. I jffW - ' Lebanon Express. THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 1896. Ben DodjB left yesterday tor Cor valll. Dry good are arriving almost dally at Baker's. Gents' shoes. A full Una of Bead, Feeenok k Co. ' Read the d of Klein, Dubrullle & Co., or Albany. Remuiuber we print calling carda at the ExpttKgH office. Mm. A. E. Davie U vltltlnj rrlende In Alliuny thin week. Dr. 0. W. Chcadle, dentist. Office over City Drug store. The time for re-openlng the schools ha not yet keen fixed. If you want the uewB you should lubuiiribe fur the Ext nam. H, Baker curried the largest line of boon and shot In Lebanon, Call ond examine Mlller'a linineniie slock of goods without delay. Ben Dodge has sold hi buggy-. and harness to Postmaster 8 ntlb. W. E. Chundler returued luesday frolu a business trip ui Portland. , Complete line of pocket hooka, blank i books, etc., Juat received at Miller'. II"I'K) Bi represents some of the j f'l liiHuratice unmpanle in the world. Alelitleuien, call and see (lie new fall f LM winter clmhlng at Bach 4 Buhl's. Mrs. H. K. Kirk returned home 8at urduy from a visit to her aiater In AHiany. Klein, IHibruil.e & Co., of Albany, are closing out their boot and ahoe bjeiuess. J. N. Tuttle, who baa been working in Hu4;,'iie for "ine lime, hna returned II lli'llMit'l (In in Ml DuiiiiMid'a for lullllnery bin U ttlllug at cost, and wanta no goods loft over. When ynu want to buy aauit of cloth' line, vim ivill save money hy getting it at iliiuh A Buhl. Mayor It. B. Montague drove down 1n Albany riuiiday, to attend the fli'ieml of Mrs. I'lawk. .VI m. I Eldrlilge left Monday for Eugene, where aheexieot to remain for lnor three uioutlia. J hnve soverul liundred dollar to urn i, f-r ilieilH, on giaid ilrat mort swift, piaill'l M Garland. I'll I'l'byti-riuna of Med ford are v. iu i' ''": ,jrtl',ii "f a new .'iiull'U iililili- ill lllllt tllWII. M A. Miller wim III Albany on Tuea dn, of this week, ulteni'.ing the demo- cruth: central coumiitlee meeting. Walker Loveall, who haa lan stop- iIhk; lr (lie pnai few years on a claim on t tie iwii-I, Iiuh relumed to Lebanon Mrs. W.K t'liaiidler spent last Hull lu. In Albany with her pareuta, re luming in Ubunon .Monday evening. Dr. N. L. Lee and wife, of Junction City, were in the city a couple of daya the flint of the week, vhitlng relatives. A thirty years' franchise haa been Km 1 1 led to B'iberl Clow and associates, t Junction, for an electric light plant Wheat has ndvunced considerably within the past week. They are now paying 40 cents at the Lebanon ware house. Boventy-four coyote and wild-cat ' acalpa were received at the county & l-rk'H ofllce In The Dallea one day Inst week. The verv latent In walking linti, sail ors and dress hats, cheaper than ever before. Call and lie convinced. Miss Dutuoud. ' H. P. Bach epont last Sunday In Portland with his family mid In visit lug old friends, nduriilng to Lebanon - Monday evening. We were In error last week In regard lo "Doc" Smith' Illness It was pucu jiionhi liiHliml of t, pliohl fever. "Doc' .! able to lie around now. lio to VV. E Ciuiiidler if you want uliiiilng or pluiiilitng work done. He work at liuicltiine prlcea, and guaran iters i II work to lie flretoluss. U. MuCiilley returned to Ilia home 3 ii Piirlland Tuesday, utter spending two weeks in tills city visiting his luo:,'nter, Mrs. M. A. Miller. ,;f Money to loiin, A limited amount of money to loau ou good farm secur ity. Call upon or write to 8, N. Steele & Co., Alhnny, Oregon. liev. J. H Cornwall requested ua W n yHm-i I tin-r will lie pivueli. ii'f, rrviitv t:s iUv ' jpieshyii-riiui ol-iitrli lie,-.'. ;-Mi,,MV, o.Ui uiiiiitiug ;;" .(-' i. .r: II of ii.il I'VoU: .ul Ihe i , l b, , of Alllllll.v. y lie ,r 4lJ III thin IH.il..'. , 7i tuniiul hi'liool meeting is culled for oui' o'cloiil:, ,Mt.iulny; Hie 27th, for Cie jiui'iwse of considering Uie bivylug ol u tax Ui defray interest on boml-i, ciwl of ftirnllun-.'ctn, . li'r- Is about over Imve buell llllrkd jr.il,-i:y be Ikkvu off tomorrow. Peace and quiet now rclna sublime In Lebanon. The reception that an Albany deml monde received in Lebanon laat week will not tempt her to repeat ber visits to this place, It would be well for her olnas to remain away in the future. Klein, Dubuille 4 Co., ahoe dealers In Albany, have an ad In tbla laaue ndvertlalng their closing out aale. They have an Immense stock, and advertlae that they will aell at factory prlcea. Llcenaea have been laaued for the marriage of John E. Cartwrlght, editor Review, and Ella V. Wliltbeck, of