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About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 10, 1893)
'TTtV COEVALLIS GA'ETT L, i? ik i DA 1 , J" Lilt i e-alvx J. U, 1 o:.j. die. i tin rtsl'CD KVKtT FKII'f Ror.MHO ET CONOVE3 r ".w, - R s Mont Three M....J13 t'lKle C"V'- ; i r4 Viir (wir. n not Dai J in i 1 1 . 6c advance).... 2 t I THE SCHOOL BOOK LA !''. T. B. llandley, attorney, ex-editor and a former experienced edu cator of Tillamook, writes pointed ly on the school book question a follows: "Among nil the questions before the Oregon legislature tho;e is i:o other that can compare in impor tance to the poor man with thai of our school books. Under our present system a single firm in Portland lias an absolute monop oly, and books are sold at an enor mous profit, and sold too, to the weoDle least able to bear the bur den. It costs a poor man more ior school books than for the tu ition of his children and at least two thirds of that expense is clear profit to the state agent who ex torts it because he is granted the power to do so by the legislature. Go to any book store and you will see books of history, poetry or science, sold side by side with school books and sold at less than one third the price. A copy of Byron can be bought for SO cents and a fifth reader for $1.10. The Byron contains Ihe most reading matter, is on paper, with better print and better binding, but hav ing no "cinch" on the people it is sold at a reasonable profit, while, the other book is forced upon buyers at enormous rates. When a school history that can bo pub lished for 17 cents is sold to a man who is obliged to buy it for 1'20 cents, the purchaser is actually robbed or at least 90 cents of that sum, and when the people of Ore gon b.iy over one hundred thous and of these books they are rob bed of 90.000. So with all the books, and it is safe to eay that ! the present school book monopoly of Oregon is clearing half a mil lion dollars Annually, above a rea sonable profit on business." "No wonder that they can have talkers and writers, and newspa pers, aiid perhaps members of the legislature creating a public senfi menfiu favor of the present sys tem, but it seems to me that ev ery' man who buys a scho l book and then reflects a moment on where the high prices come from, must demand some measure of re lief from the-Jaw-making power. "It may not b best for the state to print tiie books, or it mar. Bat it certainly is suicidal to trust any man or firm with an exclusive riht for the sale of school books in the state. Let the booksellers compete qii an even footing and we will buy all our school books for about one-third of tho present prices." The jute mill bill, says tiie Statesman, will likely pass, since the committee lias reported it fa vorably and there is no other pro- ! position for the employment of J the convicts, except it be a re- j newal of the present contract. It j is said the wool and hops of Ore-' goa will use more jute sacks than j the proposed factory can manufac ture, to say nothing of tiie wheat and other sacks. It will be fully a year before tha proposed plant can be put in operation and the con victs be educated so as to run it successfully. The machinery come3 from England, and by bring ing it around the horn there will be a'dehiy of about three months, but a saving of $25,000. The ap propriation calls for $160,000- The governor of Oregon appears to be thoroughly mad. He seems implacable in his bitterness toward Cleveland. The ' Salera Journal saw him in reference to his refusal to allow the state camion to be used at the inauguration, and here is the cranky result, "The gov ernor says he will court martial any officer of his staff who would do such a thing. It is asking loo much of "him as commander in-chief to have a salute fired at the expense of the state in honor of such a man as Cleveland. lie says the bar barians bow down to stock and stones, but Oregon shall not con: tribute to the idolatry of the stuff ed prophet of Wall street while he is governor of this state." v; -''' Cooper's new road law does away with the labor tax which yields no good results in roads, but proposes a tax of four mills instead. Grading machines provided to do the work b are fore the grouud gets hard and euch a machine will do as much road work as thirty or forty teams with plows and scrapers. The roads are to be