Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1892)
m -w. THE COKVALUS GAZETTE, PRIDAYT OCTOBER 7, 1555. V I i. . " . . . . .... ., . 50 " j " ... - V. ; , ' V 9 - . V ' " ISsuss event rEinT morxiwi it ' jj BSQiWTICN BATES tm ... - &x Months, Turee Months, VmtfU Copies. Oris VW (wiioii out paaJ i advance)... 2 00 1 0C 76 3 M BUY YOUR Because their Trees Ihave taken first prize - . 4- W ATE? R A1STT; P. Free from all pests wherever exhibited. a Because they have no tree agents to ml' . Kti cniarantee them tC ICyiCKUl iuviur vuw be satisfactory or money refunded. 3? Cleveland calls 'it the "spectre VM ..-f ,-mnnMA free trade1', but it ' (-VAMfoulles him like a nightmare just w tnnramR. . m vi Tup Russian governor 01 lxizum 3toveorod recently issued the fof- nrl Nation: "In the ivn"b ww, CBSussee hospital to-day died the physiciaua-Jacob Idelsohnt Jrom cholera. The dead .jnan wa5 one the first persons who voluntarily liame to Nizhni Novgorod to aid the Kick. Totally disregarding himself in working for theoodof others, he.Jbecame ,a victim of the scourge, and gtTvegip his lfe pr hfs OnvrholeFroots nffor Catalogue, free (Engliah o German.) 4 j i Special prices on "fifat orors" from new localilaesf- -, ' 1 " ' " - - THE GREAT OF 1 -OPENS AT- PORTLAND) SEPTEMBER 12 Continues one solid oiontli. fore-runner of the The FISH & MURPHY, STOVES, 208 and 210 Second St., PORTLAND, OR. if THE '-tfbREIGNER TAXED.' . We haverfree tradaja'&ohg or selves throughout 'our fofty-four states and.territories. That is b cause we are oneffmily, - one country. .We hatie one standard of citizenship, one 'flatt, one con stitution, one nation, oriC-destirT I mi P - 1 'tm 1 . . .1 inai lawny sve uave nee among orselves Our relations "AUhohe belong tolV." oide , j, the follow of'the-Jtesai. han!y cUfferent from ""r'tftaUons aiuuiigyviuxoci v ca . LjJ separate organism, a distinctnd independent political ocietyor- ganized to work out- their, own destiny. .VThey are'ourcojnmercial rivals. We deny to those foreign nationstrade with . us?" -upon " the sanxe terfVe enjoy among our selves. T foreign producer is not entitled to equaEfy with us in th-mnrlrpf. " TTft ts no-taxes: y i tj JCa. he is noramenableto .our Xjfy. he performs no civil or military duties; he is exempt fromsfate, county 'and iunicipal taxes; Ke contfibutes nothing pmaril toA tire wjpport ot the government, e its progfess "fend prosperity, --it. - Upon what principle, D'pray you, should h eDjoy ual privil showed fV his condnfit the Unrest Clirjstian love ajkl Sevotibn. I shall endeavor fooiior the mem - ory of this worth v man by attend- . jus-iunerai." r MRiJpLEVjELAND argues fc1 tree raw materials as the great thing nt&ssary to infeease trade, but the'Tboot and shoe andeatUer in dustries of Massachusetts, whose gliOVf raw itaterial (hides) is frej a decline .this year,r whfle the tariff-ridden voods " -irere never mare prosperous. -"Thfcr PiiiladeJ pliia Press5' notes "iliisfactj'and iurther eilSL. "There is the'f&est kmd of rawmaterial in cotton ' marflrfactuTers, Jwjcause 'It k'prb- tluced in abundance right hee at show that t)Ut copn manufl targrsave amy. advantage in that respect. Vthe exports V free raw material industries demonstrate 1UO ictijllijr ui tuabVAjr. date, Weaver may thank his stars that Jie was " not greeted with loaded shot-guns in place of de cayed eggs. Well, the great encampment, the gTeatea in the history of the G.A. K.,v is over, the crowds all gone andthe streets of Washing ton lookabout as usual at this sea- son oi tne year, dus it win ue many -.a long year before the peo ple, both visitors and Washington ians, stop diking about the grand affair andthe royal good time everybody had, for no person who witnessed. the events of last week, ; Some. But th3 s'tatis.tics do notJkeges and profits in our markets with our producers, ourlatorers, out taxpayers? We hve no way of reaching, him except through jthe cystom house. He is unknown to our-tax collector, who vis its us. annually buTthis official cannot vfsit him. Tiiearni of the staters too; short, and the-power of the federal gbvern'ment too limited to touch ;Sthitfg he hSs orios- iflsesses. soe say" to Tiim, when you wunj; t,o bring yogir prOv this being our home,jiOurh natural market, "thSse products must haye; attacned to tnem a conaition, ana that condiMon shall be the ptiy ment.of duties which shalljjo into' the public treasury to relieve in part the-taxpayers the United States froni the burdens which estf