Corvallis daily gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Oregon) 1909-1909, June 11, 1909, Image 2

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    CORVALLIS DAILY GAZETTE
Published every evening except Sun
day. Office: 259-263 Jefferson street,
corner Third street, Corvallis, Oregon.
PHOriE
10
Address all communications and make
ail remittances payable to the Corval
lis Gazette.
In ordering changes of address, sub
scribers should always give old as well as
new address.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
DAILV
Delrvered by carrier, per week
5 15
Delivered by earlier, 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
made the moral welkin ring
with the thunders of his invec
tive against the Republicans if
their party h id contained such a
arge percentage of members who
repudiated the party platform
and the platform promises! Evi
dently Mr. Bryan feels desperate
y put to it to deal with the sit
uation properly, for the upshot
of his consideration of it is the
conclusion the anvway :our
platform was. superior" to the
Republican platform.
CORVALLIS WEEKLY GAZETTE
Published Every Friday
Entered at the postoffice at Corvallis,
Oregon, as second class matter.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
One year, in advance $2 00
Six moths, in advance 1.""
CHAS. L. SPRINGER, Editor and Publisher.
TRAVELERS' GUIDE
Arrival and Departure of Trains
UNION DEPOT, CORVALLIS
r. c. LINVIL' E, Agent
v
Arrive Southern Pacific Depart
11:30 a m. Passeng-r 1:30 p m
s:4oo. m. Freight 6:4o a. m
Corvallis & Eastern
Passenger east -
west
east
11a.m.
8:35 a m.
1:20 p Dl.
4:35 P. m
8:35 p.m.
Sunday Trains
1:15 p.m.
Daily except Sunday,
trains daily.
11:15 a
6:30 a
2:15 P
6p. 1:40 p.
11:15 a. m,
All other
CORVALLIS POSTOFFICE
Opens 8 a. m , closes 6 p. tn.
and holidays, opens 10 a. m.,
a. m. :
Sunday;
closes
Ma'ls Open
From
7. 10 a.m, 12 m.
10 a m, 2, 5 p m
7, 10 a m, 12 m
10 a m , 5 p 111
41:80 a m
10 a ni
12 m
o p m
10 a tn
5pm
Mails Cl:se
For
Portland 5:30, 10:30 a ni, 12 m
5:30 d m
Albany 5:33, 10:30 a m, 5;30
p m
WashiiiRton and 10:3i m, 12:30
Eastern states o:au p m
California a and 1C:30 a m, 5::
points South p m
Philomath and
points West 12:30 p m
Monroe 1 :30, 5:30 p m
MeMinville and
We tside points 12:15 p m
Mill City and
wy ro.ms 5:30 a m
Philomath and
Alsca 8-45 a m
Monroe stage 2pm
Philomath stutre . 9am
had been instructed to make the
best financial arrangements with i
the exposition management he
could and send state college
athletes to the meet. ' " .
It is the first conference col-
P0INTS OF RESEMBLANCE.
A. H Campbell's new residence on the
corner of Eighth and Adams streets is
nearing completion.
V. Mrs. Geo. Campbell, who has been vis
iting friends here, returned yesterday
to her home in Lebanon. ".'. "
. Mr. and Mrs. William Dewueefe, of
lege meet of the Northwest, and ! su. wasn. wm arrive today to
DESPERATELY PUT TO IT.
Nothing will surpass the ten
derness of Mr. Bryan's treatment
of the Democrats in Congress
who have combined with Repub
licans to defeat promising opp
ortunities for drastic revision of
certain tariff schedules, says the
New York Sun. In the House
some 40 Democrats bolted an
explicit provision of the party
platform and by their votes kept
lumber from going on the free
list. In the Senate 18 Demo
crats followed suit. Seventeen
Democratic ' Senators likewise
voted for a protective duty on
iron ore. Yet has Mr. Bryan
arisen and denounced these
Democrats as "traitors," "embez
zlers of power" and other names
synonymous of nefarious deprav
ity and degraded abandonment?
Not if lie knows it. The very
harshest thing that he has said
about them is that they have
made a "mistake," and now he
is engaged in what? Well, the
latest issue of his proprietary
publication discloses him in an
act which closely resembles the
. performance known as juggling
with facts, for he says that the
Democratic member of Congress
who votes against a decrease in
a tariff duty "is the exception
rather than the rule." The
Democratic Senators who voted
for the protected lnmber and
protected ore were more than
half the Democratic strength in
the Senate. In the House more
than half .the Democrats voted,
in the only roll calls which put
the ' Democracy on the record
there, for protected lumber, hides
and bailey.
