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About The Lebanon express. (Lebanon, Linn County, Or.) 1887-1898 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 25, 1897)
Y Lebanon Express. H. Y. K1RKPATR1CK. Editor - and - Proprietor If McKiiilev cause all un lawful trusts to be vigorously and justly prosecuted and punished, we will acknowledge the justice of bif claims to statesmanship. An exch.'nge says: "Forgivenese is a divine attribute. Politicians usually prefer memory and a hatchet. What a demand there hag been created for the hatchet?" Governor Budd, of California, has vetoed the bill appropriating $75,000 for state printing. The right Vind of a governor could do some good work along that line in Oregon. Roseburg Review. If Senator Mitchell does not close the comedy engagement which he has been pUying with a burlesque company at Salem, at the expense of the tax payers of Oregon, he will not get back to Washington in time for the inauguration. Dis patch. The San Francisco Bulletin says: "I: Senator Mitchell had known as Foraker element, and for this rea moeh during the last campaign as Ln alone his appointment will be he does now, would he have trier! wej received. to be a gold and silver man at the j same time tor toe consolidation oi his strength in Oregon? Those metals fuse beautifully but not in politics." Here is a puzzle: Altgeld is de nounced vici iu!v because be par doned the anarchist-?, this act being advanoed as o:ie good reason for considering him a very had man. j Gage wrote a porsnual letter to j Altgeld, askiiig him to pardon the j anarchists. He is called a good man. Why the difference? Sews, Something over $3000 was raised , by popular subscription in the tate, to buy a silver service for he battle ship Oregon, but it has re cently been decided to make a gift if a drinking service. The pro- liihitimiiata nf thp pnmmittfte. lerl bv CWH.Dodd. are makine , i real Live "'kick' the plans. over the change in The Oregonian is wrathy because several 'scrub papers" have said it demanded and received 16.000, for supporting McKiniey and Hobart So wonder the Oregonian is mad. influence" of more i It values its value, and if it ever demanded any than - thing it G.O0O. wtinlfi ak more There is nothing small ah.! Seort-Monntiineer. " rrrrrrrrrr7rrr A New York lawyer propounded ' to a Witness a question containing j b.o words, ine witness asted tbe' ... . , j , . .. j iwith great directness and vigor, attorney to repeat the question, and ' , . , i then answered that he did not; relative to the annoyances that are know. Ex. visited upon a chief executive by That lawyer must have written ' persistent office-seekers, and he Grover Cleveland's last presiden- j suggest a unique plan, by which tial messnge far him, as exceed-j the president's burdens in that ingly long sentence v. ere in direction could be greatly light abundance in tbot document. ! eced. and he be enabled to devote ! more attention to more important There is one consolation to he' terB A feature of the article derived from the disgusting state wiI1 have , timely imeref4 to of affairs between the rival political j thoIle .Bnlbit!ouB to ggrve the coun fictions at Salem and that is, there jtrrnnder the ieoming adminis is sure to be a merry war whenever j lr;tioni degcribw very fuUy bow the next local campaign opens, j ore.iden, make6 annointment From tbe primaries to the finish on mini resun me air wui De mica and heavy with denunciations and the shifting of responsibilities, with never a truth in any of them. Tomahawk. tioo Reward, ties. The readers of this paper will be pleaded to learn that there is st least one dreaded disease ibst science has been able to cure in all its stages, aud that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure at tbe only positive cure now known to tbe medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional difease. miulK a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly up on tbe blood and mucous surface of the eyttera. thereby destroying tbe foundation of tbe disease, and jbvmg the patient strength by building up the constitution and sitiug nature in doing its work. The j fiiuprmuro iuw ml iuucu uum ill lu cura tive powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to core, fiend for list of testimonials. Address. F. J. Cbssit Co., Toledo, O. Bold by Ununrists, 75c. Hall Family Pills are the best Hoe Cake neap contains no free al kali, and will not burn tbe bands. Tlie Waterloo (mien Milk) are in II.. lwl nnk Aulltno, nun'i ,-1.1 1 , lix! and boys' clothing at cjeeedii'igly kwv j Mitchell is probably beaten, and the Oregonian will divide the honor with Simon, Bourne and that gang. The people can have nothing to rejoice in the success of this crowd. The peop'.e should put one foot on Mitchell and the other on the Oregonian, and stamp the lite out of both of them. The purpose of the governor of Ohio to appoint the Hon. Mark flanna to the seat in the senate, to be made vacant by the retirement of Senator Sherman, is a proper recognition of the services of Mr. Hanna in the last election. Poli tics, like any other business, be stows its rewards upon those who have acquired success and it does not stop to enquire as to the fitness of the recipient. Mr. Hanna showed wonderful prowess as a politician, tie is probably no bettor and no worse than the rest of Ohio politicians. He is just as good a man as Foraker and is just as much entitled to be senator. Foraker is a bitter and sectional politician who has long wrought upon the race and sectional preju dices of his constituents. Hanna's annointment is a victorv over the The school meeting next Monday should be well attended. Special attention should be given to the choice of director. Our school should be raised and maintained to the highest possible degree of excellence. A man should be chosen who has the interest of the school at heart, and who has th ability and firmness to see that the bst results are obtained from the means available. The needs of the district have grown faster than its wealth. Cseless expenses should . I H Ant ff Xni nnj. ititllur filinnld : be spent except in the direct chan- jiiels of public education. Bich districts can possiblv afford to indulge in luxuries, but our district will do well if it provides the necessaries. A few dollars spent he" d there for needless things, are so many dollars wasted, ne j believe the present board has been careful and economical, ob have .'ulso its predecessors. Never before ; has there been so great need of j economy. Ex-President Harrison has writ- n of "A Day With the President at His Desk" for the March Ladies' Hme "Journal. The article "s said l interesting in the iaeu!1 WKn wmcu 11 a" wearisome routine of the president It ie said that General Harrison, in tnift artic!fc na8 delivered himself tooffice. A Dav with tbePresi- j being the first time that tbe daily Ii'e of the president has been de scribed by one who has fillej the ; exalted office. Articles npon the social and domestic life of the president by General Harrison will follow in successive issues of the Journal. Hoe Cake soap, heat on earth. Bargains in clothing at Waterloo. Good elotiitog at a low price at i Bach Buhl's. M. A. Killer lias a full and complete line of cough eyrops. j . Hoe Cake soap wrapper are worth a j g eeut apiece in valuable presents, rate J jnem For sale, 4W0 first-elasa heart shakes will be sold at a bargain. Inquire at j this office. I Bina M. West Hive Sal ut work-j ing nnder a special di-penwHo-j fur a ; few weeks, at the very low raieot (1.50, initiation fee. Any one wishing to) unitewitb the Lady Maccabees, and j take advatitage of