upon them.f-fioyr-McKinley. particularly the parade and the 'reunions, can ever forget. The veterans andiieir friends were glad that theycame to Washing ton, but not: more so than were the people of Washington. . General Dan Sickles, who was one of the Eammany delegates to the Chicago5 convention, excited much comment among his repub lican comradfiS at the encamp ment by praising the soldierly xmalities. of Gen. Harrison, and V;his" laying particular stress upon tne fact that he fought for the Union instead of hiring a sub stitute as' Mr. Cleveland did. Salem Steam Laundry. T. M Hamilton, the agent for the balem steam laundry, has deciaea to locate permanently in this city. He has al ready established a good business for that company in this city, which bids fair to become constantly larger. Their work has . never failed to give entire satisfaction, while their charges are as low as is compatible with first class work. Clothing called for an delivered free of charge. TAKE YOUR "WATGH E3 XJ. 33. VOGLE, Kext door to Boss's cigar factory. GMeago Exposition of 1892. MfcSlC BYiTHE FAMOUS AMERICAN BAND OF PKOVIDENCE, B. I. An: ArtCollection Surpassing all former Expositions and valued at $300,000. A MAGNIFICENT DOUBLE ELECTRICAL EXHIBIT Under the combined Thomson-Houston and Edison Companies, including the latest adaptations of electricity. AN IMMENSE Mineral Exhibit ! IB u5JTr U. & MODELS OF IPS OREGON : PACIFIC RAILROAD COMPANY. T. E. HOGG, RECEIVER. This, takenin connection with the "Wednesdays aud Saturdays dislike, which Gen. bicKles - The New" York Tribune makes . Ikis . riBrtinent inquiffe "Iven if the democratic tariff-smashers were to effact -a free-wfeol bill aqd, as Ahey -proless to believe they ca 'dOjfc yere ,tc succeed in opening fovwgn markets for . ..lerican AvooIensv in what respect , would pur people be in a superior positioan to the Bradford rj&nmaclurerj'Who already 'ha free, wool aSd has been. competing for manyyiears for foreign trade? If the? BrMd trade under lhmost favorable fme trade conditions has not been afteo prVe'nt the displacement of-JEnglishgoodsn the English nfarket by,, milliorisof pourifc, worth' (Jf comDetini: goodg. from the 'continent, how will it be posljjom'aii quarters, inese uaya no- EXCURSIONS FOR 1892. Tickets now on sale at Corvallis and Al- bany for these excursion at the very low I Round Trip Rate, $3.25 & $3.50 Respectively, good for the going trip on WASI1INQTON -Good republican LETTER. news comes sibLe'for'American .manufacl&rfs' with. free wool anowter duties on woolens to retain "contuol of their htfaearket?1' 4 lN"nis .'argument foan income tax, Governor Pennoyer says: IInder tlie tariff, mennav to the . ' t " J; . . . :i government a tax on the food they"parylana congressional uismi. withstanding the quietness of the campaign, -ana especiaiiy.irom New York, without wbich Cleve land cannot possibly be-' elected. Secretary. McComas, of the na tional committer, tfio came over, to add his mite towards Jielping the republican candidate in nis,oiu is : known to feel -toward the demo cratic nominee, caused the predic tion to be frequently made that he would be openly working for Har rison .and Reid; and and he is not by any means the only democratic memtjer of the G. A. K, who dislikes Mr. Cleveland. Hundreds of them stated that while here that they ' could not bring them selves to support a man like Mr. Cleveland when his opponent was a comaade whose bravery they had seen" tested aud proved on the ! Srffeld of toaltle, and not a few of theaftannounced their determina tion to w,ork and vote for Comrade Harrison, and this, mind, you, was without any solicitation from their republican comrades, for no par tisan talk was indulged in at the encampment, the veterans were not here on a noliltical errand, but o join their old war time com rades and to have a good time and did precisely what they of each week and for return untilj SEPTEMBER 30th. 1892. C. C. HdGUE, G. P. A. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE COR vallis Gazette, the oldest pa per w Benton co. One year. $2 From the Navy Yard at Wash - mgton. THE STOCK DEPARTMENT Exceeding all former years, with greatly Increased. Premiums! 