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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1904)
FI:D DVfRHSIMENTS Five linaa. o- leas. 25 rents for three insertions, or 50 l enls per month. WANTED MOHAIR AND WOOL WANTED Tre vpry higlimiC price paid, at S. L Kline's. Ci'rval i.-. -MOHAIR AND WOOL. HIGHEST market prk-e paid. VV1I. CBEES, Corvallis. INFORMATION WANTED OF THE whereabouts of Eliza Ann Clinton or heirs. Persuis knowing pleaee ad dress Eixa Kennkdy, Kenton, Hardin Co., Ohio. FOR SALE INVALID'S CHAIR, LIGHT BUILT and Light Running Child can handle it. A bargain at $7 SO Call and Be it at the Gazette office GERMAN COACH STALLION, FINE imported stork. Pedigree on applica tion. Call at Vidito's Stable. C. A. RUBY. LIVESTOCK P. A. KLINE, LIVE STOCK AUC TIONEER, Corvallis. Oregon, Office at Huston's hardware store. P. O. ad dress Box 11. Pays highest prices for all kinds of livestock. Twenty year's experience. Satisfaction guaranteed PHYSICIANS L. G. ALTMAN, M. D.. HOMEOPA thist. Office corner of Third and Mon roe streets. Residence Corner Third and Harrison streets. Hours 10 to 12 a. m. 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. Sundays 9 to 10 a. m. Phone residence 315. 3. A. OAT HEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon. Rooms 14, Bank Build ing. Office Hours : 10 to 12 a. m 2 to 4p.m. Residence : cor. 5th and Ad ams Bts. Telephone at office and res idence. Corvallis, Oregon. "C. H. NEWTH, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, Office and Residence, on Main street, Philomath, Oregon. : DRS. W. H. & MAUD B. HOLT. Osteopathic Physicians. Over First National Bank, Corvallis. Office hours 9 to 11 a. m., 2 to 6 p. m. ATTORNEYS E. R. BRYSON ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in Post Office Building, Corval lis, Oregon. JOSEPH H. WILSON, ATTORNEY-at-Law. Notary, Titles, Conveyanc ing. Practice in all State and Federal Courts. Office in Burnett Building. PAINTERS v SAM KERR, PAINTER AND PAPER Hanger. Phone, Main 405. Corvallis, Oregon FEED HORSE FEED, COW FEED, CHEAT Hay and Sheaf Oats. E. S. KING, i wles North of College. LODGE DIRECTORY MASONIC CORVALLIS LODGE, No. 14, A. F. & A. M. Stated communication first and third Wednesdays of each month., at Masonic Hall, Second st. Jas. A. Harper, W. M. W. P. Laffertv, Secretary. FERGUSON CHAPTER. No. 5, R. A. M. Regular convocation 2nd Wednes day of each month at Masonic Hall, Jesse Irvine, H. P. J. B. Horner, Secretary. OREGON COUNCIL, No. 2,R. & S. M. stated assembly fourth Wednesday of each month, at Masonic Hall. S. Chipman, T. I. M. E. B. Horning, Recorder. ST MARY'S CHAPTER, No. 9. O. E. S., meets Tuesday preceding the full moon, at Masonic Hall. Lillie Groves, W. M. Bertha Davis. Secretary. ODD FELLOWS BARNUM LODGE. No. 7, L O. O. F. meets every Tuesday evening at I. O. 0. F. Hall. Dolph Norton, N. G. W. P. LaftVrty, Secretary. QUI VIVE ENCAMPMENT, No. 2, 1. O. O- F., n eets first and third Fri days in I. O. O. F. Hall. E. L. Strange, C. P. W. E. Yates, Fcribe, ALFI1A, No. Si. EEBEKAH LODGE, meets the Fetord and fourth Mondavs in L O. O. F. Hall. Mrs. II. S. Pernot, N. G. Miss Sadie Dixon, Secretary. MARYS PEAK CAMP. "No. 120. W. O. W.. meet? sewnd and liourth" Fridays, in Woodmen lid!!. V 1-n cr, C. C. J. L. Underv.-cd? CSerk. .- TTlSAItAJTEROFHEAUB mm Absolutely Par THERE IS KQSUnsnWTE LETTERS f ROM THE PEOPLE, Articles of general interest will he pub lished in this department as the personal ouinion of the writers. It is understood that the paper is nor. held responsible for any opinion here expressed. Editor Gazette : As the editor of our most valuable county paper has opened a department, of correspondence by the subscribers. I will contribute the follow ing in regard to the Sabbath : Now, all we know or can know, about the Sabbath of the Lord we get from the Bible. We find it stated in Genesis 3 :2 that God blessed the seventh day and sanctified it because that in it he had