uniform in plan, built with gravel with stone culverts where practicable. It is being opposed on -the ground that the tax is al ready loo, high, and if the super-" visors; would . do their duty we wduiU nave good roads. We I THE aiiEA T S'ORTUEItX. I !1' of ill.v i!hi:-tr:i(es American , . .,'. ,,1 v.i 'Males (.Men ' otitr-riirKi' IJie which was co::rL;le!e;l to its Puget .Sound terminus a few days ajro. The road was pushd over the j iiio'.intfiins at the rate ol 2,000 to i V iY'i'f r, (I'lv. :in(! for iliy ;ast ! l ici'i. a (t:iv. aim ior in two or llii-oe weeks the biiikk-rs j have been hindere bv over three ! feet oi ;;iHiv. with "in ccisiim i'hH woiK v ent on and certainty of a great .army, nolwis itanuimr tno snow a;il col-i. verses wilds and : to tourists and b The road tra oiitudes un known -seers, and the work was pushed in ootn direc tions unt day nigh' :i the bm uters , .'January 3th, i was driven. liK'L irri when liif And not only v ,'c.re Ui r - r-;i! icarlv la do vr, at the rate o half a luiie per day in frost wire car followed and unreeled a and snow, but a the locomotive Western Union line, and an improvised telej rapn end station wus formed at the of each day's worn. The manner of the construc tion of the road is gratifying also, says the Inter Ocean, compared with the history of the Northern Pacific. In the building of ihe latter, Chinese labor v.'hs an -important and at that time regarded as an indispensable element. In the construction of the Great Northern, however, Scandinavians and Irish did the greater part of the work and at fair compensation, the wages for common laoor being i per clay. The immediate benefit of an other great transcontinental route will be i'c't bv all the cities of the L northwest as well as by the rapid ly growing states of the northern Pacific coast. The element of competition will now enter more and more in commerce with the coast states, and this in turn will be felt in the increased commerce between the east and' the west. Every great railroad and telegraph line makes the solidity of tiie United States more complete and tends to unify commerce, politics and law. AFiiiK viewingthe remains of ex President Hayes at Fremont, Mr. Cleveland said to a friend: "When the news of General Hayes' death reached me I w as almost overcome. I said to my wife that if General Hayes were in my place ami I in his, he would certainly come to me and I told my wife th-ifc I should take the trip. lie was a man for whom I'" had the highest regard. lie was brave and he was consci entious." Yet these are words from the leader of the party wdiose spokesmen from the Atlantic to the Pacific, from the lakes to the gulf, hounded the lifeless ex-president to his tomb with (he old pot house political howl of "fraud Hayes," and all the other epithets once familiar in a reprehensible turmoil at the bottom of which tho democratic party was just ex actly the one that-was responsi ble. The contrast between the j AUrk LA J V . I JAW B4.WA..A - 1 . I V J .uv ceaoie. xnai is au. Ix is to be hoped that demo cratic whang'doodles, who have set up a man of straw for President Harrison and abused it high and low because they "jeo' knowed he wouldn't appoint a democratic su- tuvmha ir.(lf-r in nlnr-A r.f T.fiinnr." .vm w 1 nOVffi (1f t'.oir dis- ! ,roco c,'i.m,.w nrV.-.t n. t of squawking geese tuey have made of themselves. Howell E. Jackson has been appointed by the president to tho position nam ed. He is a democrat and a resi dent of Tennessee, where his stand ing as a lawyer is high. Tin; Sandwich Islands, in which the pariy now in power asks lor union with the United States, are a long way down toward the equa tor, being more than half way from here to that line. They are under the 201. h degree of latitude, which line also passes over the middle of the G ulf of Mexico; and the 160th degree of longitude, which cuts the western part of Alaska, also passes over them. Exchange. When the project for an ex-Confederates' home in Richmond, Ya., was first set afoot, General Butler was living in. Washington, and contributed $500; and as he hand ed a check for that amount to Mr. Fleming, the canvasser for the en terprise, lie added: "If you need more, let me know." A law is under way to counties liable for loss or damage a person may sustain in conse quence of defective and dangerous roads and bridges on any legal county