LOCAL LORE. Bide a Rambler. Public School opens September 15th Miaa Helen Steiwer returned her home near Jefferson, Monday. to a. w Kauplacn was a passenger ror .Portland Sunday. N ; Miss Maud Horningr, of Toledo is a guast at m ujme of EB Horning Charles Cntiiijbell of Portland is x vioiuug iue-iiiiLiiiy 01 xnomaa xseii. . W E Hanley ut Hillsbora arrived Saturday for a biief visit with friends W E Yates and family arrived Saturday from, a sojourn at Newport Boy Woodcock returned Satur day from a few days sojourn at New port, Mrs Broders and children arrived Friday from a six week's outing at Newport. Mrs Da Bolt of Yaquina, arrived Saturday, snd i3 a guest at the Laff ar ty home. iather Jurek was a passenger to Portland Saturday where he was called on business. Miss Grace Scott, arrived Friday "' v from The Dalles, for a short visit with Corvallis relatives. George Hulbei t is in Corvallis on a visit with relatives. George in now located, in Idaho. Miss Clara -Lane returned Sat urday from a couple of week's with friends in Portland. Miss Carrie Danneman left Sat urday for Clem. She will be a sent about there week's. " Miss Belle Banney returned Sat urday from Olex Oregon, where she bas been visiting for the past several months. A carload of cbittim bark billed to New York left the S P depot Mon- day. The shipment was made by S L Kline. Mrs August Fischer and children and Miss Eva Millner returned Fri day from three wpeks recreation at Nye Creek. Lincoln County Leader: Frank Hubler of Corvallis is temporarily in charge of a block in Lsster Waugh's meat market. - Byron Gill of Scio was in Corval lis Sunday to make preliminary ar rangements to re-enter college, He - secured a residence. Mta James Martin and son expect to leave Monday for a two months visit at Canfleld, Ohio- The visit Is the first In twenty six years, J J Flett drove over to Albany Sunday afternoon to meet his mother. ,1 who re&ides in Boseburg and who will spend a couple of weeks in Cor vallis. - Mrs Greff jz and Miss Adelaide Greffoz arrived Monday from Newport and will spend a week with friends before returning to their home in Portland. J N MeFadden returned Sunday from a visit to Junction and Eugene. He attended Buffalo Bills Wild West show at the latter place and gives a favorable report of the performance. Miss Winnifred Cameron left for Portland Saturday, where she will visit relatives. She was accompanied -by Miss Beatrice Cameron who has been a guest at the Cameron home for a month. Mies Ruth Ingram of San Fran cisco, who has been the gutst for the summer of Mrs M Elstoii Lee, left Thursday to accept a position as tea cher in an Episcopal school of that city. - Work on F L Miller's house is progressing rapidly, and as the frame work nears completion, one is forced ' to the conclusion that . the house will be one of the biggest things in Corvallis. Miss Lulu Spangler returned - Saturday from San Francisco where she has been studying music for two months. Miss Spangler will leave itKtuu ui ciuuut a wees to resume ner i work In the Weston Normal School. Tommy Newman, who resides with his parents on the state road, fell from a wagon last week and sustained such injuries as necessitated . the "at tention of a physician. The .upper portion of the hip bone struck the wheel as he fell. The exact extent of the injuries can not be stated' but it is believed that it will not prove seri ous. , Mark Twain says that some years ago, when in the South, he met an old colored man thatr-claimed to have known George Washington, "I asked him," related the humorist, "if he was in the boat when General Washington crossed the Deleware, and he instant ly replied: " 'Lor Massa, j steered dat boat,' " 'Well, ' said I, 'do you re- ,4 ,. member when George took the hack at ' the cherry-tree?" "He looired worried for a minute, and then, with a beam- inR smile, said : 'Why, suah, massa. j. aun arove aat nack myseir. Joseph Polly an old tims resident of Corvallis was In town Monday. Saturday night he lost a horse from hi3 home In Alsea and he started next morning afoot to search for the ani mal. He tracked the horse up the val ley until he found that it had crossed ' the mountain toward Corvalii3. At this point he availed himself of a ride with Mr Fruit the stable man, who was returning home from a fishing trip, and came on to the city. Fort unately Mr Polly next morning found his horse ia Jobs Addition. B F Irvine and daughter are rus ticating at Elk City. They left Friday. Examination begin at OAO on the 19th and recitations on the 23rd. , President Gatch left Monday to spend two week's at his Newport cot tage. . After a few days spent at home Charle Heckart returned to Eugene Monday. The Chemawa band passed thro ugh this city Monday enroute home from Newport. Miss Hazel