Harrlahurg, and 0. H. Blokena and Mlaa B. P. Oaylord, of Sweet Home, Jamcl Warmouth, aged 20, ton of Wm. P. Warmouth, living two miles south of Brownsville, was asalsllinr In felling a tree Monday when a limn tell and htruek hhu to the ground. The young man died Within a few hours. E. W. Achisnn, the marble nnd monument dealer of Albany, was In Lebanon Monday, setting up a monu ment, of which mention Is made In another column. We acknowledge a pleasant 0' II from Mr. Achlson wliil: In the city. An other attempt linn been made ! kill Miss Ethel Riddle, of Hun Ulmrc Tbla time an envelope was Bent 1 1 her filled with powder, the sendei thinking she would burn It without looking Inside, hut it wua opened und the powder dlaoovord. C. M. Clark, who hue made hii home with bis daughter, Mrs. Colo- man, or una city, ror tne past six mouths while he waa looking around over the valley and coast In general, left Wednesday for hit home at liavter Riirlmis, Kansua. Mr. Chirk made many friends while in our city. Except 8000 pounds of hops owned by Frantz ilroa., together with the product of the Wilson Bump yard, nit the hop in Kings valley. Benton county, have been sold, and they went nl the uniform price of 6 cents, about the blithest figure readied during the season, saya the Corvallie Times, The paper mill abut down one week ago yesterday. The principal cause of tlie shut down wan on account of the quarantine and alckneaa of several of their handi, but there was aome needed repairs which baa also been done during the abut down. They will resume work Monday. The Democratic Central Committee mot at Albany Monday. Much Inter est was taken In the approaching can vase and strong hopes are entertained for the auccesa of the party. Nothing definite waa done about fixing the date of the convention. Another meeting will be held shortly at which time all necessary arrangements trill be made. The farm residence of Fdward Chambers, near Knox Butte, caught fire Tuesday and waa entirely destroy- ed, together with all the con tenth. The barn waa saved by haid work. Mrs. Chambers waa awav from home when the fire stalled It is supposed to have originated from a fire in the parlor stove. There was a email amount of lneuraiioe. . Rome one waa hawking gold specta cles about Corvallla last week for a dollar a pair. Mr. Pomeroy bought a pair, which were pronounced by a lewiler to lie genuine gold-rlmtned glasses, worth 7. From Corvalllstbe hawker went to Albany, and there waa arrested for peddling without a license, and sentenced to five daya In the city jail, Seven pairs of glasses were found ou bis person, and there ia a suspicion lhat they may have been a part of the booty of the late Dallas robbery, In which $150 worth of Jewel ry was i-toleu by burglars. Ex. Several young men were up before the Recorder' caurt Monday, for dis turbing the peace. The evidence In dicated that they were having aome fuu by playing a joke on another par ty, and very likely laughed and hol loed toi loud. There waa nothing particularly wrong in their conduct and evidently no intention to violate the law. A small fine was Imposed on the young gentleman whose voice hap pened to be recognized, and the others were released for want of proof. Mr. Bllyeu, of Albauy, and ). F. Skip- worth, of this place, defended the boya, and City Attorney Garland pros. ecuted the cases. We understand that the boys divided the cost among then selves; which made It very light. Many will remember Ihe sensational story published some two years since about Rev. M. S. Driver, a ton of Rev. I. D. Driver, formerly well known as Sam Driver. For several years he waa luboriug wiUi the uiireg' n. r ite li Union countv , and llmill., went In California. Ii waisaid, jliun hntnv hi. wife ami i'a.uily. !inlv -if ... It win : ..iinu eed :. ilie .: a piitohca ilra' he I..H.I eloped v in, other in i'i'i. wife from J I. Ii win? Mi:iposml I. hut the e .i iv n"i ' ' '.-o t ll i none hi the Hawaiian Islun l- n ol h : ';! not, from the !'..!' P H I.be.i ,s; I" llllll'i 11 Mi. i be Uiilo! Ifn im; ; nl. nil in ditl.-re cut ... lOlll VVuR' in K No.' :l- m'RT . . omnn ui , ,i ii i ly,. her. in ii . vlv I. It is . tin,.'!