HUNTING OB MONAZITE. A New Industry in the Plndmont Seotlon of North Carolina. Tbe Paopla of That Vicinity aU But Cnurr Orar tho Btraoga ary How tha Siloaral la ObtaUaad. The enthusiasm with which the Hearch for monazite Is now being pros ecuted in. the Piedmont section of North and South Carolina is something remarkable. Men, women and chll-j dren talk about It, dream about it, I search for it, and would perhaps eat it it it could be prepared so that it would hiblted at the pure food show? asks be palatable. For two hundred years Kate Field's Washington. Four hnn the plauters on the coast stumbled over I dred competing loaves all fell short of phosphate rock, which had been (ho standard, if it is reported fairly. It brought to the surface, and considered it of no value. Finally, says the Now York Sun, after the late war, a man of scientific turn of mind began to investi gate this rock, and as a result an in dustry has sprung up that now amounts U) millions of dollars annually. lu like manner gold miners year t ftar year in their search for gold ! i ing the streams of this Piedmont .vition have been finding in their pans a heavy yellowish sand which they cust aside as worthless. This has all Wen completely reversed in the last twenty months, and nowadays a pros pector will cast aside fair specimens of gold while prosecuting his search for monazite. To obtain monazite from the hundred little streams that are found in the monazite belt the prospector wits out provided with shovel and pan. With his shovel he scoops out a hole in riio bed of the stream or near by it. He r " ;oos through the alluvial deposit until lie strikes a whitish sand and gravel. Of this he takes a panful and washes it out, carefully examining quality and quantity. After prospecting in several different places, he is able to decide whether the "branch," as these small streams are called in the south, is worth working. If it promises well a trial is made. . , Contractors do most of the mining, , , taking leases and paying a royalty of from one-seventh to one-fifth. Occa- ! sionally the monazite privilege is bought ! straight out, and in some instances two hundred dollars an acre has been paid. . bametimes, however, the owners work their own lands. Common, unskilled laborers are em ployed to do the work. "Strippers" are the hands who clear away the top foil, removing all timber growing thereon. They go down to the sand aud gravel The gravel gang comes li.xt. They carefully lift out all of the r.;rmazite sand and turn it over to the washers, who get out all gravel, silver, - .and clay, leaving a mixture of heavy material behind. This goes through a second washing, and the material left is marketable monazite. The washing is done in a wooden trough from twelve to eighteen feet in length, twelve inches wide and twelve, ticep. There is a cast iron perforated plate at the upper end of the box, through which the monazite drorw. nunc uiv iigutci Bbuu auu viuy uudb away. A stream of water flows' through the box. Expert washers receive one dollar a day, but there are plenty of : men who do this work fairly well, and are anxious to work at sixty-live cents per day. Overseers and time- V keepers receive one dollar and a half. This is considered fair wages down south, where there is little demand for day labor now. ' The sand is about as current as gold dust, six cents a pound being the aver age price. It is estimated that a group ui well-managed hands will make twice their daily wages. Letters of in quiry come from all countries seeking information about monazite, and, judg ing by the number and character of these received by the geological survey . , ' 'from various European countries, the industry and the amount of money brought into this Piedmont section for monazite this year will hardly amount to less than one hundred thousand dol lars. Monazite has been found in small quantities in Russia, Norway, Bohemia, and in gold washings in Bra zil and in the mica veins at Quebec, but nowhere has it been found in such enormous quantities as in this belt. - A Gloucester (S. J.) company is the onlyconeern manufacturing monazite in this country. The value of sand de pends upon the rare metal, thorium, which it contains, which is separated from the associated material by very complicated chemical processes, which are kept secret from every one except those who manipulate the operations, It is then used in the manufacture of the private sale of a rich man s furni incandescent gas burner- of different , lure. When Anthony