local lobe: ( AdrerUsements In this column charged for at th rate of 1 cent per lin& Mrs. P. Avery left Tuesday for a brief visit with Salem relatives. Fred Stetwer w la town . Wed nesday, to a'tencl the Zurcher-Ho ward weddiDg. ' Mrs. E. B. Bryson and children wetft to Portland Wednesday - for t a lalt with relative?, r ; Among the passenflrra for Port land on the Westeide Wedneadav was Mies Harrlett;Sheaegreen ot the Times xorce. Iflany Oorva11Iites are planning to attend the picnic to be given next Thursday at Bell Fountain. j ' Subject for the service of the Congregational . Church May 24 b, morning services, "Pride." 11 o'clock evening service, -Felix" 8 o'clock. Y-Amlcltla Hall Is to be put through " a complete course of repairs by the new owner, W. A. Well. Painting paper hanging and woodwork are to be among the improvement?, The-public schools, after three days intermission oo account of the county teacher's Institute at Philo- math, resumed wotk Thursday morn V log- ., - , " The Ladies Missionary Societies of Corvallls will hold th ir fiit Mis- - 8loDarv ' Union : at ihe Presbtt-erian Church Sunday May 21th at thre p. m. The public is cordially invited. , : " The Knights of Pythias of Valley Lodge will be officially vlsitsd - by Grand Chancellor J. W- Maloney on next Monday evening.- All members of the order are requested to be pres ent. , Mrs. F. L. Miller and eon Max were pa3sengrs for Port'and Wednee- - day. A specialist Is to be coneulted with reference to trouble Max has - with' his hearing, sometimes when afflicted with colds. The Presbyterian church will bold regular 1 services next Sunday. The morning subject "iPtera Restora tion or Warming at the Fire of Love. In the evening special memorial ser vices will be held consisting of special music and a eermon by the pastor on - "The Cost of Citizenship." Everybody and especially the G. A, B. and Re lief Corps are cordially invited. The Ministers Association at their last regular meeting took the follow ing action, viz "Owing tooths impossi- . billty of even a majority of church goers to attend the memorial services at the M. E. church south next Sunday-morning it was considered wise . for all the churches to matitain? their religious services, and as far as prac ticable to hold a memorial service in , the evening. - - They are "building a mile of perma nent road near the Bates. The stretch begins near Mrs. Er win's house and extenderto Hack Porter's. Tho gra , diogjs now in process and is to be worked on the plan adopted ou. the Albany road.- It is thrown up and Is to be thoroughly packed with the county roller, aatt foestdes-iti iB''to.: be thoroughly ditched. h It I white land and the endeayon Js. to. . make. ,a guod road out of the stretch without use of gravel. Reuben Taylor", road super visor of the district is directing oper ations. - " I - - . -Anumber'of Corvallfeftes'wenS Vo Albany oa the rarly i traia tThursday morning to see the president, and were not dissappointed.' Iq passing through the town the presidential train slowed Hpj and Mr Roosevelt etood, alone on' the back platform, bowing right arid left' to-.the people .as the train, paa'aed. Many other local townspeople went to Salem! where all ,bad full opportunity to eee aad hear'- the chief ' fxecutlvV. They heard him deliver an address to the school children' la Wilson Park, and hard him again from the Capitol steps, where brief addresses were also1 made by Governor Chamberlain Sena tor Brownell and Mayor ' Bishop of Salem. ' ' 1 ' " 1 ' " .. is .-.I u MarrlepT at the residence of Mart . Emerick at Cottage Grove 'May: 17 Adoiphus. Emerick of Cottage Grove and Miss Mncia Pfout3' of Monroe.1 Rev. (J. H. Fees officiating. The bride Is a daughter of James Pfouts, a well known farmer residing neir Monroe, and Adolphus Emerick is a eon of George' Emerick of Corvallls. ' It was a home wedding, -only immediate rela- nvoa ueiMg. preseuB. xoe U0U3e . was decorated with evergreens and snow balls. .. After the ceremony , a dinner was served.' Mr. and. - Mrs, Emerick will make their f ifture home in Cottage Grove where Mr. Emerick I3 'engaged in. business."' ':' :.,y ; . .,. , : "A. traction engine is being used with great success as the motive pow er on a road grader in : improving i a stretch of road in the south -end of the eouoty. The stretch is a mile long and it lies between -'Mrs. Erwlh's and Mack Porter's. The engine Is Raubea Taylor's eighteen horse threshing en gineif It draws the grader, with per fect eas?, and moves about as fast as