tho Union. Lank of a fellow feeling between city and country, foster-d largely by the pmfussl mal politician, t'Ut with out any real foundation, has beeen the baue of Ore son. 'i'he press of the state should inculcate the fact that the interests of town and country are Iden tical, although working on different lines All are interested in getting out of the present rut. In union there is strength. Let us all, as loyal citi sens of Oregon, pull together to ao- eommplish this moat desirable end. Charles B. Montague. - STATE AND COAST. Taken From Our Exchanges Through out the Northwest. The Seal Rock school district is raising $80tl fur a school house on bonds. Marshfield expect a good many horses from the valley at its sum mer race meeting, which begins July 3. " The-Forest Grove ,nKjkcrusher has started up work at Dilley. A good coating is to be given the Gales creek road. ? IPeter Euney, the proprietor of Foley Springs, Lane county, is at last' convalescing from a protracted illness.- , . . '' the coming municipal campaign in (Grants Puss promises to be cluttered up with an independent reform ticket. . Mrs, Joseph Dixon died at her home on Oak creek, neur Corvallis,. last week. She was born in Miss ouri in 1830, and came to Oiegon in 1853. Porrett & Co.'s store at Dundee was entered by burglars last week, and their safe was broken open and rifled. The thieves succeeded in getting only about $50. The Lincoln Caunty Record starts in this week 7 at Newport. With commendable self control, it denies Use f a salutatory, and prints - an exhaustive statistical article ou Lincoln county. - George Bartley is building s road around the summit ot Talla- uiook bead, where he bas, -with in finite labor and enterprise, made a comfortable' home out of an un promising claim. William Leueni, who is working a. claim on Tennessee-gulch, has, it is thought, one of the be4 paying mines tn Southern Oregon. He was in Canybnville recently with 1700 or C80U in gold dust tafcsa LANGUAGE OF 1 HE! HEN, Kotvt of Warning, Calls So 4lnnv anil Otbsr Mstliodf at Conilatiulmtlon. The ordinary domestic fowl affords the moat positive evidence of the pos cession of a language that k nnder ntood, says a writer in the rittslmr?h Dispatch. There are many decidedly diftcront calls, which if token dowu in a phunograph and repented hi a hen house, or yard would produce Interest ing results. I need but mention a few colls to illustrate the range of sounds in the domestic fowls. On a warm day, when hens are released from their coop, when thoir minds are undisturbed and all nature looks bright and Inviting,, they sing as they feed a continuous repetition of kerr-korr-kerr, with vari ous modulations. The rooster never utters It, nor the mother hen; it is the ong of the happy-go-lucky ot hen cre ation. Now let a hawk appear in the sky or any disturbing clement; an en tirely different sound is heard. The hen stops, Btretches her head upward, and, with the cock, utters a decided note of warning hi a high falsetto, k-a-r-r-r-el And if the enemy still comes on It is repeated, and every bird in the vicinity lowers its head and runs to cover. The sound says in the gallu s language: "An enemy is coming, run!" and run they do, the korr-kerr-kerr be ing discontinued only when all danger 1b past. Koto the joyous call of the hen that has laid an egg. Cut-cut, ca-da-cntl cornea oft repeated from the hen bouse, and other envioua hens are in formed beyond any question or mis take that Mrs. Oallus turn laid an egg. Now, when the eggs are hatched we have other and maternal notes. There is a deep, monotonous cluck! cluck! that la a warning to others and a gen eral admonition of the chicks to re main near, but it is not a call. Note the difference when the mother or proud cock finds a worm. The cock appears to be greatly