80,000 spuare feet devoted to the finest. HORTICULTURAL EXHIBIT Ever made on the PaciOc Coast. Agriculture to the front. Manufaturies in full oneration. The wonderful Hall of Mvsterv. "The Little World." the result of mechanical genius. Larger number of exhibits than ever before. The popular snecial days continued. Everything new nothing dead. GREATLY REDtJCED RATES ON ALL TRANSPORTATION LINES. Dr. J..M. Campbell, D D S. Corvallis, - Oregon Officeover rst National Bank. : , - eat, the clothes they wear, and'the -' .r implements theyflse in theirlabgr, and this being the case, it follows that a poor lairing, mart?" not worth a' dollar in the' world who liyes by thelaborof his tiands, and who has a wife and eight Children, pay ten times as much ; for the sfrpport of 4he federal governmemM adiacent to the District of Colum bia. savs the work of t& campaign is in cplendid condition and fnt victory is as nearly assuqw as anyiJ thingwpolitical Can be in advance)! the counting of the votes. kx-Uon gressman Earquhar, of J?ewYork, has been in . Washington for several da vs. savs that the state is as liis rich bachelor neighbor, wlicn bound to cast its electoriat votes is worth a'Tnillion dollars." This sounds mathematical arid logical, but it is the Jieigbi of absurdity and cotrar; to the common ex. -perience of ''all. ' Thepoor'man ' with his'family of "ten spends at the very maxhnunr but $10001 per year, ine millionaire. inep, , if the polir man pays ten times as mufth as he, must live on $100 a 9. year. .On the contrary, heends 410.000 "a. veat Or ten times as much- as the poor mifn and his '"family of ten, arid as the things he buys are of the class that pay the highest tariff rates, as he wears imported cloth, smokes, .imported "eigars drinks imported wnearid uses othr,luxunes highly Jaxetf, "a greater proportion of his $10,000 a' year goes to the government man tof the $1000 ,spent by the poor . ' man. The ergurirent anxeunts to nothing, and was only advanced as'i a specious and demagogic effort to 'jnake the poor man beljeve. that he js payiHg'all the revenue raised by &ad character of the whole adOss. I protective tariff, H for Harrison and Reid, unless the dprnni-rnts nfNew JTork city cah .r - get awav with the 80 J00 majority which ithe. republicans will bring down to the Harlem river, and he has not the remotes! ideathat they can come witjiin 30,000 of doing it Secretary Elkins ha9 returned to duty. He' was slightly up wen but says tile sensational stones of his having been dangerously ll which were widely printed a few days ago were'entirely.fajse. V Those fairiiliar with things polit ical in the "South onlynnled whe,n tfee news. that weaver -naa cancel lied, his 'engagement to speak in that section because of the bad treatment he had received whHe on the stumpj was- received There It is bul a rerjetitiorf ;of an x)ld stonk The south never liear3 but Lone side, eitner on tne stuxnp or in its newspapers., if it did it would Ions A" ago . have ceased to. bS solidly democratic as it? matenarmterests acf all depei the maintenance of' is candi 1111 JL ' GOVERNMENT LHNDS Fine as the choicest in California are waiting to be taken up in the beautiful !.oney ne.y cam, for and nothing else. m i m The New York Tribune says: 'One of the silliest devices of the free trade enemy is that of figuring out the difference of wages between Eridand and the United States in a given industry, and after de ducting the - percentage from the tariff duties, charging the balance to,; the manufacturer as extortion ate profits. The consumer has his share of the profits when prices are'teduced, and the senate finance committee investigation has shown that prices hsve fallen in . two years in nearly all domestic man ufactures. It is preposterous to assume that when allowance is made for difference in wages, the manufacturer has the balance of profit from- protection. That can not be v true u prices are cheapened." WniA3f Stevenson, a Denver gentleman, has said concerning Colorado politics: "There has been considerable talk about Col:J brado - going for Weaver, not so much because the people of the 6tate take anv stock in 'Weaver or his political heresies, but simply to show the country that Colorado voters are not tied to any party as agast the interest of their state. But while Colorado is for silver, it is a mistake to suppose thaL,all Coloradoans favor free coinage of 6ilver, and I think that whe"kthel votes are counted after election; Colorado will show "her us'ual majority for Harrison. The reason is this; Thinking men are coming to the conclusion that Har rises is the best friend of silver after. alrv and that the only prac tical way to remonetize it is by means of an international agree- trilenfc' 9J 7 Lassen'County, Cal. . Under