rr' re ; . . ... 5 lit it . ;(:; - Jt " ' i i's .'.'31' ?T i - .hi?: Vol. XVI. No. 35, CORVALLIS, OREGON NOVEMBER U, 1903. , f B. I". IKVUTE Editor and Proprlstor. ? !j ! mj - " . j quasar - - No ' Previous Season Has ever found our Store, in all its Departments, so well equipped. The Stock Includes all the Latest Novelties. Special attention is called toour Line of Dress doodsVJack ets, ; (Waterproof ; i Wraps,' v Skirts, Shoes an d Children's ; Clothing. Call and see. O. A. C. UNIFORMS. -J. H HARRIS. US& hot Clue CO to as high a standard as, jour desire would promote us. but see that yau make no mistake in the house that keeps the hig- est standard of Grocer- ies that is the place to i j BUY , , , - .', ' ' ' 'i t- -t " -V ft ; (t.s.. 4'"'-,S -v'-v --rf Fresb Fruits, Fresb UegetabUs, fresh everything to be had in the market. We run our delivery wagon and - our aim is - to keepjwha voii wantandto " - please. Call and see O T-"- 1 1 : .J ' . 1 1 . Sjy LMLJH nff mi mi BF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR , SOME REAL good bargains in stock; grain Jfruit and poultry Ranches, write for my special list, or come and see me. I shall take pleasure ir giving you all ' the reliable information you wish, also showing you over the country. s - HENRY AMBLER, , Real Estate, Loan, and Insurance, H S. PERNOT, : Physician .& Surgeon Office over postoffice.' Residence Cor: - Fifth and Jefferson streets. Hours 10 to . 12 a. m., 1- to- 4 p. ra. Orders may be -1 left at Graham & Worthata's drug store. D&. C, H, NEWTH, Physician & Surgeon 'Philomath, Oregon.- E. E. WILSON, ATTORNEY. AT LAW. . ' NOTARY PUBLIC. - ".. Office In Zierolf Building, Corvallis. Or. m IV Ira . ' . t i ' 4 l lv (! .mi m.v -i . m.j 1 Philomath, Oregon. - - - . E. Holgate ' j ATTORNEY AT LAW V -r JUSTICE OF THE PEACB " ' Stenography and typewriting done. Office in Burnett brick Corvallis, Oreg B. A. CATHEY, M. D., . : Physician and Surgeon. : Office, Boom 14, First National Bank Building, Corvallis, Or. Office Hours, o to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 p. m. J'orSale. . Grub oak wood-. For ; particulars . in quire of E. B. Horning. 7 - ; " .' ' MANY DEATHS IN MINE SEVEN DEAD ALREADY TAK ES OUT. From Fifty to Seventy -five Men Are Still in the Mine, arid All May : Be Lost Disaster at Kear earge Mine, Near Vir ginia City. - ? Butte, Mint., Nov.' B. A die-' patch to the Inter-Mountain from Virginia City, Mont., Bays: Seven are dead, a number more burned and perhaps scores lost in the un derground workings of the mine in a fire which started in the Kear- earge mine, tituatea at oummit, night miles from here, this morning. The known dead are, Superintend ent R. B.; Turner, of rthe mine,- a miner named Tobio, and five other miners, too badly burned to be iJeD- t fiod. Tnese ' seven bodies have b-eh" recovered, v Prom 50 to: 75 men are fctill down in the. mine and may have perished. ' ' The plant employed 200 men. .It is the property of .United States Senator Millard, ?-f Nebraska, and was valued at about Sl.OOQ.000 There is no wav to estimate the loss.' The fire, 'which? started at7. o' clock this morning:, "as the shifts were bsiog changed, , still rages fiercely: and the . rescuers, hundreds of wham have gone frooo 'Virginia City,, will be hampered,, as there'is no apparatus at the mine. It,, is not known how the tire started,. .... .. y Sup't- r Tur'ntif i 'gave,. his, life fori bi9:menv. He.' was atbreakfae'i and par ially dre 4ed when tha'alarm cBme. f Dishing intojhe shaftbouse in bis ebirtj. sleeves' with, another minefrwbo?e'narne has not I beep learned. Turner ma3eM his way into ine m-aiq junnei, .jaere ney,;ounu evervthinev; ablaze'. Tbev leroned their way dowp and in and dragged out hve Dodiesiinciudinz loDins, In.a second yttenopt they ..did, not p.rimfi : out and . wern Tat fir 'milled forth dead by the jrescuere,. the man, wno ai neroicaiiy .aioeuji jjrnprer- Tokinir wif Pi Kim . v . C ; (.TurnW.w.k.acnowV4iC'B'Bb9 leading authority , on, coanidio'e in A.mericl.l Hp, was a member bfthe American oocpjiy .01 aiiningngiu eer'sjis' father owaaormerlystalic auditor qf' Colorado.1 J-Tutn'er' ' had foreboduiM that rp wouf4die before. ne iWas.