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About The Lebanon express. (Lebanon, Linn County, Or.) 1887-1898 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1895)
Leban.cu Express. H. Y. KIRK PATRICK, Editor - and - Proprietor Lebanon will have a bank. Advertise in the Express. It will bring you good returns. Lebanon's exhibits at the state fair and Portland exposition . ill be good. A small stock well advertised will prove -more profitable than a large stock not advertised. Print; ere' Ink. It may be better to bebornluoky than rich. All the same, it's mighty unlucky not to be born rich. Judge. Many people want what many others want to get tid of. The means to satisfy both is printers' ink. Printers' Ink. The season is approaching when it may rain wid it may not; but generally it may. But that m what makes our crops. There are 964 women employed in the national and state banks of the United States, and no woman bo employed haB ever yet been found to be a defaulter. A Chicago editor pays a hand some and deserved tribute to Ore gon climate and woman by re marking that "every lady is beauti ful, for her complexion is as clear as crystal aud tinted like the rose. For the climate does it. Our "new woman" has teen again heard from. This time in a divorce court in Cincinnati. A few days ago one of the number sued for a divorce from her husband. He filed an answer, He says she is one of the "coining women." He has been compelled to don an old calico apron, wash the dishes, scrub the children, attend to their oiothing and perform other acts of household drnggery which custom has releated to the sphere of lovely wumnn from time immemorial. Hoping that the court still enter tains the old fashioned idea as to man'B proper relation to a domes tic arrangement, Mr. Gravius hum biy prays -for authority to get away. In a cemetery in the suburbs of Lowell, Mass., there are five head stones all alike except the inscrip tions. The first one reads, "First wife of John Smith," and the sec ond "Second wife," and so on until the fifth stone, which reads, "John Smith, at rest at last." The people of the United States use, on an average, i2,000,000 post age stamps of all kinds every day, or a total of about 4.30,WO,OW) per annum. Insure your property with Peterson & Adnrews. Tbey are agents for the Old Reliable, Home Mutual, Mew Zealand, Springfield of Maawtcliusetls, Continental, and other good, reliable companies. If you desire to purchase property at a bargain, call on M. A. Miller. An Arkansas editor snys: "We have mountians so high that you can tickle the feet of the free silver angels in heaven, and gorges so deep that you descend to their base and hand down ice to the goldbugs in the infernal regions." i A. W. Bash, ex-collector of cus toms of Puget Sound, has returned from China with a lot of franchises and has gone east to raise money to build railroads in Li Hung Chang's domain. It is said that Li thought him the greatest of Americans, the image of General Grant, and securedtfor him valu able lights. "Get out of debt and stay out," is what an eastern Oregon editor has been preaching to the readers of his paper for some time. With wheat at the present price, the Umatilla county farmer would vote this editor a golden crown and a free pass .to heaven, if he would furnish the key to the prob lem of how to get out of debt. The farmer once out of debt will stay out. The dearly acquired exper ience of the past ,hasv, more than the lesson; "stay out of debt." A person advocating a theory, tn argument or a subject for the ad vance of mankind, is naturally supposed to be in a manner con versant with the question he is handling, and, consequently, in looked to for his solution of the problem which he hag unrayellsd. The average farmer, when once out of debt, will stay out. Bot to get out "aye, there's the rub!" Athena Press. The press association of the state of New York, in its recent annual convention, unanimously adopted resolutions rejoicing in every effort on the part of the dif ferent women's organizations to educate public sentiment in favor of a higher moral standard for the preas.and pledging its influence and co-operation; also pledging co-oper