fpfS ' 'J " . jV J -; 4 f --: T H vff vV.i.i,. "WEB SBIvd:i-,WBBIi:L,T. VoT.',XVI. No. 19. COR V ALUS, OREGON, JUNE 4t, 1903. B. F. IRVIJfK Eli tor and Proprietor. " V Willamette Vallej Banking Company. CORVAIXIS OREGOX. Responsibility, $100,000 I 1 eneraj Banking Business. Exchange issued payable at all finan cial centers ia United States, Canada and Europe. Principal Correspondents. P6RTLANO London & San FranclxcoBank Limited; Canadian Bank ot Commerce. SAN FRANCISCO London & San Francis co Bank Limited. NEW YORK Messrs. J. P. Morgan & Co. CHICAGO First National Bank. LONDON, ENG. London & San Francisco . Bank Limited. SEATTLE AND TACOMA London & San . Francisco Bank Limited. CORVALLIS & EASTERN RAILROAD, Time ' Card Number 21. For Yaquina: ' Train leaves Albany. ......12:45 p. m " Corvallis 2:00 p. m " arrives Yaquina. 6:25 p. m I Returning: ; . ' Leaves Yaquina... 6:45 a. m Leaves Corvallis. 11:30 a. pi Arrives Albany......... ...12:15 p. m 3 For Detroit: Leaves "Albany 7:00 a. m Arrives Detroit 12:05 p. m 4 from Detroit; '' Leaves Detroit............. 12 :45 p. m Arrives. Albany..... 5:35 p. m 1 Train No. 1 arrives in Albany in time to connect with S P south bound train, as well as giving two or . three hours in Albany before departure of S P north bound train. -- Train No 2 connects with the S P trains at Corvallis and Albany giviug direct ser vice to Newport and adjacent beaches. Train 3 for Detroit, Breitenbush and other mountain resorts leaves Albany at 7:00 a. m., reaching Detroit at noon, giv ing ample time to reach the Springs" the Game day. For further information apply to Edwin Stonb, 1 Manager. H. H. Cronise, Agent Corvallis. Tiios.-Cockretl. Agent Albany. J. P. Huffman, Architect Office in Zierolf Building. Hours from 8 to 5. Corvallis, Oregon. - L. G, ALTMAN, M. D . Homeopathist Offlce cor 3rd and Monroe ets. Resl- dence cor 3rd and Harrison sts. Hours 10 to 12 A. M. 2 to 4, and 7 ;. to 8 P. M. Sundays 9 to 10 A, M, Phone residence 315. DR- W. H- HOLT. DR. MAUD HOLT. Osteopathic Physicians Office on South Main St. Consul tation ani examinations free. Office hours: 8:3o to 11:45 a. m 1 to 5:45 p. m. Phone 235. DR. C. H. NEWTH, Physician '& Surgeon Philomath,-Oregon. H. S. -PERNOT, Physician & S urge on Office over postoffice. Residence Cor. Fifth and Jefferson streets. Hoars 10 to 12 a. m., 1 to a. d, m. Orders mav be left at Graham & Wortham's drug store. E. Holgate ATTORNEY AT LAW JUSTICE OF THE PEACE Stenop-ranhv atirl tvroarnHT nniia Office in Burnett brick Corvallis, Oreg Notice ot Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given that 1, GE Farra as administrator of the estate ot Thomas Graham deceased, have filed my final account as such administrator In the County Court ot Ben ton county, State of Oregon, and the said court has fixed Wednesday the 8th day ob July 1903, at the hour of 1 o'clock In the afternoon ;sald day as the time, and theCcounty court room In the county.'court house in Cor vallis, Oregon, as the place tor hearing any and all objections to the said final account and for settlement thereof. Sated this Junes, 1903. O- B. Farra. Administrator of the estate, of Thomas Gra- haU aaasasea.. Administrator's Notice. Notiee is hereby (riven that the undersigned has been duly appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregon for the County ot Benton. administrator ot the estate of Elizabeth Jane onipiey, aeceasea. Ail persons naving i claims against said estate are hereby requested to pre sent the same properly verified as by law re quired at the offlce of Yates S Yates, Corvallis, Oregon within six months from the date hereof. Dated at Corvallis. Oregon, this 19th day of Way, 1903. -r . A.J. SHIPLEY. ' 'administrator of the estate of Elizabeth Jane f - Shipley, deceased. Many Men . And Boys 0an now $aue money By inspecting our Bis line of Clothing, Shoes : :: : 4 And Hats. Reduction on the to your interest me Do to as high, a standard as us. but see that you make no mistake in the house that keeps the hig est standard of Grocer v , ies that is the place to , BUY Co X o Fresb