excited, and he pretends to peck at it, make the guile less hens believe that he is about to de vour the bonne bouohe himself; ali the time he is saying cut, out, out come, come, come rapidly, which causes the hens to rush pell-mell in his direction, to find in many instances nothing, being merely a device to call the flock away from some rival. But in the case of the mother the little ones always rind some tidbit which she has discovered. I will not attempt to produce the baby talk of the old hen to her chicks, unfit exists in great variety and is suggest ive of tenderness, affection and solici tude. When the hen has her brood be neath her ample fold she often utter a sound like e-r-a-w-z-s-e of half warn ing and contentment. And when an intruder enters the coop after dark she utters a high, prolonged whistling note Hire w-h-o-o-e, softly repeated, indica tive of wonder and slight alarm. If now the fox or coyote or other enemy seize her how quickly comes an entirely different cry a scream of ter ror and alarm, c-i-a-i-a-i-o-n, repeated a;?ain and again, and so full of mean ing that the owner, sontft distance away, reaches for his shotgun and answers the signal of distress. NEW USE FOR AN ALARM CLOCK. Employed by the Old (n to Sana Ilk. Ihiutf i,tr'. Uean llama. A young man stood in the portico of sn apartment house In Washington park, Brooklyn, the other evening, and . on the atep above him stood a pretty girl, says the New York Bun. It was late and the street was deserted. De spite the darkness it was apparent to the occasional passer-by that the young man had the daintily gloved right hs-nd of the young woman within his own, while his left hand rested over it like 1 cover to keep it guarded. The young man was apparently trying to say good night and the young woman evidently could not hear him, for ahfc was bend ing her head close to his. They stood in that attitude for pearly fifteen min utes and might have been discovered in the same pose by the gray dawn of the morning hod not something intervened. That something was round and bright, and it came out of a sixth-story win dow. ' It descended slowly, the moon light shimmering on Its silvery surface and making it conspicuous. Boon it could be seen that it was on a string and was being lowered by an elderly woman. When it dangled over the portico there was a sudden bur-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-ring and the voung man and young woman parted like an over strained Hawser. The young man seized the round and bright object? which was still ringing, and held its face to the electric light The bands on the alarm clock wereclasped at mid night He raised his hat to the young woman, murmured two words in a low tone and disappeared. The alarm clock was hoisted up, but the young woman was upstairs before it finally reached the open window. King Joseph, in one of his letters, tells his imperial brother of France that the people of Naples have begun to love their new sovereign and that they hate the old queen. To this Na poleon replies by cynically advising his brother not to believe any of the non sense talked by courtiers as regards popular likes or dislikes for particular individuals. They are mere evanescent expressions of feeling, upon which it is quite unsafe to depend. "What" he adds, "one nation really hates is another nation.'' We fear there is a profound truth in this saying. National hatreds are never obliterated, though they are sometimes temporarily concealed by the personal popularity which a par ticular man or woman may gain in a foreign country. Caoaoa of fsmM If, At Edinburgh, Scotland, there is on exhibition an ancient cannon, knows as Mans Meg. It was constructed to order for James II. of long bars of iron, hooped together. The balls fired from it were of granite. Meg has sees much