road without any conlribu tiy negligence on his part. The measure is favorably spoken of. The era of "harmony" is gradu ally overspreading tiie nation. There are now only about half a dozen legislatures in a deadlock over a senatorial election. Our neighbors over in Washington seem to be frozen solid' in their 1 Hawaii 1 liprn ara -10.000 serfs which would be directly in con flict with (he laws of the United There are manv other crude and complex institutions on the island that would have to bo born again for adaptation into the American system. Annexation on the part of our government, would be like the mountain going to Mo- 'TriTir-t w.iu vnrv litllf Yi'fiyrriO;x. benefit in fact none that oar na tion has not already enjoyed well on to a century and a quarter, while we have prospered very well inn, The ihe cr a -separate government, ro is jast one valid cxciiso for United tftatcV setlinK up busi- ii ess over that i:;, among if t-he tiie Kanakas, and ooirt t;o it some other n so Jon That's bad, but there are millions of square miles or territory ngn; side by side with u;, that comes squarely under 'the purview of the Monroe doclrine, but is dominated by foreign monarchies, it looks as if the fxhemc of going oil' into mid- ocean for more territory is deci dedly tar-fetched. Fifty years from now, if this United Stales can maintain a serene and peace ful federation over the territory she owns today, she will be ex ceptionally fortunate beyond all histories of tho world. This is not an alarmist's vagary; it is a glint of the signs of the times. The people of Eastern Oregon are highly incensed over the defeat of the lialey portage bill, and talk ivtaliiation against Western Ore gon as a means of procuring a more just consideration at the hands of Ihe hitter's representatives. The Times-Mountaineer vigorously re sents the affront its people feels and strenously urges thy following significant advice: "There is one way in which the people interes ted in tho passage of the portage road can stimulate favorable ac tion, and that is by pursuing ob struction tactics regarding import ant matters. The dome of tiie capitoJ, the penitentiary, insane asvlum. reform school, agricul- turn; college, ksli J adder at Oregoi: Citv, and the purchase of the locks at that point will all need money, and every member from Eastern Oregon should refuse to vote a single dollar for either of these until the portage bill is pas sed. Western Oregon receives liberal annronriation every year and Eastern Oregon is not consid ered at all. This has continued long enough, and the time has come when the vast region east ol the Cascades should demand re cognition. no - ' According to Brads! rect, the old reliable, the available wheat supply of this country is some thing stupendous. The latest fig ures showed accumulated stocks to be 107,870,000 bushels; one year ago the like total wa3 only 67,1 S3, 000 bushels. We are, therefore, carrying more than 40.000,000 bushels of wheat in sight, avail able for market purposes, in excess of wdiat was correspondingly avail blo one year ago, after wo had harvested the largest wheat crop in the history of the United States. The new proposed tresspass !:iv: is "a rorkcr " It virtually forbids a man with a firearm in his posension going even to a man's house to ask -permission for hunting on his premises; makes a felon of a man for hunting on any grounds not fenced in and privil eges the shooting of any dog caught out from home. Sports men will fight the bill to the bitter end. - O- . A bill repealing the mortgage tax law and wiping out the deduc tion for indebtedness clause passed the house some days ago and went to the senate Tuesday with a pros pect of being sustained by that body. Governor Pennoyer's sen timents, heretofore expressed, in dicate that he will without doubt perfect tho lav. TttE New Orleans lottery swin dle having outlived its charter in this country will "set up business in T'egucigtlpa. It may be dis creet to state, for the benefit of the fence Post man, that Tegu cigalpa is not in Benton count7, but is one of the county seats of Honduras. Ovef. in Pacific county, Wash., a mob promplly-did what lawful proceedings failed to do in mov ing a county seat. There is a no more prolific cause inciting to law lessness and bloody feuds than these county seat questions. Joining in the common vein of press