Fruits. fresh everything to be had in the market. , Wq riin our delivery wagon and our aim is s to keep whan you want and to. - please. ' Call and see 6. B. Horning. IF YOU , ARE LOOKING FOR SOME REAL good bargains in stock, grain, fruit and poultry 1 Ranches, write for my special list, or come and see me. I shall take pleasure in giving you all -the reliable information you wish, also showing , you over the country. HENRY AMBLER, ' Real Estate, Loan, and Insurance, , Philomath, Oregon. E. It. Bryson, Attorney-JLt-Lcbw, POSTOFFICB BUILDING B. A. CATHEY, M. D Physician and Surgeon, ' Office, Room 14, First National Bank Bnilding, Corvallis, Or. Office Hours, 10 to 12 a, m., 2 to 4 p. m. r above makes it to cali and see not Ciue our desire would promote (b i ) Fresb Uegttables, E. E. WILSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. i : NOTARY PUBLIC. Office in Zierolf Building, porvallig. Or. G. R. FARRA, PHYSICIAN SURGEON & OBSTETIClAN Eesldence In front of court house facing 3rd it. Office hours 8 to 9 a. m. 1 to 2 and 7 to 81 OBVALLI3 OREGON THE HEPPNER HORROR SWAM 200 YARDS WITH TWO LIT TKE ONES ON HIS SHOULDER ; IN THE BOILING TORRENT, j , , r Agent Kernao Stack to Hislastru : merit to t the Last moment Striving to Save Other Lives He Lost His Own . Heart-Rending' Scenes." A FATHER'S HEROISM. -Heppner, Oregon, June 21. One of the most thrilling adven tures was that of Tom Shuler, who, with his family, was carried down the stream in his house for a mile and a half. ' His wife and two chil dren stayed in the .-tipper rooms. Below the town the house was shot across the current to the west . side where it lodged in . the debris 150 yards from the canyon bank.. Shu ler then look his two little ones on hi,s shoulder and swam 200 yards in the boiling torrent, . contending with obstructions. He landed the two children and then struck ' out for the house, got his wife and re scued hey safely.. : ; : NONE COULD AID THEM. The McBride family, which was lost, went down in their bouse. The daughters screamed and beckoned from the windows to Louis Kinney, whOjj with his family, rah in v the nick of time from their house to es cape the death-dealing tide. ' Kin ney watched the whole McBride family perish. Most of the bodies have been found. Zedda McDiwell, 7 years old, ran to tell her mother to save herself when she herself was drifting to death. s . - - , Pendleton, June 16. At the cost of his own life Station Agent Ker-nan,-of 4le O. R. & - N.,r- saved": the lives of the people liviog along the lower reaches of. Willow Creek. According ;to A. P. Bradbury, a Portland traveling man, who came in from Heppner last night, Ker han stuck to his instrument to the last moment sending the news of the olirushing flood to lone. When he was finally assured that the op erator below was informed as to the sitaation Mr. Kernan tried to save himself, and his wife, but both were drowned. The railroad station is on the banks of Willow Creek : and is two 6tories highland on the up per floor are the living apartments of the agent and his family. Sun day afternoon when the flood struck Heppner Mr. Kernan, his wife, children and Frank Hart were in the station. ' Mr. Hart immediate ly set about seeing to the safety of the woman and children while Ker nan went to his key to warn lone and Lexington of what he saw to be impending doom. While the roar of the flood filled the station Kernan bent over his instrument trying to raise Lexing ton and lone. His wife had taken the children in the meantime to the upper floor and would not leave un til her husband bad accomplished his duty. " Hart stayed, too, unwill ing to abandon them to their fate. While the family gathered, in the room above were peering out to see the onrueh of the flood Kernan was ' telling lone that Willow Creek was bearing down upon the towns be low a dead ' wall of water. The message was answered and with the water, to his waist Kernan fought hi3 way out and found Hart ready with the children to make an at tempt to reach higher ground. The nearest way to safety seem ed to be across the tracks and upon a rise beyond. Hart Went ahead with the children and Kernan took his wife and started on his way. In the darkness another wave of the oncoming flood overwhelmed them and when Hart reached a place of comparative security his calls were unanswered and he was finally com pelled to take the fatherless and motherless children to' another place in the certainty : that the gallant agent and his wife were among the dead. -..