service. It was first used at the capture of Thrieve castle, when the Douglases surrendered at the second shot James IV. employed this weapon is 1469, and again in MVT la 1689 it became unfit lor slogs worn, !r&$ nmmi BABY-WING MACHINE, A (SnuUn tn a Mint.: i sine Boon That Has Bad Wi:n,:rTiil ltraultt. There is now boing exhibited In Lyons, Franco, a queer nuuilnne that has been adopted by tho government In the Publlo Maternity hospital in that city. It is an apparatus for saving tho life of young babies, and the success it has attained there recomiuuuds It strongly hore. Over two hundred and fifty thousand babies, aged less than oue year each, die annually lu the United States, saya the New York lb-ess. The mortal enemy of babyhood is eold. To that all children are more or less susceptible, and the u-rculurity of temperature for these little beings while their organs are in proeesB of for mation or strougtheuing is the princi pal cause of the loss siiMaiued by the thousands of families in this country. The machine is merely a large box made from galvanised zinc and stand ing on iron legs. Tho construction provides for perfect ventilation and ab solute purity of air. There are no angles or interstices inside whore poi sonous germs might find lodgment, and s thermometer is suspended inside tho glass front so tho actual temperature is regular and uhvuys high, generally one hundred and twunty degrees, or even more for very young babies, and so graduated down, as the in taut be comes oldor and stronger. The re quired degree is obtained automatical ly, and the heated air is created by gus, petroleum or electricity. The babies He or sit in a oradlo, sus pended like a hammock inside the ma chine, and the most scrupulous atten tion is given the cradle and its sur roundings, so it is as ncnt os anything can be. Dr. Linn, the inventor, the oldest child treated by this ap paratus was six and one-haif numUis. and hod been brought up from birt h In this way. The doetor oluirtui tho child was nearly dead when born, and hud it not been for this treatment it would not have survived nt oil. The appearance of the babies Is said to be exceedingly interesting and charming. They look so perfectly fresh and rosy and seem to enjoy thoroughly the warm climate in whioh they iiiui themselves. Dr. Lion claims that during the three years he has been perfecting this, machine he lias s;:ved three 'hundred babies that would ittherwiw have !i 'd, and this is oipiity percent, of the entire number brought to b!m. lie believes that had these infants been left to the ordinary treatment, not one would have survived. THE PERIDOT. A FfmIoub Mime Vtth I, U diiat Now tlici Fail of tho riu'hUiiwhle, A precious stone on which the decree of fashion has, a', the t r-'sont moment, seta fancy value ia the p.ridot, or "evening emerald," i:u it has been called. It h certainly a lovely Btono, with its exquisite shudesof transparent green, the best, au.';ge.'-tion of wlioiie hue is the effect prodievd by looking ut the light -through u delicate leaf. - lieweicrs suy that the, peridot In a apecies of olivine, of the same chtr-4 the beryl, acjuamririn- r.i-d topax awl thatili:,,iiUuet, tw-a at 'Loprisuoii, ' otherwise known as the ehrVKuIite, It is found in Egypt, CevLm and lirusrl. good crystals bun;' c.-;;reme:y u-e. Uf ita various shades oi green olive, leaf, pistachio, or loel:--ia:: eb-ur k-uf green a the most admired a:, a rule. At a recent la;,;;.''.li:!Lie y.-i.-.l(inijr one of the most beau.iuii r.nd co.v -y of tiuri presents Win; a u ' of orlm,:;- ",;.i :um- pouedof peridot;!;-- in urn vii the : bieudiii of tiie Mo;t mauve i'n:;i was '. exqubiiciy an-Lslic I Of ell the precious :.i,;ii,-s the peridot ! is the laust diiiicnlt to p'iH.,;i. vei the i 1 jilaiUlpliia Timcii. 