How Mr. Bryan" would have
A. Maurice Low in an article in
the National Review has fc-und
several points of resemblance
between Mr. Cleveland and Pres
ident Taft. He describes them
as follows:
Mr. Cleveland had almost a bor
ror of self-advertising, of notor
iety, of doing anything undig
nified or cheapening the great
office which he held. From the
standpoint of the flashy, tricky,
sensational journal.he was, in its
own choice vernacular, "a dead
un." He furnished no sensation
al news, he called no man a liar
and bullied no woman; he saw
no necessity of taking the public
into his confidence when He or
dered a suit of clothes; his views
on the latest popular novel he
Kept to nimsen as religiously as
his private opinion of Senators
or Justices ot the Supreme Court
or Ambassadors. But Mr. Cleve
land stuck to the business for
which he had been selected and
mauaged to do one or two things
noteworthy and lasting the re
peal of the silver law, forinstance
and the defeat of the silver par
ty: and, living a life of useful
ness, so that at his death his
people placed hiin among their
great.
Mr. Taft is much the same
kind of a man. He isn't "run
ning' the petty pontics ot hah
the United States, for he does not
believe he was elected President
simply to build up a machine
for his re-election four - vears
hence. He is going about his
work steadily, quietly, but with
a definite purpose. He has had
to .reconcile differences in his
party on the tariff, for the tariff
is a complicated question, and in
a country so vast as this, and
where the interests of different
sections are antagonistic, it is in
evitable that what will be for
the advantage of one industry
will be to the injury of producer
or consumer. In his role as
harmonizer and party leader,
Mr. Taft has shown that he is
both Cleveland and McKinley.
all of che Big Six were expected
to be represented. Oregon is in
the midst of final examinations,
however and will not send a team.
Many of Washington's men have
returned to their homes, but have
been invited to come back for
the events, whileOAC may have
only a limited number of men
entered.
TALK OF THE TQWN
Jerome Everett is on the sick list this
week.
Mrs J. C.Lowe is quite indisposed this
week. .
Verne Williamson is visiting home
folks this week.
Mrs. I. J. Pippen is here this week for
medical treatment.
Mrs. Mayme Cauthorn went to Port
land yesterday on a brief visit.
Miss Ethel Downer left yesterday for
Portland to attend the Rose Fair. !
Glen Mngle and family of Alsea, are
visiting at C. R. Colbert's this week.
Mrs. R. C. Kiger and daughter spent a
few days in Albany this week visiting
friends. - , .
Ralph Reynolds, a former OAC stu
dent is here for commencement week
exercises.
J. H. Starns, of Albany, visited his
mother, Mrs. Susan Starns, in this city
yesterday. .
Mrs. Walter Brown, who has been in
Portland for medical treatment, has re
turned home. - -
Mrs. Henry Beach, of Cottage Grove,
is expected to arrive today to visit
friends in this city.
Chas. Campbell, of Portland, was up
last week, visiting his .parents, Mr. and
Mrs. A. H. Campbell.
M. Porter and Roy Beir left for Port
land yesterday to see the OAC cadets
parade at the Rose Fair. :
Mrs. Susan Starns, mother of Mrs.
Miles Starr, will .go to Ellensburg,
Wash., next week to reside perma
nently. Mrs. Donnelly and heice, Miss Keyes,
arrived from Richmond last evening
and will visit Mrs. Henry Dunn and
4.1 1 :. 1 : 1 . iA a; , - .
OAC commencement exercises, a son i
of Mrs. Donnelly being one of the grad- j
uates. '
Mr. and Mrs. Will Angus, of Garden- 1
ier. Southern Oregon, who have been
the guests the passed few days of the
latters mother, Mrs: A. Anstin, in this
city, left last evening to attend the Rose
Carnival at Portland. , They will return
to Corvallis tomorrow. "
Dolly Witham, of Pomona Kansas,
is visiting her aunt, Mrs. S. A Kisar,
at the home of A. H. Campbell.
Mrs. Nica Herron was called to Monroe
yesterday to see her sister, Mrs. . Min
nie Kay, who is critically ill at that
place. .
Miss Ethel Adlard, of Condon, who
has been visiting at the home of W. J.