rested from all his work which God created and made. Nowr, it still re mains a fact that God blessed and sancti fied the seventh day, and that he rested upon that day, and that he did not sanc tify and rest and pronounce a special blessing upon any other day. Looking further, we find as recorded in Exadus 16th chapter that God withheld manna from falling in the camp of the Israel ites on the Sabbath, during their ex perience iu the wilderness, causing twice the usual amount to fall on the sixth day, commanding them to gather a dou ble portion on the sixth dav, in order that they might not desecrate the Sab bath by gathering and preparing food on thnt dav. Passing on to the twentieth chapter of Exodus we have the record of the giving of the ten commandments by the Lord upon Mt. Sinai. In the fourth or Sab bath commandment it is here again stated that the Lord blessed and hal lowed the Seventh day. Now to hallow is to make holy. There is no record in the Bible that God ever made holy any other but the seventh and commmded that it shonid be observed as a weekly sabbath. It is quite generally believed that the Lord changed the Sabbath from the the seventh to the first day of the week on the occasion of the resurrection, but the Bible nowhere states nor im plies any such change, on the contrary there are very good reaaons for believing it was not changed. Tne Saviour, when on earth certainly knew which day was the Sabbath. His disciples must also have known. Now it is stated in the gospels that the Lord rose from the dead on the first day of the week and in con nection with that it is also stated that the Sabbath had passed and that his dis ciples had kept it according to the com mandment, whioh commandment states that the seventh and not the first is the Sabbath. Mark the last part of the fifteenth and first part of the sixteenth, and Luke last part of the twenty-third and first part of the 24th chapters. St. Paul was a Pharisee, the son of a Phari see Acts twetity-third chapter and sixth verse, which sect were the strictest Sab bath keepers the world has ever known, and yet Paul declares not long before his death that he had committed nothing contrary to the customs of his fathers, Acts 24 :17, which he could not have said if he had abandoned the keeping ot the Sabbath as commanded and substituted some other day. Many people who are zealous for the keeping of Sunday, the first day of the week are clamoring for laws to compel the populace at large to abstain from secular pursuits on that day. Now that won't work. The Sab bath is declared to be holy. God's peo ple are commanded to keep it holy. The majority of people are not holy, and as they are not holv there is cer tainly no propriety in trying tocompel them by human, legal enactments to keep an holy institution. They must first be made holy which can never be accomplished by compulsive means. C. P. Willis. Blodgett, Oregon. O. A. C. Notes. Rev. Green took supper with the Cauthorn Hall boys Friday evening The way the Freshmen are train ing for the field meet they will take first place if souieone don't do some pretty good work this week. In Chapel last Friday morning Prof. Goodnough rendered an ex cellent piano solo which was well received by the students. If you were to visit Prof. Lake's class in plant morphology you would be inclined to think that there was danger of some kinds of flowers becoming extinct from the number to be found on the dissect ing table. The Barometer is going to put out a large souvenier edition this year. It "will come free to all regular subscribers but others will be charged 25 cents per copy. It' will contain pictures of all the build ings, of the classes, of the battalion and literary societies, besides many others of interest. It will contain short diseriptions of the buildings, and other things of interest about the school. In fact it will be just the thing to send to prospective students for it wjill till them the fJprra tby