Drexel died there forms. . I were a lot of tilings which had personal The finding of monazite is the best reminiscences connected with them thing that has ever occurred for the which everyone wanted. It was finally poorer people of the section in which it decided to hold a family auction and is found. Hundreds of day laborers sell them to the highest bidder. The are now feeding their families with the first thing I put up was a small clock, money made in this industry. AMERICAN PLUCK. It .Was hovm at Ita Beat At Mr the fire of 18SS. "The fearful loss did not crush spir its, however, and committees were im mediately appointed to look after the interest of the citizens," says the Ship ping and Commercial List of April 13, recalling the fire which cost New York twenty-five million dollars in 1836. "One committee was to make application to congress for an extension of credit on duty bonds and for a remission of du ties; another to make application to the city and state governments; and an other on relief to those injured, and! several others for other purposes. .The : business men were not cost down.' Many had lost all they possessed, but were ready to begin again. Within a , year a multitude of warehouses and shops had been erected and the hum of industry was to be noted everywhere. Ileal estate was high Many lots when sold brought more money without build' inga that they could have been sold for bofore the fire with buildings. Tho enormous rents demanded for dry goods old-fashioned tall clocks. Chllds' eld stores In Pearl street caused the mr- est ton finally bought it for elirhtaen MJSs""4. BMLNS AND BREAD. IntolUatonoe. an Important Factor In the Bakoshop. rat Staff of Life u Prodaead by Uakara U Foaaauatt of Hot Lime Sultaln Ina; Powar A THraa-Gant Luuehaon. , . "With brains, sir," was the celebrat ed rejoinder of Sir Joshua Reynolds to ho question of an inquisitive and prob ibly shallow youiifr puinter who asked Mm with what he mixed his colors. , Is brains tho ingredient that was left out of the loaves which were ex ! more generous to believe, however, .hat the standard has been raised by m intelligence which means to educate the community. In New York a few exclusive bakers advertise "high-class bread" at high class prices; actually it is not too good. But brains in Boston, joined with broth erly kindness, have produced bread which may challenge any competition anil which Is sold to the public in tiny loaves, perhaps better called long rolls, at one cent apiece: faultless cbs bread ,. k( J it, but not sweet as the wheat can make sweeter: light and fine and close; ex quisitely baited in the mild, slow heat of a brick oven. This bread, such as the rich seldom taste, comes daily from the New England Kitchen for all who are so fortunate as to be able to send for it It is the product of the intelli gence and philanthropy of a society for the promotion of public health. When the kitchen was organized a few years ago Its first six months' working was supervised by Mrs. Mary Abcll, who had taken the Lamb prize for on essay ipon sanitary and economio cooking. This essay, accompanied by recipes and menus for the poorest wage earners, is among the publications of the Syracuse lublic health society. Proof of the economy and excellence of the cooking of the delightful Boston Kitchen may be made by anyone who hurrying, as I once was, to the Provi lcnce depot without time for lunch and with Ideas above a railway station res taurant. 1 was provided with a small paper box. I bought one of the little oaves I have just described; it nearly tilled the box. For another cent it was buttered. What else could I carry? I was offered a slice of spiced pressed meat, such as is made very poorly in some houses and called veal loaf . But ;hat was not poor, but delicate Bnd savory. It was daintily wrapped in white paraffine paper, b11 ready to be handled neatly. This was also one cent. Here was a wholesome, delicate and abundant lunch for three cents. I -.bought of Franklin, opening his career in Philadelphia with his big Dutch penny roll, and, like him, I indulged in jorne philosophizing. One hundred and llftv vears of What we call "progress" senarate us from Franklin. In those vears the era of homemade bread, with thatof homesnun clothing, has depart- And still we have no good public ! bread only the chaffy and spongy baker's loaf, overraised, nndermixed, deceitful Bnd dear. Poor men cannot be fed with such bread, and so they wash it down with spirits. We are a great people and we have the greatest