this low rate, please ' call on the undersigned for all lnfor- j niation regsrdlug tbe order. FOOTBALL AND BLOOMERS, Shock Out VlUac. One after another, the staid old Sew England Institutions have fallen into innocuous desuetude, and now a Ver mont female seminary ha been in vaded by the blooiuer and the football. St. Johnsbury, Vfc, is eminently -spec table. So it. was that tbe statement that a member of tbe seminary's contingent bad looked seriously upon bloomeraand that talk of a football club had really bees heard created the not sort of ait atmosphere about the town that the finding of as old witch did in the old day of Salem. It was all true how. ever, both the statement and the look. vYhat is more, a football team wjs promptly organised and all of the mem bers wore bloomers. Even worse than that, the new organization actuallv se lected a plot of land back of the Fair banks mansion to practice upon. Here was absolute defiance of all tbe social and community ethics that could be compiled in the bluest bunk thnt eTer St. Johnsbury heard of. It was positively awful, it was almost as bad as, If somebody bad said that Boston was not classic or that the univeraitv at Burlington was incapable of giving a student the very highest education. Gossip grew rife and tbe football girls laughed at it They were not old fogies, they said. They knew a thing or two and were not at all ashamed of it As for the harm in bloomers, where was it! And as to the football and kicks, why, there wa nothing indelicate about that One of the girls whose father lives over at Barre said that just before she came to the school tier father told ier she was tbe hardest kicker he bad ever beard of . Why, then, should they complain of her kicking a foot ball? This was the burden of the song of the football girls. There was so song among the townspeople, however; only lamentations and dire forebodings. Despite all this, the girls nave con tinued to play ball in tbe Fairbanks lot and, so far as reported, not a single window in tbe rear portion of the man sion that is tbe home of the grand panjandrum of St Johnsbury society has been broken, for the girls are ail pretty and they don't kick their foot ball in the direction of aristocracy's jowmonse. Thus it is that the bloomer, the foot ball and tbe female seminary form a triumvirate which makes the average vermonter stand aghast Knowing all this, there can be realized in a small de gree the heroism displayed by the girls who kicked the football around the Fairbanks lot. They formed a regular eleven, and, of course, in a very deli cate way, tney (Ought over tbe ball regulation fashion. They play football at assar and the sport, is not unknown st lYellesley and Smith, but none of them can kick that boll any better than the St Johnsbury girls. K. I. Berald. TINY LITTLE BRAINS. Are Haasaa Body. Br. William A. Hammond, the cele brated neurologist, says the ganglia, which runs like little threads of silk throughout the body, are tiny little brains, hugely made up of the same kind of gray matter that composes the thinking part of the brain. While the sensitive ganglia send their little tend rils into every portion of the body, there is an especially large amount of tbem about the heart and. reallr. according to Dr. Hammond, the human heart actually thinks on account of it. When we are frightened, the heart almost stoos beatinir How could it do it. unless it reallr thought? It would lie impossible. The heart brains are the little gray pcrglia. end they recognize the emo tions of joy. or pain or 0-igbt by sending quick throbs and thrills through the heart which Dr. Hammond calls a sec ondary brain. It is well known that the ancients believed different organs of the body -to be possessed of mental at f -ibules, and this idea has been handed down to us in such expressions as a "brave heart?