Hardy returned to her home in Salem today after a week's visit at the Lilly home, Mr and Mrs Simuel Bane left Monday for a four months visit with relatives at Gilroy California. ' Paul Cauthorn ia visitiog relati ves and frienda in tMs city. He arri ved Monday from Boseburg. Beese Groves a school man of Dakota, arrived Monday for a visit with his uncle William Groves. Three hundred people were aboard Sunday's bay-bound excursion Forty tickets were sold to Corvalli3 ites. . Mr and Mrs E C Hay ward retur ned Saturday from a visit to Mr Hay ward's father at Oictoria, British Col umbia. Mrs Kohn, and Miss Florence Kobn left Saturday for their home in Portland, after an extended visit at the Jacobs home. Mrs Garrow and daughter have moved this week to the Wells resi dence lately occupied by President Gatch and family. Elmer Bethers and Elmer Din ges left last week by private convey ance for North Yakima. They go to look for a location . Mrs Wm Brunk and son of Ash land arrived Saturday and are guesta of Mr and Mrs Brunk of the Occiden tal hotel. Wm. Frazler the horse buyer, was in town a couple of days last week but was unable to obtain the kind of horses he wanted. Mr and Mrs William Crees and Mrs Lessie Scrafford returned Monday from a brief visit with relatives at Elk City and Newport. Joseph Bryan now traveling sa lesman for A Schilling & Co. of San Francisco is spenuing a few days with his parents at Philomath. Mr and Mrs W M McMahan re turned yesterday from Cascadia, They went for the benefit of Mrs Mc Mahans health, and have been absent two months. Among those aboard Sunday's excursion train were Mr and Mrs J E Farmer, Mr and Mrs George Paul of this city and Mr and Mrs Ed Bryan of Philomath. Ernest Bedd arrived Monday for a few day's visit with college friends. Mr Bedd holds a position with the drug house of Forbes, Jaeneke & Co. in Portland. -Frank Seits of Lobster, was among the Corvallis visitors the first of the week. He states that there is much travel over the new road which passes by his place. From all accounts there is to be i a church wedding in Corvallis before many months. The bride to be is a daughter of a well known citizen - and the groom a Californian, Darwin Nash who has been vis itiDg his parents Hon, and Mrs Wallis Nash at Nashville, passed through thi3 city Saturday enroute to San Francisco where he holds a positi on with the American Wire 'and Steel Company. Saturday evening an Uncle Tom's Cabin company gave a performance here in a tent, and the same was well attended. When we observe such a gathering at a rendition pf this thread bare play there is no reason to marvel at the reappearance "of Uncle-Tom's Cabin company. The grand noonday parade announced was made up main ly of juvenil home talent in leggins and faded coats of red. An adventure by pleasure seekers in the mountains, near Belknap Springs turned out to be of a very thril ling nature says The Bullentin. They went for a watch at the deer lick, and in planning the ambuscade, tethered the pack horse a short distance from where they would lay in wait for the deer. Next morning .when they went for the horse his clean-picked bones we're left in testimony of a sumptous feast. by the king beast of the moan tains -rMr Cougar. It was in the far south. "How.s times?" asked the tourist. "Pretty tolerable, stranger" responded the old man who was sitting on a stump. "I had some trees to cut down but the cyclone leveled them and saved me the trouble." That was good. :lYes; and then the lightning set fire to the brush pile and burned it up." "Be markablf I But what are you doing now?" "WcJ.ing for an Jeart'c quake to come along and shake the potatees out of the ground." . For Sale Three milch cows, one fresh, One heavy horse, and one driving team. Cramer Organ" & Carriage Factory. Strayed - One bay mare weight 1000 pounds branded with cross on shoulder. Finder will nlease return nrooertv toAb- bott' Feed barn, at Corvallis and recei ve reward. v HABITS OF THE SALMON. Artificial Propagation Described The Elk River Hatchery. Three miles up the river from Elk City, a salmon hatchery is in pro cess of construction It is on the Elk fork of the Yaquina river and con struction is under direction of dep uty game warden W A Smith of Giyde, Douglas County. Up to last Sunday only a dozen big Chinooks were all that had entered the pen' or basin in which they are kept until spawning time, but their movements as they glide about in only three feet of water were Inter esting to see. No fish more shapely or handsome is known and none has a movement more graceful. The expense of constructing and maintaining the hatchery is borne out of the funds provided by appro priations by the state legislature. Construction has been in progress since the first of August. Across the Elk fiver, just above the head of tide a fence or rack made of pickets set upright, has been built. The pickets are nailed so closely that salmon cannot pass between them.