chain of bikes Bnd the Wy. gest rivers and the widest wheat-fields on the globe; but we are not able to give the multitude bread until It has been turned into carbonic acid gas for the profit of the bakers. In feudal days the lord of the manor had the monopoly of the oven; no bread for the peasant but that which was baked in his oven. By the independence and competition of the laborer we have 1 atoined the privilege of starving our-: selveTbltot almost time to Ling . . V7 .1 v," ii , back to the public oven, supervised by the best intelligence of the community, and secured against the greed of com petition? There is not wanted free bread to deprave the soul, or sour bread to deprave the stomach, or high-class bread to suit the rich; but honest bread, fit to be called once more the staff of life. BIQ PRICES FOR FURNITURE. Auction! Talk of the Private Bala of Rich Aleo'e Effects. A party of auctioneers en route from Chicago to Buffalo were in the smoking room of a Lake Shore sleeper the other night telling stories. "Selling horses and farm stuff By auction is ail ngnt," said one. "but for genuine fun give me worth, I suppose, about twenty dollars. " 'IH give five hundred dollars,' was the first bid. It came from a nephew. " 'Make it one thousand dollars." in terjected a younger son. "'Fifteen hundred dollars,' replied the nephew. "The nepbew won and got the twenty dollar clock for money with which he .could have bought the finest clock in Philadelphia. I never knew what the history of the clock was, but it must have had a peculiar one. Then I put up a big arm-chair. It was the chair Drexel had sat in for over twenty years and it had a valuable association for each one of the family. A married daughter and young Anthony Drexel were the ones who wanted It the most, Bnn the bidding, which opened at one thousand dollars, was spirited and uveiy. 1 anally sola tne chair to An thony for six thousand five hundred dollars. The day's sales brought In over twenty-five thousand dollars." "I never had anything as good as that," said another auctioneer, but I told the Chllds effects in the same way. The chief contest was over one of those ZZ?Z&r COLONIES FOR tHE WEST. larpltu Population of tha East to sattla oa Arid Waataru Land. It has been years since the cry of "westward, nor nas been heard in the eastern states, and meantime the cities and thriving manufacturing centers east of the Mississippi have been rapid-' ly filling to the point of overcrowding, until labor is a drug on tho market. Mining, which attracted s many hun dreds of people from tho east many years ago, has lost itsglamour, hunting and trapping have too many devotees already to encourage more to enter this life to-day, granger life on the western soale requires too much capi tal and tho too-plentiful foreclosure of western farm mortgages has been dis couraging to those who may have been considering emigration. All these things have tended to stagnate the population of the east, and the result is alarming to all concerned, capital and labor alike. An opportunity has presented Itself at dost, through what is known as the Carey law, passed by the Fifty-third congress, by which each of eight west ern states was granted one million acres of arid land located within their borders on condition that they utilize them for agriculture, through Irriga- ! ' prove w uw Bocruuu-y ui uie 1 interior that their irrigation plans are 1 f.lw. . . . Fire of the eight states have accepted the proposition and one more is ex pected to reply favoistbly before long. The national irrigation congress, a body composed o( delegates from twenty-three western states, has appointed a national irrigation commission, which body is engaged in forming colonies to take up these arid lands and can y them on by irrigation under proper and scien tific direction. Some of the details of the scheme are given in the Boston Transcript It is the purpose of the commission to form colonial clubs throughout the east, wherever there Is a congestion of popu lation, and these clubs will disseminate information concerning the present and future possibilities of tne western coun try. It is not intended to send out sepa rate families, which would certainly become entangled in dlfllculties, if not properly directed. Whole colonics are to be organized and dispatched to fa vorable localities, with men competent to teach them the solution of the prob lem of irrigation and agriculture. These colonists it is proposed to, organ ize on the principles upon which the successful