criticism of the legislature the Statesman discovered "space to remark that all the fools are not in the legislature." And the Statesman filled that space. Tins senate has passed -a bill which sets apart a homestead to the val ue of $ 1 500 for each head of a family'. cflTd the probabilities are that the measure will pass "the house and become a law. ' ; - 1L?I Crv for Pitcher's 'CastorlaJ WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, Jan. 30., 1333. -The solemn tolling of the big bell in the tower which surmounts the church of the covenant tells the sympathising thousands who crowd the streets adjacent thereto that tho remains of Americ a's i greatest statesman James cmies-. -James Gilles- j pie Elaine nave leu uie houmjii which lie maue siiuu a uiavu uii agamst uearn. oiowiy, sio-a iv iue funeral cortege moves through tire vast sea of sympathetic faces, every head uncovered and rever ently bowed and every heart throb bing with the same sympathy that is felt by every patriotic American. At the door of the church the un ostentatious black casket an al most exact duplicate of the one 'in which Mrs. Harrison was so lateiy carried to her last resting place was carried within by loving hands and carefully deposited on the vel vet covered dais. In the congre gation which filled every inch-of available space were the most prominent representatives of every profession and calling, conspicious among them being President Har rison and entire cabinet, and the legations of every foreign govern ment represented at Washington. The services were of ' the simplest, no singing; no music, except a Urge upon the organ played by Vlr. Walter Damrosch, Mr. Bistine's son-in-law, and no sermon; noth ing but the reading of the Presby terian burial ritual, and a prayer by Dr. Hamlin, the pastor of the church. It was. proposed lo give the dead statesman a grand public funeral in the capitol building, but at the reouesf of the iauuly the ltlea was abandoned. Mrs. iiiaine also re quested that no further official no tice of the deatli be taxen by tne iational government than was ab solutely necessary, and that the mourning now on the state depart ment on account of the death of ex President Hayes should be re moved at the expiration of thirty days, just done had as would nave ueen Mr. Blaine not died; and her wishes will be respected in that as funeral. Prom thzy were regarding the the church of the cove nant to Oitk Hill cemetery where the interment was made beside the grave of his favorite son, Wal ker, from the effects of whose death Mr. Jilaino never entirely recov ered, is something more than mile, but the crowd which followed the oiocession, on foot, cared nothing for that; they were there to dp honor to the man they loved, and'had it been twenty miles they would have followed that casket to its final resting place. Ana who doubts that lu the alter years, when the United States shall have reached the grandeur which was so plainly visible to the prophetic eyes of Mr. Blaine, it will be con sidered a great, honor in thous ands of families to say: "My farther, or my grandfather, or my great-grandfather saw Mr. Blaine buried?" Not I. Already there is much talk of a movement for the erection of a grand monument at the capital of the nation he did so much for, in honor of Mr. Blaine, and there is little doubt that in due course of time such a memorial in bronze or stone, or both, will be erected; but Mr. Blaine will have a monu ment in the history of his country that will last as long as the world itself. His great work in behalf of Ids country is already as well recognized by his political oppo nents as by his followers, as was shown by tike following telegram to his widow, from Mr. Cleveland: "His brilliant statesmanship will always be an inspiration to the nation he has served so long and so well. Permit me to extend 1113- sympalliy on the deatli ot your distinguished husband." Within a few weeks sometime in March the patents on the prin cifl.il parts of the Bell telephone will expire. This will be a very important event to the renters of telephones who have been compel led to pay extortionate prices to the owners and controllers of these patents', which may soon be used by anybody. Whether intended or not Sena tor Chandler's resolution provid ing for the investigation of the whisky trust, had a stimulating effect on the house