'i'hv iin, ta-.v h iaj given on a copper vU. -;i. i..li;.', r.ed J with sulphuric ecSd. 'iim tenths peculiarity of bccom'.ii.'iiohii.it'. ,ime-' times it is cut U row 1 Jii.1. ov enj caboclion, like the carbuncle, but It is! bettor und more vniu.'ihUi when woi-lted j in small steps, as the briliiauee is there by inerea d. MIXED THE POETS UP. The Hlffh School l upli'p Krror nntl tho Contusion Wtiii-ii I dHhwimI. Now that the "sweet Wile girl grads" of last year's aureus) etas ru e being crystallized into tke prim s-.-itwIURtriiia of years to come, too neKsr-filimr sto ries, true and.othonvi;;, funny kii,1 :.np posed to be, of el:;s., iiiiils and J.ih.-rers are cropping out nrr! U-irr; i-.-.l h ;! to the already great volume of ",;; as She Is (Spoke." One of the latest comes from the high school ami is fuut ened by the Washington .1 "o.it mi a sweet-voiced lisping yonth, ivitii on in cipient mustache- and a fitrlivc fftvnce' that will wander toward the ;UW Bide of the study hall. They v.e.o being called up the other day by the jUnglish literature teacher and examined as to their memory of last yeur's work, and the sweet-voieed ymitli w:ii:.,:t.'d .or a quotation from fieott. lie sUirted bravely enough, but mixed his authori ties before he finished: Oh, woman, in thy hour.-; uf eftw, Uocert:tla, coy, sml ti-uil to pluane; But Been too of t, f;;ui:ii:;r K-rtti Uiy face, We ftrutondure, then pity, tlim oitibr.ice. The conclusion was entirely too much for the class, tho rul-iietiocd cot-porul from D company exploded in a regular vacation luugh, the rent of tiio room, including the teacher, followed suit, and the sweet-voieed youlif collapyed, vowing he would never memorize an other quotation so long us lie lived, Mfltai awl turtlimiTvuro HoliJnrod, A new electrolytic method (ft eeat use to plumbers is the joining of metal to earthenware. The earthenware should have an unrjuized sm-fuee, hut if otherwiM! the ,gli:?.c , is removtil aud the surface coated with pliim baro and placed iu an electro lytic bata, thus oUamiiiK a metal lic seating. To t'irii ooatinff the lead pipe can lie soliiorcd in tho or dinary way by means of o pluinbur's "Wiped" joint. This process, it is ouid, will probably super-a. :lo tho use of rubber sleeves, wushers and putty, glth whleh jmpsrtsflt JoluU ar(tB LIVERIKE THE GREAT LIVER, KIDNEY UND C0HSTIPAT10H CURE. Pleasant to take by old or young, No griping. The root of the Liverine plant is extensively used in Norway for the cure of Piles. Sold by all first class drug gists, Wholesale Manufactures. Anchor S Chemical Co. J elanon, Oregon. The Yaquina Route. OREGON PACIFIC RAILROAD, Chas. Clark, Reoslvar, Direct Line Quick Dispatch Low Freight Rates. Connecting with steamer Ho mer between , Yaquina and Ban Francisco. For freight and passenger rates apply to any agout. Chas. J. Hexdrys, Sun & Co. Nos. 2 to 8, Market St., Ban Francisco, Cal, Chab. Olaiik, Receiver. Corvnllis, Oregon. Buy you tickets East over the N. P. H. It of W. C- Peterson, Local ageut. UiMMolutlon Notice. Notice in hereby iriven that the partner ship heretofore existing: between P. 11 H111 it 1 1 and U. M. Weatfall, known as Smith A: Wentfall, and the iartnerflliip heretofore existing between v. M, Hniitb aud G, M. Westfull anil A.b'niphrey, known as Smith, Wentfull 3l Umphrey, both jiartneriihips be ing enjruKed in the Livery & Feed business in Leliunon, l.inn county; Oregon, were on the 12th day of February 1SD5 dissolved, P. M. Smitti with drawing from said (irais. ti. 51. Wentfull and A. Unipbrey will con tinue the Hume bushiess at the same places, us West full A- I'lnprey. All parties indebted to the old llruis are eameetlly requested to settle at once. P. M. Smith, 0. M. WSSTPALI,, A. UHransv, First publication, Feb. 22, 1886. ArlmlHlmtrutor'a Notloe. Notice is hereby given that the under- signed