ation with the National Editors! Association iu the resolution adop ted by that body last year in refer ence to the exclusion of immoral and questionable advertisements. May the wave come westward and southward and wash our secular press. It is claimed that the press follows in the wake of public opin ion and caters to the public; in a sense this is true, but in a . more important sense the press is re sponsible for the vitiated taste it andMVori to gratify. Let the good work go ou until ths firs is LEBANON PRODUCE MARKET. (Changed Kvery Week.) Wheat S7e. Oat 12 to l5o Hay $3 to V per ton. Flour tO 7585. per sack. Chop $0 90 per cwt. Bran 76o per cwt. , Middlings tO 75 per cwt. Potatoes 25c. Apples Dried, 6c per It Plums Dried, 6c. Onions 2u. Beef Dressed, 4jc. Veal-34e. Pork Dressed, 4. Lard 10. ' Hams 10 per lb. Shoulders 8c. Bides 10c per lb. Geese $4 t6 per doz. Ducks $2 t3 per doz. Chickens $2 003 00. Turkeys 8c per lb. Eggs 15c ner doz. Butter 16 20c per lb. Hides Green, 5c; dry, 10c. MAKING OLAY PIPES. Ilow and W hero Thoy Are ManufeotiuuU An Jhitertntiffig Froews. Charles V. Muxwoll of Strowbrldjro, Hiss., In oonrornition with a St. Louis 3tnr-Sayhis reporter said: "It is popularly believed that all olny pipes are cither made in Europe or from slay brought from tho other hemisphere, but such Is not the case, as a very lorfre share of the elaypipesmrule in America are from clay found at and near Wood bridge, N. J. Tho clay comes by tho earload and the first step toward pre paring it for molding is to sufficiently dampen it with water to make it plia ble. This is done by placing it in a tank, where it soaks for about twenty four hours. It is then hammored with iron bars, thus ridding it of any lumps or dry chunks, Then the molding be gins. The workman takes a lump of clay in each hand and by squeezing and rolling it molds the pieces into a rough stem about three times as large as tha finished pipe atom, having a rough bull at its end. These rolls, as they are called, ore piled on wooden trnys, six teen to each tray, after which they are dried, either by the sun or by artificial means, according- to the weather. Aftc; having been dried, not to hardness but sufficiently to dispose of all superfluous , dampness, the rolls are ready to have the stem drilled and the bowl formed. To drill tho stem the workman holds u small iron rod the size of the stem holes, and with his left hand pulls the clay roll over the rod instead of shoving the rod through the stem. To do this the workman is guided solely by the sense of touch in his linger tips, and that sense is so accurate that the hole is in variably made correctly. The bail at the end of the roll is turned up, and then roll and rod are placed In an iron matrix which presses the pliable clay into the desired outside pattern. The matrix and ite contents are placed in a hand press, and the workman, by pull ing a lever, forms tho hole of the pipe bowl. The molded pipe, still soft and pliable, then passes to the hands of the trimmer girls, who scrape off the super fluous clay, making the joints of the matrix. Then the pipes are placed in fire-proof clay sajrger and the loaded saggers are placed in a large furnace. I Ins furnace has eight flues at the bot tom, and the six sheets of flame at tiki bottom concentrate at the top, tluvi making tho heat even throughout. Until the pipes go into the furnace thoy are blue in color, but when they come out they arc puro white." Catarrh Cannot be Cured, with LOCAL AU'LIOATIONS, as they cannot reach the scat of the disease. Ca tarrh Is a blood or constitutional diseaw, and in order to cuic it you must take inter nal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, aud acts directly on tho blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this coun try for years,, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the beat tonics knnwn, combined with tho best blood purillers, acting directly on tho mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two Ingred- Inets Is wtia: produces such wonderful re sults In curing Catarrh, Bend fur testimo nials, free.