- a "nobie heart," a "sple netic nature," and the like. Crossrruined people are said to have their E;i!eens ont of order, and the an cients located anger, resentment and impatience in tbe spleen. 6 An imtnense amount of gray matter or tiHsite rins hack of the stomach, and a keary blow there vr'.ll kill as quickly .is if 'Ise I rain itself hud been struck. Wiicrevcr the pGDrlia congregate is z thai s;t, anil Instead of tliinkin? ioleSy with the gray mst.ter rhct in v. ith :n cur fiVtrlls. we fli'iik in every im T'.nr.; fr-"T.ti awl throughout every ittcralnci.t function ivithin our bodies. trn stivs i)r. Hammoiii:. and science accms to agree with him. X. T. Trib une. Wept at Their Own Lot An iitnerican pliot'ifr-tulicrwho pene ai fl t to i i c Si tens and e:.t cG&siuvniljie i.r.:r in taking pic tcs of the .cope at.il countrv, in crd ot:e of ni" t:nt:-. j M-rvamis to sit I it ' i u. TV . d 1 1 J prcb :.v lA-ver eun rci-d ir toa mirror: r." v r:sii:. ::c n;.'.! l.u conception of cv. ik iT-iii-JMi. JtfJ he manifested .:(?t:.u;c riooui v.iv n he pazed on 1 1 - oi - -scr i i evl- ;., . : ;K-Ui tnal he VM B fur SO ( ik ig oi 111 r , t ouita vt:t iirrtie: but when i,e taw ;Lerc u nK liimust v.ti. ii'h mer: thr- , - r I t, tiic 1 ti -e in a ti:o;,-!:if. ! ohc came yut and cmors. When they i -wiy a vestipe of ir heads and they -tiinrs taken again. l.m a veritable t-oid: n Davs. triced. ;.:.i presei:;, I 'jorrov.caa pj:rof I T.:crf-cd raic i.i.r reicr-'.ned ori I i1 eo ,uLdVL ibi. r 1 The caii-'-ra rti?. : tree of linov.M-t:;-!'. Kan to He. Tseethattheycangbtthefellowwbo onAe out of jiil !a t week," said tbe ' :wtifr Miig over his pa- -r. n nme- asm toe Cheerful Of course." said the Cheerful ! oI Jtuot. A Mi-jw Hmbresksoutissui WANTS (O HOUSES. American Anlmuls Again In Do m .nd In England. a stmt ArvkmiMo Chance la ths atatas of a vtM InUHtry The ws las afclnmrala at This k'aia In spite of the alleged dullness lu the horse market on account of the bi jvle craze, U,; ui hart been shipped to tjigknd tnL year, and there is a con tntly increasing demand. A year ago those farmers and there .vere luou,mls of thcm-4 bo were aakinj: mr,t of their mouey raisitg unmon or "railroad" horses were tioot the biuret class of men in the I'nitcsl Stilted To-day they areagaic in (d htrat. Then they were onviuecd that the uidu5.u- in which th-ir capital naa invested, and itom which they had won their ptuilts for years, was doomed, that they must abandon for ever t he one business to which they uad dinctetl their lives, and with which they were fuuiiiini-. nnd seek other ways to make their farms productive. Many of them, indeed, sold their horses at big sacrifice and ciascd out without cero- aiony. ow Ihcy are beginning to go into business again, their pastures and paddocks are once more being brought into use, and they are satisfied that the outlook w full of promise. .This most desirable change in the status of a &rtt industry has been brought about so gradually that few perrons not directly engaged in the horse business knows anything about it. Its cause, accorduig to William F. iioerr, one of the best-known hone dfttlers in the United Suites, has b-en the apprehension somewhat tardily shown, to be sure- by the English of t he farw with regard to the horse market in the Cnited States. It was some time last year that dca1 "rs on the other side begun to nd their buyers over here. Thcv had neverdine m to any extent before. Possihlv this ttas in some degree btcuuse thev did not favor American horses, but chiefly for the excellent reason thot American horses could never before be bought nearly so cheap as those of foreign breeding. The first F-Eclish wr?nt went at his buying. periKitia, with pnme hesi tation, but he soon bevonw cacf! nt, for he found nut only that the prices st which he could fcsy here were