has been duly appointed hy the t.'nunty Court of Linn county, Oregon, the administrator of the estate of A. V Oaroiitte, deceased ; and baa duly qualified as such administrator. All persons bav- ing claims against the estate are hereby required to present them, with proper vouchers, within six months from the date hereof, to the undersigned, at the ollice of V. M. Brown, in Lebanon, Linn county, Oregon. Dated this 22nd. dav of January, ldOfi. Phil Kilter, W. M. ltronn, Admlnlitrator. Attorney lor Administrator. A Clubbing; Offer. A great many uf our readers Linn county like to tuke the weekly Oregon. inn. We have made arrangements iv hereby we can furnish It at s reduot ion from the regular price to those whu want both the Exi'KESo and the Ori-gonliui. The regular price of tin Oregonlaii Is $1.6X1 per year, and of the Exi'itKfs $1 .60 when in advance. We will furnish bntli f r tt per year lu udvnuce a saving of one dollar to tin Hiil.HC. IjnT. The Uregniihni gives al the general itewsof the country onim i week, mill the ExPRKtn gives nil tin loeul news once a week, which wll imilie a most excellent liens servlo for the moderate sum of t2. per yeiu Those lin are at present subsorlber if tnu Kxi'Hisi- must pay lu all arreur iigei and one ear lu advaUe lu olitalu UitiSriTMl ' East and South VIA- ' - , THE SHASTA ROUTE OP THE Southern Pacific Co. - KxprenK trui: leave Pnrilued dully: II: IS P.-u I ..... i . !w I0:!U r. m. hi... v 10:16a a. I M'.i- I nn The uliove irni j.-. -ion II'. S;-.-()A. ...lr, 4: a. a '"eo LvJjntlOKii nil .vtiiniihs troiu iviiiil-io'tniigiilit. Portland to All n v ii i l BliHlit, Hul-el. ilinrUlnu-i!. Jinu-tiini I'ily, Irvine, KliKene it il nil titliniiM iruill Itos'e. hurg to AsIiIiimI ini-lu-ive. iiosel.urg liiliil -iiinli-: '!. . I.v ..I'.iribii.il ... tr " 4:9lrrii. ll-M p. H. : l.v,..AiiiOi.l Ar, i 2:0 P. N. 5:60p.m. Ar...lt'etiirg.l.v.-i 7 :(Hf a. m. Liiciil iiAHspiiiier tntti iluilv ti-xi-put SiukIh.v, 1:20 a. m. I.v....-Mliiirv Ar, ; uMii.n. 1:11) A. K. I Ar.,.lelmiio! ..l,v. i) :-H1 a.m. 1:30 P. u I I.V...AII11111V :lr. I KM p. u. ill) P. H. J Ar.UIiiiiiiu ,..l,v, I G:fK) p. M. Dining Can mi ("( Mnutr. PlthUIAN Til fl -"I Pl.I-MTHS -AND-- ' Second CliifR Sleqmi Ci?t At-: tnelu'd to all Tlimugh Trnimt. t Went KWI DlvUlon, BeTWERK I'0I:TI,iN11 Ati ('01tVAI,I.lH. Mi.il truth ilt.il IfS ' l butnlayj: 7r3ll If "1 "t.v l..uliM,ir .r R flR u 12:16 P. st. I Ar.-.t'iirvulllti" Lv! 1:1)0 f. . At Allimie Olid Ciirviillis eoiineel ultlt trains uf Oreiron t'iicitie niilroiiit, F.Xiresb train daily ii'M-cjit Hmulay): 4:i(0p. H. j l.v...l'.irlliiil ...Ar. : a. . 7:36 r. a. I Ar.Mi-Mhmvillr- l.vj IkISO a. m. THROUGH TICKETS'1'""" i- ida anrt Knmjic can Ire otiititiird nt lowest rftfeu from I. A. Hmmcft, lurciit, U'liumm, K. P. ll'KiKI'ti. Aunt. (i. 1". A I'iihh, Atn. To Advertisers. IfyotMvirth to ulitiiin the licst returns from vottr -advortisciiiciits Don't Forget the important fact tlittt The Lebanon Express will give the desinvl rw.i'ts, ns it Is The Best Advertising I"edium in Linn County,' Albany Steam Laundry RICHARDS & PHILLIPS, Proprs, A.llany, Or(.';on All Orders Receive Prompt Attention. Special Rates for Family Washings. Satisfaction (itiiii-iuiteed or Money Unfunded. "j. E. ADCOX, Apent, In Hinltli's Drug Slurp. I t-llH 114111, 4-4-A4ll. .. Notice, " , Blitekstiilt.il wiiiited, one who tinder lntidH geiii-rnl Jihn'lisiiillh work mul I'speelully lliineshoelliK tllo euu do wood work for I'l'imlrtng of wugoisi mid nmclilnery, will - furm-li nlmp free ifeharge for one ye,- r, I'nn frnlii I lite a it Itrn I m t nf tools. For I'm I her Information write . , At J llAMtl.TO.,, Mnll'-.V, tlrvgoll Notice. . ' ' All permiu.i Itii iii !ni' thetiiii. Ivis in li liletl to mi- will pleiisi i-ull mul with it unite as I need my mnni-y. Jin KuU,MltWMKlk