Wilbanks, has returned to Condon ac
companied by her grandfather, Mr. Wil
banks. A marriage license was issued yester
day to Frank L. Davis and Minnie Jan
uary, both of Benton county. Cupid
Johnson says it is a January wedding
: in June.
Misses Belle and Lillian Ranney, popu
lar Corvallis girls, who have been teach
ing the past year at Condon, Eastern
Oregon, arrived last evening and will
spend the summer at their home in this
city.
Pitti Sing Peep Bo and Yum Yum the
three little maids, fresh from school, are
pretty, pert and pungent. ' They are de
signed to dance and sing. See them in
the Mikado Monday night
Pish Tush Collie Cathey, has a fine
voice of the baritone persuasion and he
knows how to appear to decided advan
tage. Come and see him for pointers
on Japanese dignity. Monday night in
the Mikado at the Opera houes.
The C. & A. Toad is now working up
quite a freight traffic, several carloads
SUMMONS
In the Circuit Court ot the State of
Oregon for the County of Benton.
A. R. Locke, Plaintiff,
' vs. . : : ,
Jennie E. Alexander,
Jesse T. Wilkins,
Mabel H. Wilkins,
. Deiendants.
To Jennie E. Alexander, Jesse T. Wil
kins, and Mabel H Wilkins, defendants
above named;
In the name of the State of Oregon;
You and each of you are hereby required
to appear and answer the complaint tiled
against you in the above entitled couu
and suit on or before the i8ih day of
June, 1 909, said date being six weeks
f om and after the first p .blication of
tnis summons. 1 ue hrst publication 01
this Summons being oh the 7th day of
May, 1909, and the last' publication
hereby being oh the 181 h day of June,
1909, and if you fail so to answer for
want thereof the plaintiff will apply to
the above-entitled court for the reliet as
prayed for in plaintiff's complaint now
on file in said court, to-wit: that said de
fendants and each ot them be forever
barred and enjoined from asserting any
claim whatsoever in or id the following
described premises or any part thereof
adverse to this plaintiff by decree of the
above-entitled court, to wit:
Lot one (1) in Block Thirteen (13),
County Addition to the City of Corvallis
(formerly the town of Marysville), Benton
county,1 State of Oregon.
That by such decree it be declared
and adjudged that said defendants and
each of them have no estate, title or in
terest whatsoeverin or to said real property
above described, . nd that the title of the
said A R. Locke, plaintiff, in and to the
said premises is good and valid and in
fee simple thereto and that said plaintiff
nave such other ana lurtner reliet as
may seem to the court meet and equit
able '
This summons is served upon you by
publication by order of Hon. E. Wood
ward Judge of the County Court of the
State ot Oregon, for the County of Ben
ton, made on the 4th day ot May, 1909,
directing publication thereot once a
week for six successive weeks in the Cor
vallis Gazette, a weekly newspaper of
Contractors
ind Builders
' T
""" -i
i ' ' yfi
vV , -
: . x
Foundation work, sidewalk and curbin
a'specialty Manufacturers ofcemen
blocks, plain and fancy cement brick,
porch columns, cement flues, jardi
nieres, etc. Dealers in cement, plaster
and lime.
first and Adams Sts. Phone 2313
Corvallis, - Oregon
Che City $table$
Everything new and up to
date. Rigs furnished on
short notice. Call
and give us a
trial. Cor.
Madison
and
3d
L. F.GRAY,
Manager
of supplies being brought in from along general circulation, printed and published
weeiciy in orvanis, uenton v-ouniy,
Oregon.
J. F. YATES,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
Date of first publication, 7th day ot
May, 1909; date of last publication, 18th
day of June, 1909.
the line every day. This week Wilhelm
& Soil, of Monroe, shipped three car
loads of wool to this point, where it
was transferred to the steamboat line
and taken to Albany.
; Money To Pay Warrants
Notice is hereby given that there is
money on hand to pay General Fund
Warrants endorsed to November 22,
1904, and all endorsed street warrants. !
Interest will stop jn same from this
date, June 5, 1909,
Z. H. Davis,
6-5-10-17 City Treasurer.
HYDRAULIC WELL
DRILLING
1 6-5-10-17 City Treasurer. j
Powerful and rapid well ma
chine run by gasoline engine.
Whitney's & Colbert
We Make
Concrete blocks ot all kinds. Concrete
bricks, fancy and plain, Concrete tile
and steps, Concrete window sills and
caps.