the Extensive irrigation System of th Honey Lake Valley Land and Water Co. $ Explanation- n m iTOHB BEAUTIFUL HON RY LAKE VALLEY CONTAINS A J jy. largp auxa ot fine, level, loam lands, all ready for the plow, is ur- !.J,p. f- rouuded and sheltered by numntains, and has a fine, mild climate jl jf. the year around. Honey Lke ts a body of fresh water covering one .fc y. hundred kqukre miles. The N. C. O. Railroad has recently been built into the Vailiy, and the Great Salt Lake road through Ik ck with Pass will aUo cro-s it. The land easily cultivated and rotliices extra large crops - wh-.at, oat, barley, hops, corn, alfalfa, vegetables truit and totk- Wood -jf 3 and water ate plentiful and tumicr Cheap. The lai:d can be taken up with out residence utvier the Lrscrt Act, in tracts of 40 to 320 aire, by a man -fe or W 'tiion, married orrgc. t fo Tf We are building a la:ge Water System for the irrigation of this land, -j-if. We want to get easterners lor the water we will have to tell, so wU help if. you to get a piece of it. The land will cct you $1.25 an acre to the Gov- 3 ). eti mcut, aj cents down, ?nd $1 00 in four years. Ihe Water (a peipetual JfL -jt rijjht ad gooc supply). cost $6.45 an acre to the Company: .$1.25 down 'jf-j and $5 co on delivery to the land ft its iirigation. Ail land cftice business sL jV ts attended to for customers by us witnout extra cnar.e, ai a the nltngs Jf, if. under the Desert Act as recently amended by Congress, must show a water -fc cc supply beft-re they will be accepted. Ar HOhef LAKt uiiy, tne town we are estatiinipg, rner good OuaRces tor tarn esiaLiisnmeni w ucw wuamcanca, sluu m cn vtna in- jq i-f if vestisting. - : -- J: t ? i MX 8 tt 8 4 n -4 TINWARE, PLUMBING. Plumbing and Tin-Work a Specialty. i Has been to place pods on sale that give iiontvt value M every dollar paid toTis. There is not Possibility of onr prices and values being equaled by any one in this man's town. No one has the nerve to try it. We have Aimed To 'get the best stock of Boots Shoes, Clothing, Dry Goods Dress Goods and Trimmings in this county We have Fired All the makes oi shoddy, and only clean stock is on our" counters. There is o Growl Wow KOHll'S BIG STORE. The Regulator of Low Prices. WANTED, B ICYGLE CLUBS. Five, Ten or Fifteen in a Club. Ln a Cash Club of 10 1 will give 40 per cent, of my discounts ' Write for Club Rates and Discounts. THESC LANDS CAN BS it TAKEN UP WITHOUT RESIDENCE! $ Under the Desert Act, affording a chance for the speulattor - as well as the homeseekef. i II I I JT. I EMPLOYMENT AT GOOD WAGES f - - . w J For Mea ancl Teams oH the constructioM work, if you desire to make a J x-m home there ' tt REMEMBER that, these Lands are level, rirh soil, aa railroad now built. And on line of another. free, lumber cheap, and water plentiful. Good local 43 well as outside $. The irrigation of these lands makes them immensely and imme- X$ Send 4 cents in stamps for full information to all ready for the plow, with building;. Fuel is Jl markets. diateiy productive. tt tt tt it Honey Lake YalleyLand&WaterCo : FRED W. LAKE, Secretary Office, 6 FloDd Building, SAN FRANCISCO, 0AL. it SPECIAL EXCORSIONS AT REDUCED RATES ARE BEING RUN FROM SAN FRANCISCO. tt tt I it CWMreCry forjitcherlsjlastorla. tttt&Stnt -f " a f - or. a ,. fsaPllBm n SAFKTIFS alii viri cesfresup; cash or on :i-t u .1 it ii-tt. EICYCLES, TYPEWRITERS, SKATES, ETC. Controlling Orrpon and Wssh ii:jjton for the lead ing and best BICYCLES) nrmi'iiKits asd JjKATKS manufac tured in America. A full stock constantly On hanil atall prcesfrrmflOtip. V rite for cat-li dircunuts na instollnicnt terms. Bicycle and Typewriters taken in ' change. BKAKCH STOEES: gALFM, Ok., Spokak ABD TACOMA, VVASSi "The Proper Caper." . FRED T. MERRILL, 127 Washington St., Portland, Cm. MR. CHAS. HODSON, My Corvallis Agent, iu t.n all about it BOWEN XESTEE , Office upstairs in Farra's Brick. Strictly First-class work guaranteed. Corvallis; -.. , - Oregon. Main St., Op. Cameron' Store.. A quiet room. Good Books. Current F pers and Periodicals. The public invited Strangers especially welcome. . Per Order of W. 0. 1. V, iSTurnished rooms (Up stain) to rent. THE OREGON LAND CO. -wrfH rrs flosfB oftict at-- SALEM, ' - ' OHEGOlSr, la the Gray Block, corner Liberty and State .Weets.; branch offi in Portland - Makes a specialty of Sunnyside fruit tracts near Salem. winil 5. 10 or 0 1 acreots at $50 to $60 per acre-smal cash payment long time balance. Send for particulars. X i 1