horses in an ordinary walk. The ten giDe;weighs pine tons and it's broad wheels do much to settle the ' 'loose" dirt after ''grading; 1 The 1 machine is also to he used' after; completion of the grade In-rolling the stretch with the big eight-ton road roller owned by jfche county. ; The work, is under direction of Reuben Taylor, and Is de clared to be highly successful. : ' Big track and fltld meet this af- ternooD. v . "' v - - - Ed Dunn returned Wednesday from a business trip to Portland. Mrs. W: Washburn arrived yes terday from Brownsvile, on a visit to her father, Caleb iDvle. ... . At the annual election of officers beld-Bt the U. or O. Wednesday, Ray Goodrich was elected president of the student boiiy, ; . ,V. , - Chrlf-tlatr church, Tomorrow at 11 o'clcck the subject will be "The Value of Memorials " Evening lecture, "The Ideul Young Womao.V i : : Ad adjourned erm of thecfrnmis sloners court was held Thursday. Be cause suffering w;th an attack ot tmasles, Commissionar Etwia was un able to attend. United Evangelical church : Sun day at. lL.a: u .; theme. life wonh Hvinp?' At 8 p. m., "The Unburled Dnad," Witham's school house at 3 p. ro. . j .: .; i i . The county road roller, which baa been io use on the Albany road, rasa ed through town j s ertfay. on the way to the Cooper UU trior, west of town. . ....... j . The socialists held a political meeting at the Court house Tuesday evening. Addresses were delivered by M. W. Wllklog, national organizer of the party, and John W. Ingle, can didate for congress. Burns Dick and family of five left Weduesi-av for Stafford county, Kan sas, ta reside. They arrived la Ben ton about Match 1st : tbis year, : .but failed to fall sufficiently in love with tho country, tj jjlich their teDts in this section. - Eugene Register: John McGee, of Corvallls, an old timer ot 33 years ago, Is in Eugene on business. He has purchased of Mrs.-Travis 208 acres of land three and a halt miles west of Junction and will place his son ia charge and with his wife will make Eugene bis future home. There are hopes out at the college that Jackson may break the Northwest inter-collegiete record iu the fchotput In the meet this afternoon. In the Forebt Grove meet last week, he put the sphere 39 feet four Inches, and in practice since has raised his record to 10. He has also during the week, thrown the hammer 108 feet." The Northwest inter-collegiate record In the ehotputis 41- feet.-three -inches, made by Sanders ot Chemawa." ; A two-acre tract north of the col lege and west ot Herzlg's place has been purchased by L. B. Baker and Marie Huctingten, new arrivals. On tbe tract there is a four-room bouse. The price paid is $500. The sale was made by F. P. Morgan. The owner was Mrs. G. L. Hickland who, with her son came out from Oklahoma about a year ago. 'Later tbe son re turned to Oklahoma and the mother b as been tor some time withfriends near Portland. : :; , - r" " ' The nely elected c fflceca-of- (he city assume their pesitlons on theiirst Monday In June. The -retiring coun cil holds a meeting on -the evening of that day. The new council Its- first meeting on the second Monday in June. The new council will he com posed of the fallowing members : Jet wasd, Rose,, 4very.,nd, Porter; j2d war,d, Creea,, Cameron andTaylpr; 3d ward, ' penkle,. Codies fand Colbert,' Five members, a majority ot th'ecoub- ,cil, are newly elected, an instance that rarely happens. - There Is every reason to expect tbfct the. athletic meet on ,the;0. A. C. field this afternoon will be very close ly contested. A,Both.teams,are . strong and both aref in the tbest -condition, each, however, having a man. or' two more or less handicapped. O. A. C in particular sustains a loss In Swarm, who sprained one. arm in the Forest Grove meet and the other In practice on the home field this week, and. will not he able to fake part.-'He1" is ,f ac counted the beet polevaulter at O. A. C. Eugene Guardr"TheGuard yes terday stated that the. tracs meet be-' tween the teams of the U. O. and O. A. C. would probably not he held. . Last night Manager Earl 'was successful in arraigning for the meet and the local team will go down to Oftrvallia Friday afternoon accompanied bv Trainer Ray and Manager El, The follow ing is the personel of . tbe team which will be sent: Poley. Peiklos, Pacland, Merchant, McKinney, Veatch, Hender son, Lewi,-Sergeant Williams Thayer and Payne. From ell accounts , the Italian prune , crop is to, be short ' this j season in some of the orchards in the south ern portion of Benton. - Albert Zierolf 1 who owns a - 12-acre " prune ordhard there was in town Thursday. About half bis orchard is Italians, and he figures now from 1 the ' latter he will only have a few bushels. From, his pept trees he expects a good ' crop. Mr. Zierolf aho says that the . same conditions prevail in the - orchards Of Si.He.rron and Hugh Finley. , Tbe 'or. chards there are alODg the Willamette bottom; where they blossom earlier than do orchards to the westward. A couple of killing frosts occurred dur ing the blossoming period, and to this the damage is ascribed." Peaches'.' in the Zierolf and Herron orchard prom Ice a fair Crop.i nl f-i: ' .