The daily gazette-times. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1909-1921, August 14, 1909, Image 2

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    THE DAILY GAZETTE-TIES
Published every evening except Sun
day. Office: 259-263 Jefferson street,
Corner Third street, and 232 Second
Street, Corvallis, Oregon.
PHONES, 210 4184
Entered at the postoffice at Corvallis,
Oregon, as second class matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
DAII.Y
Delivered by carrier, per week......$ I5
Delivered by carrier, per month .50
By mail, one vear, in advance 5.00
By mail, six months, in advance....; 2 50
By mail, one month, in advance .50
demand a protective duty in be
half of a product or an industry
in my own state until I am will
ing to concede protection to every
other industry in every other
state of the American Union." ;
WHAT WOMAN IS MADE OF.
THE WEEKLY GAZETTE-TIMES
Published Every Friday
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One year, in advance $2.00
Six moths, in advance 1.00
In ordering changes of address, sub
scribers should always give old as well as
new address.
N. R. MOORE . .
CHAS. L. SPRINGER,
. . . Editor
Business Mgr.
LAND OBLIGATIONS.
While great fortunes have put
it in the power of man to acquire
land in great tracts, nature has
placed a limit on the ability of
even the most capable to manage
it properly if it exceed the di
mensions which reason and com
mon sense would dictate. It
might easily happen, for instance,
that one of our modern million
aires should purchase a tract as
large as one of our smaller states;
and yet the man does not live
Who could manage a farm the
size of the smallest county in the.
smallest state, in such a way as
to get even moderately good re
sults from the whole of it. By a
farm is, of course, meant a tract
of land suitable for general agri
cultural, and not a pasture range,
which is rightly held in much
larger areas. But be the land
tillable, pasture, or woodland,
the standard of conduct for 1 him
. who assumes its";" ownership and
management is precisely the
same. "Let the earth bring
forth grass, the herb yielding
seed and the tree yielding fruit;"
see that you do not hinder it: do
do not take the land out of com
mission; this law is written large
in the evident purposes of nature
and the needs of the world, and
it lays upon the landowner an
obligation so sacred and so im
perative that it not only demands
- his best powers - of mind and
body, "but forbids him to under
take more than he can carry out
For he has assumed the kingship
of a portion of the universe; he
is dealing directly with the
forces of nature and of evolution,
A SENATOR OF RIGHT CONCEPT.
During the debate on .the tar
iff bill in the senate, Senator
Gore, of Oklahoma, refused to
Vote for a high tariff on oil
though urged to do so by the oi
producers of his state. Explain
ing his refusal, he said;
"I confess there is a good deal
of human nature in me. I wish
that this cup might pass from
my lips. Many of the independ
ent producers in the state of Ok
11 11
lanoma are my personal ana po
liti-ial friends. They would ren
der me any possible service, and
I would reciprocate. I would
render them any possible service
that I could without violence to
my conscience and my convictions,
Perhaps my attitude on this oo
casion is attributable rather to
verdure them to virture. Per
haps when I have grown older in
statecraft, and in political fine
ness, i may reverse both my
views and my policies. Mr. Presi
dent, I am not unaware, that
may now be making a serious,
fatal political mistake, I am not
unaware that I may , be ordering
a political casket. ' I am not una
ware that I .may be, like the an
fcient queen, lighting my own fun
eral pyre. But, sir, I shall never
According to a Hindoo legend
this is the proper origin of wo
man. Twashtri, the god Vulcan
of the Hindoo mythology, created
the world, but on his commenc
ing to create woman he discover
ed that for man he had exhaust
ed all his creative material, and
that not one solid element had
been left. This, of course, great-
y perplexed Twashtri and caused
him to fall into a profound medi
tation. When he arose from it
he proceeded as follows. He took:
The roundness of the moon.
The undulating curve of the
serpent. , .
The graceful twist of the
creeping plant.
The light shivering of the
grass-blade and the slenderness
of the willow.