wish to know concern-; i i t 7 gtimiiimHimmHjrMMikIiui mimmmuit Aketable Preparationlor As similating Hie Food andEeg ma ting theStomachs and Bowels of m m Promotes Dige3fion.Cheerful ness andRest-Contins neirher S)him.Morplune nor Mineral. OT NARCOTIC. m Jbttpe afObHkSAMUELPtTOHER flmmJcU Semf jflx.StrvM. SmJlu sum- Clmiud Jhaar hSktmywmt rmr. Aperfecl Remedy for Cons lipa Tion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions Jcverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COPY Of WRAPPER. Dr. Withycombe went to Portland yesterday(to meet Professor Elwood Mead, who is from Washington D C. and is at the head of the irrigation and drainage work. He is now on the coast investigating some prospective J work. He came first to ban Fran cisco, and is now on his way to the Sound country. Roy Howard, "'02, who left here last fall to enter school at Drake University, Des Moines, Iowa, has lately become quite a traveling man, with headquarters at Buffalo, N. Y. He is now traveling among the colleges and universities of Ohio aud West Virginia, hiring and training agents to go out during the coming summer with the "Self and Sex Series" of books. He is an excellent canvasser himself hav ing done some record-breaking work in the last two years. Professor Pernot is carrying on some very interesting experiments, in the preparation of cheese for market. Wnen cheese is cured in the old way it must be turned and greased everv day and then J 1 per cent is lost by shrinkage and in a damp climate about 30 per cent more by mould, and in addition to this it must be kept in some partic ular temperature while it is ripen ing, and then when it is sold the consumer must lose considerable in the rind. But when cured by Prof. Pernot 's new method there is absolutely no loss, for it is cured in a sealed tin can. It does not mould and no care is needed except that it be kept in a tolerably cool place, and there is no rind at all. And beside all these advantages it is much more digestible and he can giye it any flavor he desires and it will retain it. He is also curing some Swiss cheese in the same way Friday evening after an early supper A. R. Barnett and J. Lin gass left Cauthorn Hall for a trip to Mary's Peak. Lineass carried the bedding and Barnett the cooking outfit and eatables. As they start ed bravelv forth with their faces t ward the setting sun the boys gave a cheer to help them on their way. As they vanished from sight the boys turned back into the Hall many of them wishing that they could go out for a jaunt and live on fish and wild game for a few days As the sun sank to rest in the golden west the excursionists found themselves near "ballv" about half way to Philomath. They decided that they had travelled enough for one day so they pitched their camp. The next morning when the sun came up and thawed them out they struck camp and made tracks for home arriving at Cauthorn Hall soon after breakfast. The boys josh edthem a little but they did not mind, for they hadhad the pleasure of an early summer outing. Thursday morning at Chapel exercises President Gatch read a letter from F. E. Edwards, last year's commandant, who is new a student in Berkeley, California. Mr. Edwards says that the summer school at Berkeley this year will be an very interesting one for several of the world's greatest professors will be there. Among them are Professor Anhenius, of Stockholm University, ozie of the. world's great- jH'wrHtH'i:iiiiHHniHitir.Hutisn f TSPl Bill For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of est Phvsicists; Sir William Ramsey, of London, and Hugo De Vries, the great evolutionist. He also said all of the O. A. C. men who are in at tendance there are making them selves known. Stanley Herbert, '02 is oon to go to Nevada on some government work in irrigating. Roy Shepard, '02 will graduate this year and is among the best electri cians in the University. Fred Haz ard who was here for some time last fall is