- K. J. CHENEY & CO., Props,, Toledo, O. sTWoold by druggists, 75c, Final Account. Notice is hereby given that the under- signed administrator of the estate of John M. J. Jiveall, deceased, has tiled his -final account in the above named estate, with the clerk of the county court of Linn coun ty, Oregon, and the court has fixed Biuur day, the 12th day of October, 1890, at 11 o'clock a. m., at the county court room, at Albany, Linn county, Oregon, as the time and place for hearing objections, if any, to saiJ account and the settlement of said estate. J. H, Lovsall, This 2nd Sept., 1806. Admr. BiM'L M. Uablaud, Atty. for Admr, k Prof. A. STARK Of Will & Stark, Jewelers Optical Specialist. Graduate of the Clcug.) Optlialmic College. I am prepared lo examine scientifi cally and aecuratly, by the latest aud improved methods of modern science, any who desire to have their eyes tested. Oueick Block, Albany, Okgoon. Final Account. Notice is hereby given, that the under signed executor of the estate of Moses Bland, deceased, has filed, with the clerk of the county court of Linn county, Oregon, his final account in the above named estate: and that the judge of said court has fixed Monday, the 4th day of November, 18ft), at 11 o'clock a. m of said day, at the county court room of said county, as the time and place for hearing objections, if any there be, to said account and the settlement of said estate. Ghoboi II. Bland, This25th,day Executor of estate of of Sept. 1895. Moses Kland, dee'd, Bah'i, M, Gakukd, Atty. for Executor. ... BRAIN WORK AT N1QHT. Unless It Is ImjMmUve It Should llo Avoided. To the Imaginative young writer there if uf .iseination about the quietude of uninterrupted night work until much of it ) ni icliicf has been done. If ho has c ffc-.rl daily occupation, or is pop ular among his friends, the night offers tho best chance for continued applica tion by its quietness and peace. This very cessation of life's turmoil and the resulting feeling of ease should be ac cepted as nature's preparation for rest Unless it is imperative night work lioold be avoided, says a writer in, tho Herald of Health. It must be impera tive to the staff of morning papers, and the question thus assumes importance of accomplishing the work with tho least possible expenditure of vital force. While by working during the day per sistently and deliberately an enormous amount of copy can be thrown off, that produced after midnight absorbs the best part of the writer's vitality. When he should be in the prime of his faculties he is nervous, suffers from in somnia, aud his overtaxed nervous sys tem cannot rest, even in artificial sluia ber. The natural temptation is to ap ply the whip of stimulation to the jaded brain; but thii is dangerous, and at the best only a transient and uncertain remedy. The imagination answers fit fully to this kind of forcing, the next day's critical judgment of the results almost certainly will be unfavorable, and the mental excitement thus induced will probably be extravagant. Try to mituin the brain under such stress rather than to excite it. AdminlHtrlotrlx'a Notion. Notice is hereby given, that by onler of the county court of I. inn county, Oregon. the undersigned has been duly appointed and is now the duly qualllled acting admin istratrix of the estate of W. A. Bishop, of said county, deceased. All parlies having claims against said estate are hereby re quired to present the same, duly verified to the undersigned, within six months from the 12th day of July, 1805, the first publication of tnis notice, at the office of Sam'l M. Oarlaud, 1-ebnuon, Oregon. Hahnah Jt. Bishop, 8m'l M. Garlahu, Administratrix ' Atty. for Admr'x. of the Estate of W. A. Bishop, deceased, Conservatory of Music ALBANY COLLEGE, ALBANY, OREGON. Prof. Z. M. Parvin, musical Director formerly of Willamette Uuiveislty,lias been elected Director for tho coming school year. Full Courses in the Important brandies of Music. Latest methods, Flnetnuslo rooms. Price low for grade of work. Diplomas eonfered on completion of course. Term begins September 11th. Bend for circular and aaUtlogue. W, H. LEE, A. M., Pres., Albany, Qrom SOMETHING ABOUT BLONDES. An Observing Gotham Conductor toys They Arc Careless About Their Hair. She was a big, tall blonde, with square