( ' Lost. Thursday, on the streets of Corvallis, a white buggy robe. Suitable reward will bepaidjforlts return to .the ..under- signed. . '' ' , Li u ; . Joseph Yates, .i- Corvallis. IN MANY CAMPAIGNS. Captain Hardin's Thirty Year's of Ser vice Was in Modoc War. Captain C. B. Hardin, the new commandant at O. A. C. has been for more than thirty years in the military service of . the United States. He began as ; a . private at seventeen years of age, , and by dint of his own efforts has risen to , the position that Tie now occupies. He has seen much service in the In dian campaigns, Ihe most notable of which was the Modoc War in 1873, waged by Captain Jack against the white settlers, and in which General Canby was assassin ated along with other whites in a peace conference proposed by the Indians, and unvvis"ely accepted by the pale faces. During the Modoc campaigns, Captain Hardin was in the following engagements: Lands rancho, December 20, 1872; Jack's stronghold, January r 16 and 17, 1873; near Applegate's rancho, Jan uary 22d ; Jack's strong hold, April nth, 12th, 13th, ith, 15th, 16th and 17th; relief of Captain Thom as', command' April 26th;-at , Dry Lake May 10th: Van Buren ratcho May 29th. Captain Hardin was born in Ber lin, Illinois, August 10, 1055, en listed in troop G. 1st cavalry, Au gust 17, 1872. He served as private and corporal through the Modoc campaigns and until June 1877. In October 1878, he enlisted" in the same troop joining at Fort Boise, Ida ho. He served in the campaign against the Sheepeater Indians in Idaho the summer of 1879. He was recommended for commission as second lieutenant and was ex amined and passed in 188 1. He re ceived his commission in March in 1882. in the 1 8th Infantry, and served in Montana until August 1883. In the latter month he was sent to the United States Infantry and cavalry school at Fort Leaven worth, Kansas, from which he was graduated June 30, 1885. He served at Fort Hayes, Kansas, un til December 1, 1888, when he was detailed to take a course in electricity and submarine mining at the United States engineers school at Willet's Point, New York. He graduatedvfrom the institution in October , 1889, and was pro moted 1st lieutenant, 18th Infantry, December 26, 1889. r He was married October 1, 1888, and was on duty in Texas until Oc tober 1, 1891. From April 6, 1894 to April 6, 1898, he was professor of military science andtactics at Do ane College at Crete, Nebraska. At the outbreak of hostilities with Spain he ' joined his" regiment at New Orleans, and served in Hono lulu and in the Philippines.. He was in charge of recruits at San Francisco until, rAugust 1 900.- In the Philippines he commanded the 2d battalion, comprising four com: panies of the' 1 8th infantry, - and was in the battles of Iliaya and Pa via on the Island of Panay. After his return from the Islands, Captain Hardin was on duty at the Presidio and Alcatraz. Island, San Francisco and atJFortKLogan, Colorado, until detached for duty as professor of military science and tactics at O. A. C. " paptain Hardin is expected to take command of the cadets at the college next week. ,, '. ; . : jNow due-! a 1 carload of 1 the famous Old Rickory wagons.'. Waft for them. We-have prices that' will sirpriee ypu.1, - A. Whelm & Sons, Monroe. 1 ' ,A good cup of rcoffee puts you in the moodlto 'enjy the entire day. ..' For this purpose always get "Seal Brand'? 'Java arid. Mochi, sold only by'P.'M. Zierolf. . ';. Some People Eat to Live . m.. And others liye to." eat. Both 7 classes can be accommodated in this 1 particular by feeding at the Occidental hotel.., .A g6od bed is the next best thing to a good meal and that also can be secured at the Occidental.. ' V, ' , ; New goods all Callahan. ' the time. Nolan & Girl Wanted, .... - To 'do " houeework. Free " access to piano', organ and washboard. Inquir at this office. -..v.i, a v Racine buggies are the best. See our stock and get our prices before buying. A. Wilhelm & Sons Mon roe, . ' For Sale. ' ' A small bnt good paying business, in Corvallis.