now doing special work in the minir.g department there He says for himself that he is taking some very interesting work in soil phys ics and chemistry. He is also assistant professor in qualitative analysis. He will soon be back as his examinations will come May 11. We will all be glad to see him for he is a universal favorite with all who know him and with the College boys especially. Card of Thanks. We are deeply grateful to the kind- rhearted people of this community tor their words of sympathy and acis of kindness during our present affliction. Geo. B. Keady and Family. FANION 53,053 34,473 Imported Black Percheron Stallion, will make the season of 1904 as follows : Mondays, Tuesdays and Wednesdays at Farmer's Barn, Corvallis; Thursdays, at McFad den's Farm. Bruce; Fridays! and Saturdavs at Monroe, Oregon. Terms: $15.00 the season ; $20.00 to insure. T. K. Fawcett, Owner, Corvallis, Oregon INGESTION "I was troubled with stom ach trouble. Thedford's Black Draught did me more good in one week than all the doc tor's medicine I took in a year." MRS. SARAH E. SHIBFIELD, Ellettsville, Ind. Thedford's Black Draught quickly invigorates the ac tion of the stomach and cures even chronic cases of indigestion. If you will take a small dose of Thed ford's Black Draught occa sionally you will keep your stomach and liver in per fect condition. THEDFORD'5 , BLACK-DRAUGIf n More sickness is caused by constipation than by any other disease. Thedford's Black-Draught not only re lieves constipation but cures diarrhoea and dysentery and keeps the bowels regular. All druggists sell 25-cent packages. "Thedford's Black Draught is the best medi cine to regulate the bowels I have ever used." MRS. A. M. GRANT, Sneads Ferry, N. C. Ml- . I aw I I r Jp in lnr Use jf- For Over ' I ' mm K B ' " iff m nirtv lears - ! tm oetmioii aoHMMT. New von. am. -:zr5--r.- 1 ran GENERAL BLACKSMITHS, WAGON and HACUMAKERS. One door North Farmers Hotel ;;; Serine Httttouittttttent DressiGoods Millinery Shirtwaists Hosiery J- E. HENKLE, Philomath. O. J. BLACKLEDGE, new yiimuurc 3 music $tgrc. cordially invite you to inspect my new stock of goods, mm. consisting of . Various Musical Instruments Bed Lonnges and Couches Bedroom Suites, Iron Bedsteads Maple and Ash Bedsteads Woven Wire Springs Good Liae of Mattresses Extension Tables, Center Tables Go-Carts Also Sewing Machines, new and second-hand. Second-hand Pianos for sals and for rent. A few stoves and a few pieces of Granitewa-e left. O. J. BLACKLEDGE. SHOE REPAIRING I am doing first class work cheaper than elsewherean the Willam ette Valley. I use none but the best leather. Ladies half-soles, 50c; Men's half-soles, 75c; Men's half -soles, old Kentucky tan, heavy Jumbo White Oak, 75c. AH repairs in proportion. Your pa tronage sol icite I. C M. GlEASON. With J. IV. Ingle COMMERCIAL RESTAURANT OPENED Saturday, April 9th . . . AT THE SAME OLD STAND . C. C. Chipman, Proprietor C. A. HYLAND, FREE BUS OCCIDENTAL HOTEL H. M. BRUNK, Prop. Leading hotel in Corvallis. Newly furnished with modern convenien ces. Rates $1, $1.25 and $2 per day. U El Q Q El Q IL ADAMS BROS., SESfiSSg Will furnish estimates on anything in the building line. All kirn s of picket and weveti fence to order. South Main St., Corvallis. - HATHAWAY BROS., OPPOSITE R. M. WADE'S. SOUTH MAIN ST., CORVALLIS. Carriage Building Hacks for sale Horseshoeing General Biacksmithing Benton County Cumber Company, MANUFACTURERS OF AYi kinds of Dealers in Shingles, Mouldings, tention given PfcHcaiata i Sideboards, Kitchen Safes Kitchen Treasures Dining Chairs, High Chairs Children '8 Rockers and Many Styles of-Rockers ' Fine Lot Bamboo Furniture just in Window Shades, Curtain Poles New Line of Wall Paper PAINTER & PAPERHANGER. Graining, Alabastins work and fine Carriage Painting a specialty. Satisfaction guarac teed. Call or drop him a card ior estimates. FREE SAMPLE ROOM Fir. Lumber- Doors and Windows. Special ai- bills in car-load lots. t. , Oregon. N