Mormon colonies were car ried on. An organization, to be known as the Plymouth colony, is now being formed to take up lands in Idaho. Each member of this colony is to furnish one thousand dollars capital. The land is to be taken in small holdings, and the whole managed on the basis of a co operative village. GOOD HEALTH OF HOBOES. Tramps Oanerally In Bettor Condlllan Tftan any Other Claaa of Paopla. Prof. John J. McCook, of Triniti col- leSe. in a recent lecture in New Haven "The Pathological Aspect of the lnunD "ooiem. irave tne louowing lUlOTCTbUlg lUUM auuui uie HilJgUVB 01 the road: "New Jersey was the first state to pass a law punishing the professional tramp and at the same time to define what he was. This was in 1878. Khode Island was the next, and Connecticut came third. A recent writer asserts that there are about 60,000 tramps in the United States. This number is a trifle large, although it is safe to say that there are over 40,000. This is larger than the army of Wellington at Waterloo. Wo look on tramps as human wrecks, as driftwood, and yet the ma jority of them are in the prime of life, ''" -veruge . P cent, of the tramps from h,om . ta'lstf .we leo" claimed in the dead of winter, while the grip was raging, that thoy were in bad health. They arc robust, and will fill you with envy, malice, and all other jealous feelings when you hear them snoring at midnight. "Eighty-one per cent, of tramps de clare that they took to the road be cause they were out of a job, and only one man because machinery took his place. Over 00 per cent, of the English tramps are givon as taking tho road because of vagrant habits. The major ity of onr tramps arc of American-birth, 86 per cent, of 1,343 being of American parentage and 272 Irish, who come next. Over 100 out of 1,7S8 tramps could read and write, and they all spend money on the daily newspapers. Out of 1,S8, only 70 are married, 67 nre widowers, and 84 have children. Thirty-eight per cent, say they work for their food, 24 per cent, beg It, and 69 per cent, that they steal it. Over 400 sleep at cheap lodging houses, and near ly 800 in police headquarters. About 100 sleep in boxes." vVhUt In Llon'i Deo. In the Hungarian menageries a fa vorite sensation scene is for four whist players to sit down and play a rubber in the lion's den, while a fifth stands by to sec fair play on the part of the lions. I thought, writes James Payn in the Illustrated London Kuwa, 1 hud played whist under all possible circum stances, and in company with the very strangest specimens of created bungs, but thiacxperience is beyond me. Some people are mode nervous by folks look ing over their heart, which (unlets they are my adversaries) docs not nlie-jt me at all, but I don't think 1 should lil.-o this from a lion; the greater nticntion he paid mo the less pleased I should feel by the compliment. I am wire I should be very much put out even if it were evoked by B mistake of my oppo nent'sif he roared. Hungarian play ers do not scorn to mind tiioso things. The other day, howover, it nppiv.n this very imorcBting pcrformasco wo ifiven once too often. The lions, with deli cate forbcuinneo, abstained, H in trno, from interfering with the player.), but they wont for tho fifth joan, whom thoy douljtlor.s considered biipcrlluoMS, and made very short work of him. In spite cf tho bcuumaeak that in often, though $xzsiztt A Clubbing Offer, A great many !' mir readers Mini nunty like to ttilif I lie wt'ckli' Ori'iMii ill. W Iihvi' in-iilc uvriiiii ill ills .In' i'V vi' cur l'ii:'iiisli ll td mvdiU'l u fr. nt-tlip fi';iiiti- piTtei- to ihiij-e w ho ,Uil llitl It tli- Kxr-lin IIMll 1 be Ji'iguiiluii. Ti." tvnuiui: 411 lei' uf till1 Oreu'iuifHii ia $!.nl it year, etui 'if Ihi Gsii'lll'SS il.fiil In ii'lviiiiei'. VV -till furnish I1.1t :t f r fi i r - If ui vniuH.' u Having I' 0111' il'dhir iln Ulwe. ipur. The OU'ipniinii gives all ilie general newsiif the eniiiili'y mice a week, mill the KxI'UKhh gives all I lie local in W8 once a wetk, which will make a must t'Xivlkiit ueux service for the moderate sum of ?2. per year. I'hiou? who nre lit priwnt milniorUieri' if the Exi'HM-8 imisl pay In all arrear ages 11 nd one jeur ill udviuiee to obtain this special price. .Nottoe of lSxeoutrix. Noiico in liurohy givon to alt whom It may concern, thai, by an unler of tho County Court for Mi in County, Blute of Oregon, tlte umlersitfned linn been duly up pointt'd and ib now the duly qualified und acting Kxmnrix of tliu lust will and testament of Eugene H. 1'lm, deceased. All parties indented to mill t'tuto arc re quested to mnko immediate pay men I- to the umlcrHigned, and all ptinif.