committoe on rules, and representative Burrows' resolution was repored to the house and adopted. At the game time a resolution providing for an investigation of the money spent by the Panama Canal Co. - in this country, and the relations of the Panama railroad with the Pacific Mail Steamship Co., and other transportation lines adopted. rThe president and members o! congress are much interested in the application of Hawaii for an nexation to the United States, but the matter is too important to be decided off-handed,' and will pro bably be left for Mr. Cleveland to wrestle with. The: bill .appropriatiyg $00,000 for the world's fair exhibit has parsed both houses, and went into the hands of the governor the first of the week. - - ' ' :- - ' ALSO HEADQUARTERS FOB p. --5. ,r. , j ' 4. bku ;jPMjrss, -ifc3S This "ad" sent to us with a sway POiiP. rtc. .fifteen cents on your first order. . Poetlaxd is in a peck of hall ,i)llsi,els over the bridge question. !Jonsoik' Consolidation was funny before it as a lac Tlsc Fata of Vhvu:;i3 Hulks. The crateiy which has boon rsiseS against the destruction of Nelson's old fiairsUp, the Foutiroyant, uiuktss it inter esting to trr.co tho end of other famous ves-wis. Tho Shannon, which fought and cap tured the Chesapeake, was broken up at Chatham, i ts of her hull being cold at a f.ncy price. Sir Fvarieia Drake's Goi'h;n Lliii'l came to a enaikir end at Der-lford, n chair ui.'tde out of her tira- Ivrs Ixrlng one cf tho trcat-nres of Ox ford nmversifcy. Tho Resolute, which rut m search of Sir John Franklin, tad afi.tr being abandoned in an ica v.asto was picked ur by an American whaler nit rotumed refitted by too United GUtes goverm:i3iit to thia conn try, was moored in tho Mcdway for fiotue years uUoi-warU, out tuiunaveiy takwi in dock and palled to pieces, a Gmt ct ruriiiture la-iitonea rrom nei oaken limbers being sent as a memento to tho American president. Tha Bov-ereir-n of th Sea;;, the first British three cker, buiit in tho time oc Charles I, "to tbo great glory of tiie English na tion, end iu;t to bo paralleled in tho v-holo Cbriiitian world," was ecciden- ,l!y destroyed by nro at Cbathiiui after enig iiiach and long sarvice. Of Cut-tain Cook's Eadaavor not a traco is left, though several of his scien tific iiisti-aruents have teen preserved, nor is tkera any tvac-o cf the Victoria, which made tho first voyage round tho world. Tha Betsy Cains, which brought William of Orange to this country ia 1GS3. wan cyst awny 130 years later. London Btsindaid. A I.ivcly RriilejjToom. I omilo as I call to mind the day when I married well known jockey to an equally popnlar baronet's daughter, flow he df'i make tho money uyl llo gave mo a diamond pin, my clerk jot live pound note, and tho two witnesses, both sporting men, a "teuuor" each. Some of the terms he used wore decidedly horsy. For instance, ho referred af fectionately to his levy as a "smart little lly; little" bit skittish; wants careful .lookcyehip, but a demon when she geto the bit in her month, and yet tho smart est in tho Seldr "Look at tho rare stylo Bho comes to the post!" he joyfully cried, a3 the lady walked np the room; and "now we're ender starter's orders!" as I commenced the ceremony. When I asked the lady if she would "tako this man," etc., and she answered to a clear voico "I will," ho remarked. "Takes the feueo like a daisy," asid on putting the earns question to hmj tao ans7or was, "It's 20 to 1 on I Will." When all wa3 over and thay were hitched into double harneE3, lie flung his ai-ms around her and kissed her im puhdTely; then turning to na all ua v.-e stood smiling he sentontiouily re marked, "Rattling good finish." As my jockey friend left tho room and en tered the carriage he whispered, "Back my motmt for tho Chester cup next week." 1 did it won. A Resistor ia London Tit-Bits. Wnnic-.i Who Worlb. It sooms that 23 par cent, of tho women of England earn their own living, but one would scarcely believe that there are nearly 50 female blacksmiths in England, which, hcAvevo'r, pounds no etracger than the statement that women may nov be eecn-driving cabs in New York. Chambers' Journal. A. F. Parker, a street car conductor in Oakland, Cab, posssKSoo two medals pno raven by the qr.een and the other by the khedivo of Egypt, for bravery on tho battlefield. Mr. Parker took part in the march with, Wolseley across tiie desert