We Sell
High grade Cement and Lime in any
quantity.
Phone Ind. 3181
413 Second Street South
CORVALLIS - - OREGON'
Succeed when everything else fails.
In nervous prostration and female
weaknesses they are the supreme
remedy, as thousands have testified.
FOR KIDNEY, LIVER AD
STOMACH TROUBLE
I it is the best medicine ever sold K
1 over a druggist's counter. H
Wind mill . pump repairing,
and drove wells a specialty.
Place your orders now before the
season's rush'work is on.
- A. V. HARLAN
Box 526 Corvallis, Oregon
Daily Gazette 50
Why not take it.
cents per month
1 Aji.r
I 1 I I BUS! NESS COLLEGE
U J WASHINGTON AND TENTH STS,
f I PORTLAND, OREGON
Jkd. WRITE FOR CATALOG
IM u uuu Plata m Good .Fontim
20 Per Cent
DISCOUNT
In order to clean up our
SPRfflQ SUITS "
We will eiye 20 per cent discount
until all are sold
A. K. RUSS
Dealer in ail Men's
CORVALLIS,
Furnishings
OREUON
Little Interest
Taken In Meet.
The track and field meet sche
duled for the Stadium at the A-Y-P
Exposition grounds for next
Saturday afternoon, and which
was declared off when a" telegram
was received from H. V. Wexler
manager of athletics . at the
Washington State College, Pull
man, announcing that no athlet
es would be sent by Pullman,
will be held after all. So much
fuss was raised over the decision
to call otl the meet that it was
decided to hold the meet next
Saturday, "the date originally
fixed. '
Evidently Manager Wexler
acted without the full authority
of the officials of the state college
for President E. A. Bryan, of the
institution, wben hearing that
the meet was called ofi, was in
dignant, and sent a message to
Major W.M. Inglis, exposition
director of athletics, telling him
that unless the meet were held
Pullman would claim all the
championships by default. The
message also contained the in
formation that Manager Wexler
Keep It In Your Mind
iNE thinsf we want to impress on
your mind; it's more important to us, for the
present moment, than to persuade you to
buy your clothes here; because if you get the idea.
we're driving at, you'll buy them here, not because
we want you to, but because you'll want to.
It is that this store is a quality and value store; and that whatever
you buy here is guaranteed to be right, satisfactory, in every way; and if
you don't find it so, you are to come and tell us, and we'll do whatever we
need to do to make it so; money back, new goods in exchange, or anything
you say that's f air.
-' ' ' - ' "' ' - -: ' -
We sell Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes because they're the kind of
goods that justify that kind of a guarantee; .and we mean to have every
thing else up to that standard. ' s
Suite $20.00 to $30.00
Blackledjre & Everett
Successors to Honklc & Blarkledge
FUNERAL DIRECTORS and LICENSED EK3ALMERS
Carry a complete line of coffins and
caskets in all colors and sizes; also
ladies' men's and children's burial
robes. Calls attended to day and
night. Lady assistant. EKBALMIKB FOR
SHIPP1HB L SPECIALTY. Call at Blackledge's
furniture store Both phones.
ATTORNEYS
J. F. YATES, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Office Rooms 3, 4, 1st Natl Bank Bldg.
Only set of aostracta in Benton County
' PHYSICIANS
G. B FARRA, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND
Surgeon. Office in Burnett Block,
over Harris' Store. Residence corner
Seventh and Madison. Office hours:
8 to 9 a. 1 m.; 1 to 2 p. m. Phones:
Officeii2S, Residence, 404.
J. B. MORRIS, M. D, PHYSICIAN
and Surgeon.. Corner Third and Mon
roe Streets, Corvallis, Oregon. Office
hours: 9 to 12 a. m.; I to 4 p. m.; 7 to
8 p, ni. Phone in both office ani residence.
W.T. ROWLEY, M. C, PHYSICIAN
and Surgeon. Special attention given
to the Eye. Nose and Throau Office
in Johnson Bloc. Ind. 'phone at of
fice and lesidence. . M,
UNDERTAKERS
M. S. BOVEE. FUNERAL DIRECT
or and Liceseed Embalmer. Suc
cessor to Bovee A Bsoer Corvallip,
Oregon. Ind. Phone 45. Bell Phone
241. Lady attendant when desired.
Taunton & Burnap
Cement Contractors
Makers of Best Cement Walks in Town
All work guaranteed first
class. . . " v
Corvallis, Ore