- Two hundred and fifty feet above a similar fence oa rack cross the river. Thesectian of river be tween is a flat gravel bar on which the water is three . feet deep and forty to sixty feet w i de. It is in this section of the river that the salomn are kept until they are "ripe" for spawning as the operat ors of the hatchery term it. '. The capacity of the present hatchery is 2000 salmon at one time. The spawning by Chinooks usually be gins about the fifteenth of Septem ber. An interesting fact is the method by which the salmon enter the basin that is both a prison and death to them, for the handsome fish that enter the pen never leave it alive. In the lower fence near the middle of the stream are two small open ings near together. Each is six or eight inches wide and twelve or fourteen inches high. They arecalled chutes and through these the fish enter. Through these aper tures in the fence they could pass out as easy as thev passed in, but they never do it. The instinct for reproduction of young salmon is so strong m the parents of either sex, that they press steadily onward up stream and never turn back. It is on gravel bars in the upper waters ot iresh streams that tney spawn and with the time for dropping their eggs approaching, their noses are pressed steadily against the current. When, for instance, they encoun ter the lower fences at the hatchery they try to pass through the open ings first at one place and then at another. They keep on, until ulti mately they find one or the other of the chutes, and enter their doom. The noses of the salmon now in the Elk river hatchery are white from their efforts to find an opening in the upper fence, but not one of them has tried or ever will Iry to find again the holes in which they enter, . Below the upper fence a few feet a walk crosses the stream. Stand ing on this walk, the visitor can see the handsome Chinook working faithfully in their constant- hunt to find a way for further progress up stream. It is the same restless movement that is seen in the cap tive tiger behind the bars of his cage. - It is an interesting but piti ful sight, and one that moves the observer's sympathy. To prevent the fish from undermining the up per rack of the fence, the founda tions of the fence are set in solid bed rock.- The salmon are great burrowers and were the fence not fixed in solid rock they would bur row under it and escape up stream. When the fash are ripe, that is ready to spawn, they are caught and the eggs are taken from them. Sometimes they are caught with seines, but mostly they are driven into pens, five, feet wide and eight feet long, in the stream, entrance to which is effected by holes similar to those in the fence at the lower end of the main basin, If when caught the fish are not ripe they are . put in other pens for the pur pose until tne spawn are reaciv tor removal. The removal " of - the spawn is accomplished, with ease, a slight pressure of the hand on the spawn sack being effective for the purpose. . The eggs, after removal are plac ed in spawning pans where fertil izer from the male fish is poured over them. Then they are cut in to sections that from their size are known to contain a thousand each, and twenty of these . sections, that is if all goes well, will yield" 20,000 miniature salmon, are placed in a hatching basket. The latter is made of wire netting and is two feet long, ' eight inches wide and eight inches deep. Baskets for the Elk river hatchery were manu factured by a Corvallis establish ment. After the removal of the spawn or fertilizer . the salmon is killed with a blow on the head. After receiving their quota of fertilized spawn, the baskets are placed in troughs through which fresh water very gently : flows. Water for the Elk river troughs is brought from a stream in the vicinity, through r4oo feet of flume The temperature (of the water in a measure modifies the progress of in cubation. The water in the troughs especially from the sixth to the twelfth day must not be disturbed. A ripple created by a stroke of the hand befng sufficient during that period to destroyall the eggs in the trough, that is kill 125,000 embryo salmon. ' ... . .. In twenty days after the. baskets are placed in the troughs if an egg from one of them be held between the eye and the sun, a little fish can be seen swimming about in it. A salmon egg scarcely as' large as a coffee grain, is a small world for the little salmon to live in but it is all that he requires at this stage of in cubation. In 45 to 48 days he has out grown his egg and is swimming about with the remains of it as a globule attached