- firm In it.. i sad hih' j Ills part of it yet." A, P. Stowe'i Lecture at Salem. A. V. Stowe, formerly of this city, delivered a lecture in Salvia last Sun day afternoon, on the subject, "From Bondage to Freedom." Mr. Stowe waa recently a patient of the Keeley oure for the second time. His record la well known In tbla community t a drunkard who has reformed many times, only to go back again. Thia laat reformation may be genuine, but he will have to stay with it a long time before the people of Lebanon will believe It. In reference to bla lecture the Salem Post aaya: "The address wat an argumentative one from beginning to end, and at its conclusion the sneaker received a shower of compliments from his many listeners. The hall waa packed on the occasion, and the young attorney pre sented bla subject In a new as well as attractive manner. He argued that drunkenesa waa a dlseaae, and aaid 'If there ia a disease, what a uallonal shame and sin! What a travesty up on national honor and justice to license thousands of low groggerlea and gilded palaoea to spread the germs of the dlseaae broadcast throughout the land I And, what was Ii finitely worse, to Imprison the poor, unfortunate man who happened to contract the disease! That if it was a disease we have no right to hit the poor drunkard over the head with a policeman's club and lock him up, unless we lock up a pby slciati with him to attend to him.' He said drunkards were without the pale of the church and that the Keeley Cure placed him where the church oould reach him. He also stated that there were eo many troublea in thia life, we needed all the help we could get, both human and divine. We needed the grace of God, the church, the W. C. T. U. and the Good Tem plars, but then we also needed medl cine, surgery and the Keeley Cure. His position was that you must first net whiskey out of a mau before you can got graue iu, and you must keep whiBkey out if you keep grace in. That whiskey and the grace of God will not both atay in the same bide at the same time. He paid an earnest tribute to the W. C. T. U. and proved by many Illustrations that noble women bad always been equal to the emergency when men had proven powerless to defend themselves and their country against moral or physiual foes." Lloyd Montgomery's Case. Action has been taken by Lloyd Montgomery's attorney, which will, no doubt, prevent bis execution the 81st lust. The time bad expired iu which a bill of exceptions could be filed, but Prosecuting Attorney Mc Cain to-day signed stipulations ex tending the time until January 20 for perfecting an appeal. The case will then be appealed to the supreme court. and Montgomery's attorneys expect a atay of execution until the appeal for a new trial can be heard. The main point upon which the defeuse will rely iu the appeal will be the claim that the court erred In admitting in evi dence Montgomery's confession before the grand jury. Mo credence la placed In the conflict ing stories of the murderer for bla statement that he only killed Mo Kercher and not bis parents. The general impression Is that the appeal, If allowed, will only postpone the day of execution. Cut This Out. It will count you 60 cts. ou every (2.00 worth of work, If presented at the Lebanon Art Gallery any time be tween tbla date and March 1st, 1806. H. J. Boyd, Photographer. The second term of Santiam Acade my will open next Monday, Jan. 20th. The primary grade will be excused until the public schools uegin. S. A. Handle, Principal. Our citizens are still enthusiastic over the project of establishing a more direct route from here to the Quartz vllle luiuea. If this cau be done we would be able to get a great deal of the travel this way, it being a much nearer route. About two inches of snow fell In Ibis elty Tuesday night but by H orn ing a rain set Iu and on Wednesday night a slivt and freeze set in and the ground is now covered with about an inch of Ice and sleet. The heavy sleet and ice broke down one of the electro light poles on main street hist right but no wires broke and the lights wjre not molested. How's This! Wt ..in Oi.. t ii t lor ti'.y t .i.a.i k-i DolliiiN U. ward ui lie eurtit liy I'liios,, Toledo, o ive ti t'Wli R J. I Hall's Caiarr. i ire f' .1. ' VlKN'liY .i i'ii : v. il- .-v it .-. . i'lie ev for It.e lil-l 15 yeum, j him perfectly liotioriiule in and believe all businens ..... ti a null; utile to carry iiKiliOi . imi.ic i llieir til'ln. AV. I ri. V al. 1 1 g. Ilrtwuisi-, i..i U..-lcMiii.Mr insists, Toledo.O. Kioaaii I. Marvin, Wholesale ol.- i", Ohio. i iter'ially, M- ! i . i ii.nj. i iite.1 mucous -tin- syucii, Price. 