- 1 ' TERROR AT ARLINGTON. Miss Carrie O. Millspaugh re ports that the people v of ' Arlington were apprehensive of -such a disas ter as that which desolated Hepp ner during a large part of the" day, Tuesday. " " 'Black, heavy clouds," she said, "seemed quite formidable, and as the air grew hot much fear was ex pressed. About 7 o'clock loud peals 01 thunder were heard, ' accompani ed by vivid flashes of Iightnicg. . "In less thau an hour a horse man rode rapidly into town warn ing the inhabitants to flee to the hill as a cloud had burst seven or eight miles to the south. In anoth er moment almost the entire popu lation of the little city 1 was seen hurrying rapidly up the steep hills on either side of the main street of the town. -"The fire bells rang, but other wisa there was an almost deathless silence until the sound of the wa ters was heard.: Soon after the usually dry bed of the creek, ; run ning parallel with Main street, was hlled with water constantly increas ing in force. Fences, woodsheds and other small buildings were car ried rapidly down thestream. Near ly all the horses and cattle in town bad been turned into the street, but some livestock, not thus releas ed, were drowned, - "The canyon is very narrow at Arlington and had the volume of water been as great as that at Hepp ner almost the entire town would have been swept away.", : MANY FROZEN BODIES. t ine apparent stoicism 01 tne sur vivors who have lost relatives is astonishing, the only explanation being that the situation is not yet realized, r Realization will come when the thonsaDds of helpers leave town and the remaining population finds the streets deserted. ? Many women said today they were afraid to stay here when the people were left alone with , their dead. Men talked with dry eyes of wives and children killed. Many eay they do not know what- has happened. While the bodies found yester day and today were in horrible con dition, many were frozen stiff when brought into the hot sun, a phe nomenon rendered possible by their covering of hail. Great banks of bail stilt lie in the drifts with bod ies,, or parts of - bodies, . enclosed. Corpses not thus situated are so bad that workmen dislike to handle them. Where people" were rolled before a wall of hail during the flood, they are stripped and their flesh is whipped into shreds. A pitiful scene was witnessed last evening in the morgue, when a mother and her babe lay side by side, having been found together in a drift two miles below town, from which six bodies had already been taken, with more to come. The woman was Mrs. George Kinsley. There are many children still to find. : -, - No more laborers are needed, as all that cn be fed are here. Mayor Frank Gilliam and Sher iff E. M. Shutt have issued to all persons not working or with busi ness to transact to leave town as soon as possible. No attempt is being made to save boards or tim ber it'is a question of getting the ruins out of Bight. ; Ioquiries are coming from points as remote as Georgia for missing relatives supposed to have been in Heppner. The presence of numer ous trunks whose contents show the owners were strangers, seems to indicate that the death list will be considerably larger than antici pated. v m ; , MRS. WILLIS' STORY. ' Mrs. Willis lies dangerously hurt in a room at the Palace Hotel. She said: ' - ; rr - ' ' "Jim and land the children were sitting around the supper table Sunday night. Baby was in his high-chair beside me. Outside, it was raining so hard that it seemed the whole air was filled with fog. We live othe creek bink and Jim suggested that we go over to moth er's. We started. Before we got through the garden fance, the wa ter was coming down and Jim said: 'Why, the town ia moving.' " I looked up and all the houses a mile south seemed to be starting toward us. We made a rush for higher ground, and as the water got around my 8-year-old boy's ankles he stopped and pulled back; otherwise we all would have been saved. . "Jim rushed forward and ' pitch ed the baby on to the bank. , The boy I was holding broke away and ran back home. Jim turned back and was carried off. I seized the eecond boy and held on to the iron of a railroad car near by on the track. 