to his head in the vicinitv of his gills. By this time he has been removed to another trough with . larger apartments where he has greater room for his movements. The egg globule is his food supply and it stays with him. passing backward along his body to the end of his tail. After wards it passes under the body and becomes a part of the belly. He is then a full blown salmon and must thereafter earn his livkjg. Thisjstage in his development is reached in about sixty days after the spawn is placed in the hatching ' troughs. If kept longer in the hatchery, however, he is fed and his diet is salmon, especially canned for the purpose at the Columbia River Can nery. Generally speaking, how ever, very soon after reaching this stage, he is set adrift in the waters of the river, and" allowed to shift for himself. So far the Elk river hatchery is only a temporary arrangement. Its capacity as a beginning, will be ten hatching troughs capable of turn ing off 1,200,000 small salmon in a season. If a sufficient spawn is secured additional troughs can and will be provided on brief notice . The question of whether or not the hatchery will "become permanent will be determined by the ' success that attends the temporary arrange ment. - . .. By the system in vogue at gov ernment hatcheries more than 80 per cent of the eggs are hatched. Though any estimate in the case is essentially random, experts be lieve that not more than 10 to 20 per cent, possibly less, of the spawn dropped naturally by - salmon is hatched. If left alone, salmon spawn on gravel bars where the swift water is uncongenial to hatch ing and destructive of embryo eggs This alone results in a vast waste of salmon spawn. But even great er waste is the destruction wrought by trout that feed on the spawn. Often while the female is spawning on the gravel bars the male is dashing about in the vicinity fight ing away trout that endeavor to snatch the eggs as soon as they are spawned. It is to protect the spawtf from these enemies that the salmon after the spawning cover the eggs up in the gravel. Even in the basin at the Elk river hatch ery a large trout is otten seen con stantly at the side of the salmon, apparently waiting for spawning time to come. The larger fish occasionally chases him ' away but like a shadow he returus to his wonted position as soon as the war is over. If is because of these con ditions that the hand and brain of man has gone to the assistance of nature in the salmon proposition, and the results whenever tried have justified the most sanguine expect ations. Fish Commissioner Van Dusen of Astoria, visited the Elk hatchery Monday. ' There is a contract ready to be let at Cramer's Organ & Carriage' factory for 2 million lo0s to be loaded on cars, 1 mil lion feet of hemlock to be loaded at Grider's switch, logs to be hauled three miles from Hains place. 2 miles this side of Mills City. One milliou feet to be put on cars at Cramer's switch this side of Summit one mile from skid road. For further information write b'r call on ' B , M. Cramer, Organ & Carriage Factory. Private School. Sliss Anna Denman will , open a pri vate school the first Monday in October. For particulars inquire at- residence cor. nth & Monroe. - Broadhead Dress Goods, . Wanted Men for work in saw mill and lumber yard. Steady work. Inquire of Booth-Kelly dumber Co., Coburg. Colbert & Gregory Manfy. Co. Sash, doors, moldings, furniture and eneral finished lumber. South Main St, Corvallis Ore. At: $1.50, $2.00, $2.50, $5.00, $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00. Made from fine black mercerized goods and of proper style and fit. To be had only at Tie Regulator Shirtwaists at One-Half Price, We have them in colors at 25, 35, 50, 75c and $1 .co up to $?.oO white waists from 50c to $2. Remnants in all color and materials. We are making a" Clea'" ance Sale of Remnants of Calicos, Percales, Law'ns, Swisses, Challie Dimities, Shirtings, Muslins, etc. , 20 per cent reduction on all Dimities, Challies and Lawns. We carry a full line of W. B. Corsets Girdles, Summer weigh and Straight Fronts, 50c to $1.50 Ladies' 2-clasp Suide Lisle Gloves in black, greys and white, 50c F. L. MILLER'S Corvallis, Or. Phono 191. ' mbeti you see it in our ad, it's so "Broadhead Dress Goods New Outing Flannel New Flannelettes "Hawes" $3 00 Hats, for men New Clothing and Overcoats Royal Worchester Corsets Mens Furnishings W. L. Douglas $3,00 and 3,50 shoes Ladies Fine Shoes New Cloaks and Tailor Made Suits New Goods Weekly. . Strictly Up to . - J. D. Mann & Co are receiving - !ar Load Lots of Furniture For fall trade, and are now able to show a fine line oi ' 'orniture, Carpets m Largest assortment" and best bar gains ever offered. 'J. D. MANN & CO,- DP TO DATE TIb-e 99 orosi& of Low Prices d Stoves v