The velvet of the flowers.
The. lightness of the feather.
The gentle gaze of the doe.
The frolicsomeness of the
dancing sunbeam. .
The tears of the cloud.
The inconsistency of the wind.
The timidity of the hare.
The vanity of the peacock.
The hardness of the diamond.
The cruelty of the tiger.
The chill of the snow.
The cackling of the parrot.
The cooing of the turtle dove.
All these mixed together and
brmed a woman.
each one with a personal marker.
Within a few days the farms will
be divided into five and ten acre
tracts, when the real work of he
Orchard Company will begin. It
is the intention of these people.
so our information goes, to place
the ground in first-class condition
and then to plant all that is suit
able to apple trees. As there is
600 acres of such . ground, the
task will be no small one, and
some little time and a large crew
of laborers will be required to
reach the desired results. How
ever, the land, when once put in
shape, , will present a fine appear
ance and will no doubt find ready
sale when put on the market.
The Kyle - Persinger - Quick
threshing x;rew completed it la
bors Thursday. The Misses Cora
Hawley and Stella Belknap pre
sided over the bean dish during
the season.
W. Eugene Knox, the versatile
impersonator, will be in Monroe
on Saturday night at Wilhelm's
Hall for the benefit of the local
camp of the "M. W. A. Every
body come and help the boys.
"Monroe Camp No. 9795 will
hold a meeting on Saturday eve
ning, Aug. 21, in their ball at
Monroe. Chas. Cartwright, Con
sul. .
will be a very short crop this sea
son. The petites are an average
yield. "Uncle Si. "
Second Crop
of Strawberries
Douglas County is now enjoying its
second crop of strawberries. - From al
most every direction from Roseburg peo
ple are bringing in strawberries and find
ready market for them at 20 cents a
box. This second crop is due to cul
tivation and comes mostly from non
tPH lands. Rosebure Douelas
' County claims the honor of having the
I first and last strawberries of the sea-
20 Per Cent
DISCOUNT
In order to clean up our
SPRING SUITS
We will give 20 per cent discounfc
until all are sold
A. K. RUSS
Dealer in all Men's
CORVALLIS. - -
Furnishings
OREGON
Prunes of the Italian variety son.
NOT TOO GOOD
A Missouri editor gives his
readers the following good ad
vice:
"Whatever you do, brother,
don't get too good. There is a
piety thatis depressing, - and
which immediatly breeds suspi
cion and distrust. Most eyery
mannas his faults and if our
secret acts and thoughts, or even
those things people know about
us, out wmcn we tnmK tney
don't know about tis, were held
up to the- public, we would
shrink, cut to the quick, and flee
and hide our moral and spiritual
nakedness.
"Some of us -get drunk, and
that's bad; some of us are adult
erers, and that's bad;, some of
us lie like dogs, and that's worse;
some peddle vile talk, and that's
worse, and some of us love
money better than we do. truth,
honor and goodness, and that's
worse; some of us cheat, steal
and dodge our taxes, and that's
worser" still, - though among
the elect it is sometimes - consid
ered a virtue. .
"But the crowning sin of all
this is a hard, unmoving heart
and a soul without charity for
the frailties of others, which re
joices when others are crucified
and which attempts to hide its
secret joy with sniffling and
pious deprecation. Men , dislike
such people, and God despises
them. No, whatever you do,
aon t get too gooa. Jtieaven is
going to be a big surprise party
to most of us."
GREAT ACTIVITY
AT MONROE
Benton's Southern Metropolis Soon to
be Leading Fruit Center Large -Orchards
Now Being Planted.