1 saw thej; water swing around and carry the house and the oldest . boy, down - the creek. Then a big timber struck the boy I . Continued on Fourth Fags. " A TERRIBLE FATE. A MAN LITTKRALLY CUT IN TWQBT HI A uiu SAW. In Attempting to Clear the Cqd' plement Slipped and He Fell Back on the Re- volving Saw. Aberdeen, Wash., June 17. One of the most horrifying accidents ev er recorded occurred here yesterday when Clyde R. Wyman, an employe at the Weet 2 blade mill, was liter ally cut in twain by a big saw. Tha. saw cuiereu me 0011 y at inesnouia er and made a clean cut through the entire length, laaving the two halves on the conveyor, a terrible sight to behold. - Wtmn in at. rorai nasi cm. ployment at the mill, and his duty was to take charge of the elao dash er. : The conveyor choked, - aod f Wyman attempted to clear it with, the pickaroon. The implement in Borne manner, slipped, and Wyman fell backward onto , the revolving ; saw. The next moment the bodj had been severed. Death was in staneous. The accident was witness ed by some fellow workmen, and the saw was stopped as soon as pos sible, but not until its deathly wort . hurl hftpn nerfnrmoH '! 1 The coroner held an inquest overr the remains and from the facts brought out no one could be blamed, for the terrible fate of the deceased. Wyman was a glass-blower h by trade, and in company with (hie wife and a two-months' old babe came to the Pacific Coast a few days ago- He was 26 years of age. . ? Portland, June 21. Portland Oregonian: A verdict of murder in the second degree was returned by the jury in the Martin V. Lea-, sia Case at 9:30 o'clock last highW The punishment is life imprison ment. Leasia ' appeared pleased with the result and thanked his at torneys for their efforts in his be' half. To an Oregonian reporter who asked him if he desired to make a statement he .replied. "I have nothing to fay." The jury retired for deliberation at 4 o'clock after listening to a com prehensive charge by Judge Sears, which was generally acceptable by both sides. Several of tbe iurors voted at first for acquittal and tbe others voted guilty without fixing; the degree of crime. Then a juror. moved that tbe degree be balloted on, and on tbe first ballot eevea voted for murder in the first de gree, three for murder in the second degree, and two for manslaughter. Numerous ballots were taken before an agreement was reached. Chamberlain's , Stomach and Liver Tablets are just what you need when you have no appetite. feel dull after eating and wake up with a bad taste in your mouth. They will impri ve yjur apoetite, cleanse and invigorate your stom ach and give you a relish for your food. For sale by Allen & Wood ward. ' . Call for Warrants. - Notice is hereby given that there ia money in the treasury ' to pay all city warrants ordered drawn on the general fund and endorsed prior to May 1 4th, 19O1; Interest will stop on same from, this date. ' Dated at Corvallis, Oregon, June 20th 19O3. ' Wm. McLagan, 2 City Treasurer.. Reward. , I will give $25 for any information or lue . to the party or parties that broke and defaced two monuments in what is known as Pleasant Valley, on the south, fork of Mary's river. . - : ' ' ! ;' ; E. Skipton. We can save you money on your ve hicles. We buy in car lots direct front the factory for spot cash. A. Wilhelm & Sons, Monroe. l. - , Wood Saw. Tne Crescent woodsaw will be in Cor-is vallis and ready for business Jane 27th Rates are as follows: 'fir, 45 cents per cord and oak 50 cents per cord. - , - Phone 2x3, . ; M. Berthold, ' Manager,,