7ftc,per-bot-.l.iny all Dr. it-Kims. Testimonials .frw. 1H MKKOItUH. Died, at the family residence id Leb anon, on Saturday, Jan, 11th, 1890, Key, Martin Hickman, in the "6th year of hit age. Rev. Martin Hickman waa born in Harrison county, Virginia, on May 1, 1820, wat married to Mist Phcebe Philips, in Wood Co., Virginia on the 8th day of June, 1847, by Rev. John Goff of the M. E. churcb. One ton, Theodore F., waa born to them on the 7th day of June, 1848. The mother and ton tervive the beloved husband and father. Rev. Hickman joined the Protestant Methodist conference in 1853, and preached as a circuit rider or itinerant minister in the state of Iowa until the spring of 1860, when the family removed to Missouri, in which stale he engaged in farming; preaching occasionally, until in the summer of 1802, when to testify kit unswerving love of the Union and the old starry nag, he enlisted as a private in Company "E" of the 35th Regiueat of Missouri Infantry; at trading marked attention by his con. spicuous gallantry at the battle of Helena, Arkansas, he was promoted to be chaplain of his regiment with the rank of taptaiu and placed in charge of the camp established for refugees at Little Kock, Arkansas, where he re raained until ordered to St. Louis for "muster out" at the close of the war. His services during the war were recognized by his fellow-citizens Missouri, who elected him to the Hate legislature, where he served for two years. In 1875 the family removed from the state of Missouri to Oregon, settling in Lebanon, Linn county, where for many years Rev. Martin Hickman waa pastor of the C. P. churck, as well as chaplain of John F. Miller Post No. 42, G. A. R., Dept. of Oregon, which post he waa largely instrumental in organizing ni carrying it forward to its present rank at one of the foremost posts in the state of Oregon. In every relation of life as husband father, neighbor, friend, Christian minister, soldier or citizen, Martin Hickman was above reproach. His kindly, genial presence will be sadly missed by young and old of Lebanon and vicinity. He was a general favorite among our young people, and it seemed as though all the young men and maid ens seeking to have the nupital knot tied thought that no one could tie it so firmly and well at Parson Hickman The old surviving veterans will fondly recall his words of loving sympathy and counsel when sorrow or sickness aassiled them. Saint and einner will remember with moistened eyes his fevent appeals for a better life, a higher morality generous and- full surrender to that Divine Savior m whom he had found such grace and pardon that he was able to meet the ttern arrest of the grim sergeant, Death, without a quiver, never doubting that the blessed Christ, the captain of his soul's salvation, would muster him into the ranks of the great army of the redeemed, to be mustered out nevermore. The Grand Army post buried him with their solemn and simple service, the pall bearers of honor being six stalwart Sons of Veterans. Rev. J. H. Cornwall of the Presbyterian church kindly assisted at the grave by offering the closing prayer and giving the bene diction. "Ksat oo, embalmed sud astaud dead, Detr u tlis blood you gave; No lnplous fooutep here sbttt tread The htrbsta of your grays, Nor vhalt your glory be forgot Wails Fania her record keeps, Or Houor points the hallowed ipot Where Valor proudly sleeps." C. B. M. A Pioneer's Monument. At the Lebanon oemeterv to-day we noticed a beautiful double column monument, of fine workmanship and material, being of the finest grade of imported Italian marble. A closer in spection showed it to be at the graves of two of our old pioneers, Moses Bland and wife, and it is a fitting trib ute of reiecl to that class of pioneers who braved the dangers and privations incident to the settlement of this country, but who are now fast passing away. Four prisoners escaped from the Oregon City Jail last week. They were Tom Clarke, an ex-convict, Walter Wylaud, borse thief, Wm. Orsteriee, held for rape, and Will Moore, a swindler. Awarded Highest Honors World's Pair, Gold Medal, Midwinter Fair. DH Most Perfect Made, 40 Years tit 8taadartk BAKING Dress Goods; Lais, Gents and Children's Fine Sloes Umbrellas, Underwear, Hosiery, For just a little money. Try . . . READ, PEACOCK & CO. Mammntli $20,000 worth of CLOSING OUT SALE! thrown on the market and will be Sold at Factory Prices. KLEIN, DUBRUILLE & CO. Are Positively Going Out of Business in Albany, and will sell their Large and Extensive Stock of BOOTS SHOES AT ACTUAL COST. iHTTTTTTTTTTn "TtTi'tTiTTitJtt Ttttt"TTTTTtttt This will be a Rare Opportunity to Obtain Bargains, as broken lots will be sold at fifty cents on the Dollar. TERMS STRICTLY CASH. Call and Examine Our Stock. KLEIN, DDBRUILLE & CO., ALBANY, OR. . . . Boots and Shoes