Preliminary survey work on the
McFadden and Wilhelm ranches
for the purpose of locating bound
aries and ;.securing suitable field
maps of these parcels for the use
of the apple company has just
been completed. . County Survey
or Wilkes': and T crew spent ten
days on this part of the work,
located all corners and marked
Come to
Up to the time of this paper going to press,
3:1 5 p. m., we had sold no less than
CHEW
CADILLAC
and
KING. CORN
TOBACCO
Always Good; not made by
the Trust. . Sold at
JACK MILNE'S
. Dr. VIRGINIA V. LEWEAUXr
Osteopathic Physician
At Corvallis Hotel
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays'
At Albany
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
15-17 Brenner Building
FOR RENT, ROOMS
For Rent Three furnished rooms,
two of them suitable for light house
keeping; all down stairs: outside
rooms. Inquire at
. 800Fifth Street I
Fifty-one
Pairs
Of Blankets, which is most gratifying to us,
with only one half the day gone.
PHOTOGRAPHERS
PICKEVS STUDIO, 430 SECOND
: Street Phone 4209.
ATTORNEYS
J. F. YATES. ATTORN E Y-AT-LA W,
Office Rooms 3, 4, 1st Natl Bank Bldg.
Only set of abstracts in Kntoii County
PHYSICIANS
G. R FARRA, M. D., PHYSICIAN ANf
Surgeon Office in Burnett Block,
over Harris' Store. Residence corner
Seventh and 'Madison. Office hours:
" 8 "to 9 a. m.; 1 to 2 p; tn. Phonesr
Office, 2128, Residence, 404.
BAY,
TUESDAY
ABD
Will see ail our Blankets sold.
After Supper
. Sale
TONIGHT
fi iiiiriir thii iiiini. tin mi
After Supper
Sale
7 TO 9 P.M.
CHIROPODISTS and; Foot Specialists, located at 136
North Second Street, Corvallis, Oregon
Why suffer with Corns and .
Bunions when you can have
them removed without pain or
blood. A trial will convince you
Chiropody is like all other professions,
it has suffered at the hands of quacks
(Do not judge us the same). We have
had years of practice, have treated and
cured the most prominent people in the
United States. ;
Dr. Manns has been located in La
Grande - and Baker City for the past
eight months and has testimonials from .
the most prominent people there.
Any of our patients whom we treated
over a year ago who may again be suf
- fering and desire to come to our offices,
we will gladly treat them free of charge.
-!-.
fef v-:-v ?-C ?$?V 1
4
Give us a call. AH work guaranteed.
Free Consultation
Phone 1310
J. B. MORRIS, M. D., PHYSICIAN
and Surgeon. Corner Third and Mon-
"t roe Streets, Corvallis, Oregon. Office
hours: 9 to 12 a.m.; 1 to 4 p jn.; 7 to
8 p, in. Phone in both office and residence.
W. T. ROWLEY, M. D PHYSICIAN
and Surgeon. Special attention given
to ths Eye. Noee and Throat. Office
in Johnson Bldg. Iud. 'phone at of
fice and tesidence.
UNDERTAKERS
M. S. BOVEE, EUNEEAL DIRECT
or and Licensed Embalmer. Suc
cessor to Bovee & Bsuer Corvallis,.
Oregon. Ind. Phone 45. Bell Phone
241, Lady attendant when desired.
BLACKLEDGE & EVERETT, Li
censed embalmers and funeral direct
ors. Have everything new in coffins,,
caskets and burial robes. Calls ans
wered day and night. Lady assist
ant. Embalming a specialty. Day
phones, Ind. 117 and 1153, Bell, 531;
night phones, Ind. 2129 and 1153.
Farmers! See
S. S. HENKLE
(Successor to Smith Bros.)
CORVALLIS, OREGON
The Place to Buy Right, Handles,
Harness, Saddles, Robes, Whips,
and Gloves
Does Repairing Neatly
and Promptly
First Door North of Gerhards
WHEN AT SEATTLE
STOP AT
910 Boylston Ave.
Phone Ind. A4977.
Furnished dean, light rooms. Break
fast served. Direct car line to Expo- .
sition. Convenient to retail district.
Take the Madison Street Cable Car
- -This house is in charge of Corvallis people