to Khartoom to relievo Gordon. Arnica-sure of eagerness, and even of something very like impatience, is a pretty good characteristic of young peo ple. Boys and girls, young men and maidens, ought to be wise, but not vrith old men's -wisdom. BAD ECZEMA ON BABY Head one Solid Sore. Itching Awful. Had to Tlo 1IU Hands to Cradle, Cured by Cuticura Our Httle hoy broka ont on his hend with a bad form of eczema, wizift ho was four motitha old. We tried lhra doctors, but they did not help bim. W3 thon used yonr three Cutiouba HtJiEDiKs, uul aftor uuiuij the:a eleven weeks exactly nccoid- lngto direction, ue beitn to steadily iiupro-ve, and after tiie uss of tli(.m fcr seven montliahishcr.dnts entirely well. Wlxn v.e bcnn using itliis heiid v. i.3 a solid sore frou the crown to his eycbions. it was also all over his ears, mofit of his face, and small pianos on different parts of his body. There were sixteen weeks that wo bad to keen his hands tied" to the cradle and hold them iphcn he was taken vtm and h:.d to kerp mtttorn tied on his hands to keep his fir.pcr naili out of the sores, as he would seratoh if he c-rtild ia any way get his hands looe. We know your ClticTjRA Ueuedies cared hla. Wo feel safe in recommending them to others. CiEO. B. & JLVXETTA HARKIS, Webster, Ind. Cutfcura Resolvent The now blood and Skin Purifier, and greatofltof Humor liemedies, cleanses the blood of ailin.ptiri ties and poisonous element, and thus removes the cause, while CxiTicUKA, the great skin cure, and CUTH Cn V Soap, an exquisite skin beautiSer, ckmr tho skin and scalp, and restore the hair. Thus the CirncHJRA KEXEDrss cure every specks of itching, baniinsf,scaly,pimply,and blotchy ekiu, scalp, and blood diseases, from pimples to scrofula, froja Infancy to age, when the best physicians fail. Sold everywhere. Price, CuTrcciiA, 60c. ; Soap, 2-.s. ; UZ80I.VEKT, $1.00. Prepared by the Potteb UjII-U A.MJ lit-.niLAU ugKfOliATION, 1SOSIOII. JCS-tteud for " How to Cure Skin-Diseases," pages, 50 illustrations, and 100 testimonials. 61 Skta and Scalp purified and beautified by CimcoBA cJoap. Absolutely pure. PAiriS AHO WEAKNESSES ?rMjp Of females instantly rcKavcd by tha' SSSJa new.elesrant, and infallihW Antidote tc Pain, InitammMion, and Weakness, tht Cutieura Anti-Fain Plantar, . Chiidren' Cry for Pitcher's Castoria,' A Sa.a Francisco Pape? THERE ARE HANY 0 THIS Weekly IS THE BEST PAPER IN THE WEST. SPECIAL PREMIUMS GIVEN AWAY e It to brimful of news ftom all parts of the world, and its Wterary Department fa supplied, by tita foremost writers of the day. In addition to It great news and literary faaturtis, IT GIVES TO EVERY SUESCR1BEH HIS CHOICE FRCHl TV.O MAGNIFICENT WORKS OF ART, The Examiner's Art Album, Conslstmgof eight beautiful reproductions from masterpieces of the wcrWs jrat est artists, the whole collection bound iu a handsome bamboo leatherHa u.:; Ox a beautiful reproduction, la all of Its original colors, of tha faraene hiktorwit painting, 22x28 Inches, Columbus at the Court of Ferdinand and Isabella.' Aad besides all thi3, THE EZAMIKEE will this year distribute amonjt its subscribers 9,600 XHteViS, ossrsgaiiug 1 valft the stupendous sum of $135,000. This is the fourth aunaal tlitlriiw t!oa and the list of premiums is larger and more valuable than ever before offered. Rea-.tiufeertaat these premiums entail no additional expense to the subscriber whatever. They are ahso!Uty frue. Tna cost of the WEEKLY EXABLTKSB, together with these maguificeiit preraiuia ocTtid, ia ONLY $1.50 Its regular subscription price. Get the full particulars of this grand offer from the EXA1EK32'3 Slztec-u-Paije Premium List, which wo can supply to yoa. or you can prooure oue from your I-wt-master or Newsdealer. Then, having considered the matter, call ou us aud place o combination t ub ocxiiiloa for SEo TSESLY EZAWiJsES and your hoiue paper, and so save 6ouietUias of Uw C6 If Yoa Think Rnv kind of a erorj will do. then tn' kind of seeds will do : but for PI tiio best results yon should plant FERRY'S SEEDS, Always tho lc, they are recognized os tuo btanoaru evtrywueie. Ferry'. Seed Annan! ia tlie roost important lkjok c-i tno kiuu pui i iinoci. it is isvainaQia 10 iu p.antci-. We Gend it ireo. D,M. FERRY & CO. DETE0IT, Mich. TAKE YOUR ATGHE S -TO- XT. 33. VOGLE, Koxt door to Rose's clear factory. IK?35Vi3ErJ?S. mm SUSFEHSORY. TTiH euro Without Mcd:ei-K U Vf&t&neaa rraltipg from oTeriAX&tirm oi brain, ntr7 f'Tces.tiXCflisea or fnHaretioi, tL3 nvx.ua.1 exhzLMgti&a, drat (a ossrn, nervous dfblilty, nfi ienaea, lu.Kuor, rbaiiifiatism, ic-inny, liv-r ci1 l.lftdrlur oomi.!ainiu, lan.e beelc, lumbago, celutica, general Ili-hetliti, etfi. This electric belt eoot&ins Wonderfd Iv:preYciBout over ml! others, aii.l given n current that fa Instamly felt by th v.t-arrrr forfeit jtU'3, und will cJI of the&bota ui-eact: or r6 pay. Tbcujaa'l have btn euretl by tlilc mi;r T9lot3 iareaticB after all other remedies failt'd, and wo cl.