much be low the current j-ricea abroad, tut c'so that the Amerir.n horses were hardier, more enduring, grade for grade, and bctterlooking than the English animals. The first Ecipirtr.t of const-qutuee was sent over rather csrly ltt year, and as soon as tbe homes i-i-re ipnand tested there a rushofEngl sh buyers to Ihe states began. Ever since ifc'n liie shipments have been constantly in cressing. But the traffic has not even ,ct reaebfd its hight since there :.re it least 1M English buyers now in the hind, piding up hurw v herever tlev may. Seven or eight hundred homes are now being sent over every wek, and the total shipnuuits of railroad horses to England this year are likely to reach 23.0C0 or more." The English have not yet adopted electricity on their tram lines to any extent Their adaption of street cars in the firft p'aee was slow, and, although tbey are now using them more freely, they are still bebml n to the method of hauling them. Some American homes are being nsed for other purposes, but act nary. The grade of honse-i former ly called "railronden"" are so much bet ter adapted to trem work than any it'ner sort that tbey arc all snapped up for that purpose. Chicago Journal. HARDWOOD FOfTlXTS. Oae Coueern tmM Two sUIlioa rM ot Laaibsv la Thta War. ! The correspondent for the KoHh- western Lumberman at Grand Bapida, Mich, says there is a concern in that I city that probably makes more bats tnan any other in tbe countrv. Thia year the output will be sss.ooo.a record mat nas not been broken since mm when aif,,S00 were turned ont The best bats are made of second -mr,n,i white ash; ordinary ones of common white asb, and very ordinarv hat suob as the bovs nlav out an th. nions with of mane and baastvoiri These latter are run through an auto matic lame at the rate of 1,400 a day, while the league bats are turned hand. smnll quantity of "willow" lata are made of poplar. Twenty years ago about half (he bats were poplar, but the style bas chanrwd Soma of the crack ulayers will not con descend to use a stock bat. but go to the iry ana nave oats of the aize and weight they desire made for them. If we figure it will be found that , ' metury aione win con sume about 2.00X1.000 feet of hard wood a year in the manufacture of ball bats. The others all told will consume n i r.n.j l,nn:.i . deal more thou that Therefore, when you see a baseball player with his nngers knocked askew you can reflect that the sport of which he is a victim calls for several hundred carloads of hardwood lumber annually. i SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. Unmanufactured woul was last year sent abroad to tbe amount ol 4, 27H,HJ4 pounds, valued at WM.463. Dried apples were in demand last year in Europe, ",0t,94 pounds of the American product going there, (or which $461,214 was returned to this country. . s) Maine may have to provide this year's crop of "sardines," as the Prencb t sardine box solderers have gone on strike just as tbe fishing season opened. They object totheempioytnentuf wom en and of labor-saving machinery. Plans are well under way for the expending of t!i,Ooo,(lOD on the canals of Sew York state, for which the people voted at the last electioo by a majority 3M&- and it is expected that tbe Krk will be don la Uw mat two or The N( w York (ill 9 V ."V 'to 'tt5W With the close of the Presidential tampaifn THE TElBUX E rtcogtiizes the fact that -the American people are . now anxious to give their attention to home and huiiiiess interests. To meet this condition, politics m ill have far less space and prominence, until another State or National occa sJon dt-mand; a renewal of the fight for the principles- for which THE TRIBUNE has laborud from its inception to the present day, and won its greatest victories. Every possible effort will be put forth, and money freely spent, to make THE WEEKLY THII'.ENE pre-eminently a NATIONAL FAMILY NEWSPAPER, interesting, instructive, entertaining and indispensable lo each member of the family. We fDrnisl tte Express" M "lew Ycrt lleellj Tribune" One Year for $1.25, Caath In Adiiincc, Address all orders to Write your ninn and address on Tribune Officii, Sew York City, Weekly Tribune ailljw mailed to M. RALSTON, UROHEn, 'ln XilcK-k. All.anj-. Or Motxry lo I, mi in farm security, aluo -mall luans n adi; on ix-nouiu! sMrurity. l it) , ciiuhtv ami honl sarrante lURht. 