-t Inm claims ntfiiiiist the u-ttati air hereby n quired to present tho same properly veri Hed, within six niontlis.frtmi tho ftth day n! April MV), the first puidication uf tu nolit'e, to tlit; iiiutmHigiifd at the pilicf fcfum'l M. (iurliind, Lebanon, Ore. h. J. I' DM, Ex. of tin1 last 'will and nstn:mnl Eugene II, Dim, -divinised. B.M'l .V. tiAl.MNt),-, , - Any tor Kx'-f'tir , . A elm iiiLm t r.t 1 mVi . -t Niiliit1 i In-rtii.-' iriviMi tlint the u: fdjtned has ht-urt duly n: l. u-. i-y i ('otiiity t'uurt of U;'p enmity, Mmm-. iidnin.!tn)itr ui tin- e.-iai- nf ( , (iaroutte, dv;ti:fi, (mil Im duly qiiMiiiii as such adiiiuiististior. All di-vhw U;t ii.g euiims tiga ,.-- 1 '.,v eMail ims hvu' required to preset -t Ihent, with. pro. vt vouchers, within ix months from the date hereof, tu the undersigned, at the oltlceof W, ,M. Iirown, in Lehanuu, 'Linn comity, Oregon. . Dated this !ml. duv of January, 1805 1'hll Kilter, WW.. Iirown, Administrator. Attorney fur Administrator. v ri ... ... . LIVERINE THE CHEAT LIYER, KIDNEY AND CONSTIPATION I'leacaut to lake 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 gista. . . . Whokwile Manufactures. Anchor S CiikmicalOo. Lebanon, Oregon. BARBER SHOP Bern Hliawin, Hulr Cut or HluiintoiiHl B. F. KIRK, Shaving Parlor. NEXT DOOKTO 8T. CHAULKM HOTEL. . Elegant Baths. Children Kindly Treated. 4- V' I 1 a .1 JEM r PANSY, MAYER & KIMBROUGH Have just rocoivod the (hiwst line of C.RCKKUY and ULASS WAUli evwlm.iii-.it 'to Lebanon, which tliey in vit you to call and insjnu i. Their jirico are as low, if not lower than anywhere' else, in the valley. Highest Prices Paid for Country-Produce. Insist on in packages ft Costs no more than inferior package soda never spoils the flour, keeps soft, ft tenuity acknowledged purest in I Bade only by CHURCH t CO Pew York. S aWbTsnxaratTttTWtera. 5 WrUa far Ara and Hmar Book al falnabU B,olpn FBM The Unenterprising Business Ian . , , Uses a mimll amount of Print ed HtiitiiiiH'ry and other Ad vertisiiif; irmttor, und oh o conseijiH'iioe bin btininess dies away und ho in then like tho mun whose picture appears above. The Enterprising Busi u ss Man, , Uses a great amount of Adver tising matter of all kindu. Coiisi'(iiiintly his Ihnsinoss In Oieasen nud lie .Ikioouioh an happy as tho individual who is represented by the picture just above. Job Printing of All Kinds Is done at this OHice in a Workmanlike Manner, and at Prices to Cnniiiure with the Times. Your Business will bo ; Increased by having Your Job Pr-ntlng done at this OHice. THE LEBANON EXPRESS, .i BMWARM Of Imitation trade mark nd labels. aUnHAaV, ' .W1 aaM ." and is unu the world. East and 'South -YIA- THE SHASTA ROUTE -OP TI1K- Southern Pacific Co. Kxn;ss tniins Innvc PoTtinml dully: , l):IS c ll. l.v..,l'ortlniill rtr. Hit i 10:SIM'. M. I.v... Allumy.. ..A r. I 4:iV a. 1 10:l.i A. . . r.Kiin r'rimriM'ii I.v I 7 :M) p. u j Tfiif aimve triiiiiw Mtop ul ull hiiiliiTmi Irmn j Portland lu Allumy iiii;limivtr;iilMo'riiiiuniit, j Hlicdit, Hiihey, Hiirri.Hliury, .luniitimi City, ' iiin't,' lo AhIiIuihI iiit'lusive, l!(t'!illlI limil iliiily: ':: A. 11. l,v '..I'orlliiiiir.Af."i ' "J'SO i. . I2:-JS r. M. I.v. ..Allumy Ar. 12:.Klp. M. Ji;fi(M', M. ! Ar...liui')iiirj:J)v.! 7:IU.M. I.orl iiwa)mkit IrnijiB dally (cxci'iit Hiintlny. tlM 7. J ty...AIIny..lXrrT0:XiT. 11:111 A. H. I Ar...Uliiinnli....I,v. 11:40 A M. 4:: P. M. Lv...Alliunv Ar. lt'4K u. S:a r. M. I Ar...I.uli(liiii ...I,v. fi:Kll'. M. Dining Can on Ogden Haute, ' Pin.I.MAN Bl FFJT fil.KEl'EHS AN D Sccoud-Cluss Sleeping Curs At- tni:hi:d to ull Tlirough Trains. M't Hide UIvlMloii. ' liCTIIHBN l'ojm.ANII AKUt'OBVAT,I,I, ' Mull trftin iliiily IWKupt Hundiiy): ' ' ! T:.')0 a. m. j l,v..,r.irlliind ".Ar. j (:!W',k. ; 12:llii'. M. Ar...l'i,rvitli9. ,,v, i:()0k m. At All'imv mid Pnrviillin connacit with ; Lriiliis uf (IniKiiii Pncillc nillroiiil. . , . ' liiin train doily (fxcoiit Sunday): " 4:10 I'. M. j" l.v...I'..rtlo:..! ".'"Ar!'"; 8:25 A. , 7:30 P. H. I Ar..MrMiiuivill,. U 6:M . k. THROUGH TICKETS T'o'inToi.rt.'In'Sr. . ... HiiHioni MtntoK. Con. iiila und Kuropp rim be (ihmiiicd lit luwcat rares from I. A. Ilnntietr, nnont, Lfhannu, E. P. ItoUKIIH, At. . V. k Pass. Agt. Albany Steam Laundry RICHARDS & PHILLIPS, Proprs, All Orders Receive EJrompt Attention. Special Rates for Family lashings. Sul.iHlW.r.inii ti lliil'ilnln,i.1 m Mrt. Refunded. J. F. HYDE, Agent,' XQlMN4rori a Tf rlui-n i '.';.j -