-a liuacrcrfg of tcstimctrlalB in thin and pvcit otfcr 6ia,e. urpocrfl IKPbUVCD Kf,t(Ttt filfl ii5IBhy, tho grated boon ovor offercu w eak men.t-'KEK WITH ALL HEi.fJ Ii-allh and vlr-orc;is fttrcnstULAS;.tKTKCiu Cti U90 T vi. gedd fur Illustrated Pomf hleta, nmilrd, sealed, free ACdrcta X 1ST 32X3ESC?ar-HJCO CO., Wo. G7S First St.. PORTLAND. ORE. I. M. JOHNSON, ATT02HEY AT LAW, CORVALL1S, OR. tfrncs a central fracticc in all the courts. AUo er-'-ut ior all the firat-ciau iiiuiuiiccuiiiin;e3. 2;-i Dr. J. M. Campbell, Corvallis, - Oregon. "Office over First National Bank. FOR SALE CHEAP. A tract of land situated ou the 'Little EiU road, known a-s the .Parrish ranch, for bale at 10.00 per aero cosh, on or before the 1st of Kovember, 18'J2. JA3. KOBiSKTdON & Co., Newport Oregon. BO WEN .LESTER 13 KGJ II Office upstairs in Farra's Brick. Strictly First-cbss work guaranteed. CoT'vallis. - - Oregon. MOKEY TO LOAN. Money to loan at 8 per cent interest 01. far niog laud in Benton county. Enqu'of J. C Markley & Co. Oilice oyer '.he voai alijee, Corvaliis, Oregon. B. S. MARTIN, Kotary Public and Convsyancer. Especial attention given to collections of ' :.: every description. , .OFFICE IN ZIEROLF'S BLOCK, Coi vaMis, : ; Crogon. : BLEU 1 HSU m&fL I .Hawaii ..wsmns. ' r request for Catalogue is good for Would Form an Interesting Addition to 9bup Winter Reading. REASONS Examiner VALUE, $125,000 PER YEAR gJQ OiUY LINE TIIllOUGH DAILY TRAINS Leaving Portland 8:15 A. M. 7:30 P.M. iDAYS TO CHICAGO - ... 7 Hours Quicker to St. Paul, 23 Hours Quicker to Chicago, 40 Honrs Quicker to Omaha and Kansas City. Pullman and Tourist Sleepfirs Free Reclining Chair Cars Dining Cars. For rat;3 aivl icm.ral information call on or address W. II. ll'JIU.lil'KT, Asst. Ocnl. 1'ans. Pasa. Agt 2iJ WashhiutMi) Street, i.r. TIjiM, P01iTLAM. OB. IE WANT YOU to act as our a;?eut. We furnish an expnisire outlit and all yoa ncnl frfr. It cot8 nothing to try tlie businf.-s. We will tn?at you well. Hurl hi-lp vou to earn ten times ordinary wnpra. Both gexeH of all ages c:iu live at home and work In spare time, or ail tiie time. Au one any wher can .-urn p-eut deal of money. JIauy hare made Two rtmitlrert IJollar a Month. Xo class of people iii tlie world are making to much money without capital a those at work for tin. ISuMneu pleasant, strielly honorable, and pays better than a. iv otiier oa. ie.l to aiie.ljiL You have a lesr Held, with no compuIiti.Trt'e equip you with everytliiir', and supply printed directions for beffiimers whieh, if obeyed faithfully, will ImUg more tnonev than will a:iv other bufins. In. prove vr,i:r j.rof pects ! Why not ? You can do so easily anil surely at work for ns. Keusonabla industry cinH- necHWurv for absolute tueM9. l'ainphlet cir;:nlarfiviii) every particular is seat lree to all. I'elav not in seiidii'K for it. OJiOlUJK BTIJfSO.V fi CO., liux No. 488, Portland, M. A F. PETERSON, ARCHITECT AND BUILDER. Special attention (jitcb to Job work, stair bill !in, store and ollj-.s fit tii:)?. Keeping- on hand n choice lin' of room and t"' tarc moulilingj, I am preparad to fill r!ors ior rv:l iz..'9 of picture frames with neatness aju li?patch Satisfaction w-Ukiantced. Oivs me a cnl - i:ioe uKu shop two blocks southwest ef public tthoJL 13 en ton County rs-ii-v- B - 1-14-u- b Complete Set of Abstracts of Benton County. ConTcpncicg I Fsrteg Titles a SpsdaHj, Money to Loan on Improved City and Country Property. & MELST i CO., - Propristsrs. MAIN ST.. COR VAL. LIS. J. 1L Apn.EWHITE.M. D., residence North 9th Street H. S. I'ERWf, M D.f residence 1th street, two doors north of Opera liouset Applewliito & Pernot, Cor?allis, Oregon, Offices over J. D. Clark's hard ware store, and at R.' Graham'rf drug store. Hours: 8 to 12 a. m 1;30 to 5, aad 7 to 8:30 p. m. mm A3 S-1 SSW?'W4. o2