'iiilfrtiniik l, a ie ca favorahlo terms. Fire -iinjratice i ritien in thwe of the unnut iiua)'.ii) r. Hit world, at tbe low--- nui'. LEBANON PRCDUCE MARKET. IChwisiHi fveri Wek.l Wbi'at lie Oats Ml t Hay-t8 to$9 p'Tton. Flour tl tofiil.persafk Chop tl 0 per ua t, -Bran S0c per ca t. Middlinirs tl fail per cn l Potatoes Eic. Apples Dried, Sc per It Pluiim Dried, 8e. Onions lju. Beef liressed, 4 J to 5c. Veal-JI!(S4e. Pork Iirtused, SJ. Lard f. Hams 12mr lb. Shoulders c. Hides per lb. "Geese $3 30 fJ, tfi per doi. Durks $3 a U per doz. Chickeos 2 0ij 50. Turkeys elO per lb. Eggs lOe ier d. Butter 15 "Or pr lb. Hides CJn-eu, 3c-: dry, 7c. Patronize liuuie industry, by buying your clothing from tbe Waterloo Woolen Hills. Xt will be doubly to your advantage it will keep the money at home, and will save you money as the prices are very Jow. Ripani Tabulea. Bipani Tabulea cure nausea. , Rlpans Tabulea: at druggist. Ripane Tahulea cure headache. Bipani Tabula assist digestion. EipanB Tabulea cure biliousness. Rlpans Tabulea cure bad breath. Ripani Tabnlcs: cae gives relief. Ripant Tabulea: gentle cathartic. Rlpana Tabulea cure indigestion. Ripans Tabulea cure torpid llvet. Serves i . n Ins Mmmem tf ImiMfOt Tflefrspk (jitns at ur bta&aa boij. Nerve sitsnd trosi tat brala to avsry part of ths body ana rack svsty mguL KerVM aisBssnrs good ttrTsnls but sard None anted liythttkMeaaaantlairafsn nketttnoharacter. Norvea wul bs weak sad eskaaitsa If taa blood It ttilo, pak sod kairan. Norvea will surely at snong US steady tf . ths blood It rtea, rod sad vtforoua, NorvM And s trae frltnd ki Bood't bartaa- rtlla sceaatstt Baku rtta,Rd blood. Nerves do tbslr work aa torsi 1 sad well, the brala It oiulogasd, tasrs an no atoralgls paint, appetut and dtgea tloa an good, wata job taka 00 Sarsaparilla Ths Out Trae Blood Purifier. All drociUts. II- frgpMWl waif rCl llBot 0. Uwell, Km, Weekly Tribune FOR . Farmers and Villagers, FOR Fathers and Mothers, FOR Sons and Daughters, FOR All The Family. . THE "EXPRESS," Lebanon, Or.. a postal curd. and a shiiiIi ynti. lid It In Geo. W fly of i lie New Vol . : J i 'I" i h is : mi WOtT POPULAR SEWING W;Kir.t for ft own ump. Bi ft m rrtmhw r'-trrrt;at'tw,.t. tb tut citiaA ft L .pa; Jlim ,.ilt.,. , , WJlKiS, TUTX1 . I flffif i; Xl- ,,1 .fl, .,,-'. lb mi-haul -! r-.n-ui .-, -., , , ( r" ' ports. fi:,.nr n! !,ni b en, , . tr fa iiii laipT'n, a ,tUsV i.iu H ' ' u - " ' write ron cifc'i. : , Tbe Pew floM SitlDi! F; :: Oaiinre.Sim. lw,w.J T. .- . . ," TftADt atsaag. iniicsi, oovaiOMra a. aaicllTawiltii.a. trte, MM an ii j.ni,,,,, i pinUtM, imtcitUlilu. i i,iniiuiil-a'inii. .tnette eiilliM.,t!l. imw, r,,rm,un.iiatila AinMKa. W. Iv . MmlLMI.S,,1 tpwiai uiiiiGw in the v SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, Jama on 1ati;xiii mm iiw, auoibsi . MUMN A CO.. Ml Uvoadwav, New Vsrk. nt-j mm. i ttt TASTELESS IS JUST A3 COt n rna anm WARRANTED. PRICE SOc. ptfl.jieiinin.rx, Zmi:Sir' m-K-'m- J,entleiwii;-wo Mid Ia.,1 m KiMce i,l 11 nn.. in lio Or Z b ."tfJS tnilf. aasi.r.caaa aoa. or s!,' bv V hMI'lH. anted-An Idea cl. "' M": liie m. I..I... Vho ma think or same mutuM 9 ... ..u.-...,. run tail tv v-K.jj so veaar ..... -. v.n a W.He Wll I V I liiriS ii "ana. sadkM is- ms ukimiZS aWf W mmmm sun. j jum a. una, to be prsA,-4nlini)lirtWiras4. ' T- -. .....