shoulders, a narrow waist, pat ent leather shoes and a swagger air that would have taken the train along by it self. She got in the oar t Twenty eighth street, got off at Fourteenth ctreet, and between the two stations she picked up .four hairpins from the cross seats of the car and bid them in her taffy-colored back hair. The bltf brakemau in charge of the car said to a New York Telegram Reporter while he stood near the platform: "Did you see the big blonde pick up the hairpins? Well, there are a great many women who do that same thing every day, and there arc some of them that we know simply because they seem to find plssis ureiu taking odd hairpins and using them." . ''Are there so many hairpins to be found on the elevated cars?" asked the reporter. "Why, their name is legion," said Ned, "and most of them are to be found cither early in the morning or late in the afternoon, It is peculiar how many of these same hairpins, which are found all over the car seats, are the gilt ones used by blondes, It is generally sup posed that there are three brunettes to me blonde, yet it is a peculiar fact that wc pick up more hairpins for the use of blondes iu the elevated cars than we do black ones, and that is the reason that the lady who just got out of the ear found so many hairpins that she could use." Hailmlllan's nose. : Apropos of the recent train robberies an old story told on Maximilian is re called: When Maximilian was emperor of Mexico he broke up trail robberies by a trick. He disguised three hun dred soldiers as peasant women and placed them on a train. A gang of bandits stormed tlm ,), three hundred dlsgubud soldiers ros ad fired a volley that killsd , bum M robbers, Afii..!! faj MM but aolritat..-. J. I . ' The Champion Mills Do a General Exchange Business (living 40 lbs. best Flour I , ,, ,,,, Or Wlbs. 2nd grade " For 1 """.wheat. Always prepared to give the highest cash prices for wheat on wagon or wheat stored. seed wneat cieanod or chopping done on any day in the week. Retail dealers should call and get our lowest prices on flour and feed. G. W. ALDRICII LEBANON, ' . OREGON. MARK SjJJr Fetherbone Corsets Better Than All Other 1st. Thoy Fit Hotter 2d, Tliey Wear Hotter.- 3d. They nro More Stylish, 4th, Thin- are Chen nor, 5th. They are More Comfortable, jMS1S1 fir MANX New Mo lei Merchants i dives ' "utliorliswJ ... . $00.- Cm fk$i$:1$$m to 4 Styles, t ' money i tTi trial If not J""1? Tw Satlsfao terials.V-' .-r viaTW. " II IIWM Featherbone Corset (. Sol IISQUIaolurvrl, KALAMAZOO, M1CHI0AN. roa sal iv Short Lengths, Beat Ms HIRAM BAKER, The Leading Denlor In Is Your Child Going to College? Have him fitted at the SAHTIAM ACADEMY Thourough preperation for all collegiate courses. Certificates admit to the leading Colleges on the coast. Normal Department gradu ates obtain Stale and Life di plomas. Music, Art, Book keeping. Specialties, health and outdoor life, small clas ses and instruction for the in dividual. Winter term opens Sept 23. Tuition $6.50 and $10.00 per term. Send for catalogue, S. A. .HANDLE, A. M., Principal. (STARTLING LOW PBICER IN HARNESS and SADDLERY Power & Tomlinson ARE THE LEADERS. Having consolidated the two entire stocks of E. L. Power and J. L. Tomlinson. Now located .on Second Street ALBANY OREGON. 0iv thaw i full Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots, Shoes, Notions, Etc Lebanon, Oregon. jp28SeS,S3aESSlSfeS8eSs&c m - ' . . i - "3 RIPAAS 01 E . I 1 G IVES RELIEF, I to . w GIVES RELIEF. Albany Furniture Co. (INCORPOKATED) BALTIMORE BLOCK, Albany, Oregon. Furniture, Carpets, Linoleums, matting, etc. Pictures and Picture molding. Undertaking a Specialty. ALBANY COLLEGE. On the 11th of September, the Collece onmmd fnr it twenty-ninth year, with a full corns of instructor, nnrl oil facilities for obtaining a complete education, Tho commer cial department is open for those who are aiming to pursue a business career. Careful attention will be paid to those who desire to enter our Normal coarse A Conservatory of Music under the efficient management of Prof. Z. M. Parvin has been established. " Collegiate courses leading up to the degrees of A. and B. 8. Catalogue on application WALLACE H. LEE, A. M., President