-- Inquire at Times office. . , Racine vehicles are the standard of tbe world and carried everywhere by re sponsible dealers. Why bay "cheap john" of "trailers?" '1', - - Milwaukee Chain Drive ' mowers, Champion Draw-cut mowers, Victor and Champion rakes are the best. For sale by A. Wilhelm & Sons, Monroe. IN THE GRAVE. Death and Burial of an Old-Time Resi - dent James Watkms. James Watkins, who has resided for more than thirty . years a few miles, west of Corvallis died sudden ly Wednesday, i He started about noon to go from the house to one of the outbuildings, a few yards dis tant. When half way1 there, he suddenly fell in a heap on the ground. His wife from the house heard him groan, as did also Albert, a son, hoeing in a garden near at hand. Both hastened to the side of. the prostrate man, and lifted him into a sitting posture in a chair for the purpose of carrying him in to the house. He was able to talk, and demurred to the plan. He in sisted on proceeding to the place where he had started, and was as sisted there. Reaching the place he began gradually to lean moje heavily on his son. Alarmed at the symptoms, those present carried the old man into the house, after reach ing which, the latter spoke but a few words, and within a few min utes.'passed away. The end came shortly after noon. In the early days, the deceased came to California from the vicinity of Des Moines, Iowa, which was his early home. After residing a number of years in the Golden State, Mr. Watkins moved with his family in about the year 1870 to Benton county, where he has since resided, respected and revered by all. He was a member of the old school Baptist church. One daugh ter, residing in the vicinity of the old home'near Des Moines, Iowa, the widow and several sons are the survivors of the immediate family. Among the latter are Albert and Marion of Benton county, James, who is in the railway mail service-, and . Ezra, who conducts a candy store in Portland. One son is in Klondike, and others are in Eastern Oregon. Of the children only the daughter is married. Mr. Watkins was aged about 75 or 80 years. The funeral ocourred from Philo math, and tne burial was- at New ion cemetery at three o'clock yes terday afternoon. MILLER Eupenh Faultless in Fit; The Standard of Fashion; Tailored Perfectly; The Long-Service Kind; Par Value; Seasonable in Every way; The Absolute, Satisfaction or Money Back Kind. Made in a modern sanitary daylight lac- : tory, no sweatshop contamination,- ' , , !, ' Not like the average ready-to-put-on clothes. the clothes you'd expect ircm a high-priced tailor, excepting only his price. , ' 1 VANO jSj Around We are receiving new goods daily, and as Mr. Kline spends a great deal of his time in San Fran cisco we are enabled to keep in touch with the new and latest novelties on the market. ' - Parasols .EMVy Vvlvl y lace enects in Black and fancy colors at.......,......;..:..25 and 50C marvelous Sbce Ualues: Seventy-five pairs of ladies' shoes in broken lines, .worth from $2 to $3.50, on sale thjs week at $1.50 ZrP-iiEe. NfcW Trimmings Another lot just'in. Call and inspect them, they are the latest. Black Gat Garters. Are made with the ex panding loop and fit without cutting or tearing. S. L. KLINE'S THE WHITE HOUSE. : For Sale. . The beautiful home corner ' 3rd & Washington sts. Terms easy. Make me an offer. H. H. Kreger, Santa Barbara, Cal. Manure to give away at the Brick stable. Do You Want a Carpet, matting, linoleum or any floor covering this spring? If so, don't fail to gets prices of Oliver; Blackledge, the carpet man at Mann & Co's store. ra sm lothes Are: MILLER Sells these Hats ---- - and - ; l op Round Shoes F. L. 'niLLER,:Coryal!is,:Or." the Store. Just arrived, in Black.White and fancy colors, 7C tO $5 Drop stitch and any thickness of stocking ' Screen Doors. , Best quality screen doors, 75 cents each; window screens 35 to 50 cents. - , Central Planing Mills. At Corvallis Sawmill You can secure dry wood at $1,25 per load; cedar posts at 74 cents, shingles at f 2.25; and second class lumber - at $6.50. When you buy a mower you want the one that is going to save you time and save you hay- The Milwaukee Chain Drive mower will do both. Get prices of A. Wilhelm & Sons, Monroe. cop kmt, -net, vf . KUPPENHEIMCII Of They are like LEATHER THROUGHOUT. - 0L O ASK TO SEE IT. Equal to any S5.00 Shea ptfh 7