-OjO as ft iy:oiner rap j. ur net, met a yiolenl deatb in Arizona some t ears, aeo.' when . iuit 3 aud otjiet rjoenbefa of the'iamilv '' had" been tifled at. 'that ' ajsei': Tatner was within three' month's of 36, and his foreboding is realized. A-wid ow and one child, living in Virgin ia City survive bim.,;! The total list of dead may not be known' until the' bodies" -have been recovered. -AH but those of ' To bin and Turuer are too badly burned to be identified. Physicians from Virginia City, Ennis and other towns are on the way. If the min ers known to be in the mine are deadj' tha list will foot up 10 60 or 75. Some of the rescuers are badly( burned' " " ' The shafthouse, cyaniding -plant and tunnel are a total; loss. It is not known bow badly the workings of the mines.have been damaged. , - The workings of the Kearsarge are such as to afford little ventila tion and heavy smoke from, the burning timbers is banging like a blanket in the mine.-' Should the fire reach the underground maga zine a terrific explosion is inevita ble, which would effectively choke the workings with debris and , en tomb the miners almost beyond hope of rescue, even should they escape the flames and smoke. . The amount of dynamite stored under ground is considered sufficient to dislodge ; several hundred tons of rock.' The origin of the fire . is; un known. ;Later reports indicate that all of the men in: the mine, with the. ex ception of the seven burned, escap ed through, other- workings.-? It . is possible, however, that several oth ers fcave perished..; '.The fire was ex tinguished at two o'clock, and 'for ces of several hundred workers are searching the ruins of tbe sbaJt house," boiler house, blacksri ith plant and the tunnel for dead and wounded. It. will not ;be known for some time, until a roll is" called, bow many perished. A list of those burned in the effort to rescue ' the miners cannot be procured, as eve ry man available is hard 'at "work and several of those slightly injur ed, are in the mine with the . rescu era. ",",", Every' po'sible aid is be'iDg rend ered the rescuers. ' The work is dangerous, as the ladders into the workings have all been burned out, and new platforms will have to be built. ' ' ' - ; - : Panama, Nov. 7. The "news of the recognition of the independence of the republic of Panama, cabled this morning by M. Buna'u Varilla, the diplamatic ageut at Washing ton, of the republic, spread rapidly through the town. The day was declared a holiday and even the foreigners in Panama joined in the jubilee. r ' , ' Unhealthy Kidneys, Dr. Darrin Sys That f 'Thousands , Hive Kidney r, Trouble and' Don't Know It." Dr. Dir ! rin GoJng to Corvallis ' November 15 h. 1 ' ' ' p jrter' "Kidney and bladder diseas- n Washington, Nov,, 6. The e's are more -nrevalent than 'moat:ilowiDS telegram was,, tent, by people euppose. The symptoms are eo . numerous,, and . different,, that thousands suffer and do not discover ibt) real ciuee of their trouble until they are io the fatal gripof,Bright7a disease or Diabetes,". ' . I . "The earning ofj kidney trouble is backaches, aching pain over', tjba hips, swollen ankles, sediment','o,r deposit in J-be urine, bloody or, high ly colored and milky; white '( urine, voracious appetite, thirst,' mouth dry, s tongue iurred, tand swollen, weakness and wasting of flesh, skin pall waxy or dry, bad odor, of. per spiration and puffioess under tit he tjes.".-;:' , .;- " x , ' . ;'.",' : ; AdvJce i aqd'(1 treatment ' should iSote neglected -by.f thosebavipg any of, the above, symptoms .which can be easily, enured, otherwise-, will rsui fin a fUl.meady, ( f .J?-. j "PLbaye' ot'y ears,? continued e !dQCjr,"",.made,.a specialty ,'of euc-; cessfnlly treatin g all forms ,bjf , blad -der and kidney diseases, and "will be pleaeed to talk wsth any one re garding thefr case, and give my candid opinion or render any ser vice they, may rt quire. . - -v- - i V. ANOTHBSAlJEJf JCESTIMOpAL. ' sMu Editor: i;jhirteen,eaf8ago, Dr. Darrin visited Salem.and cured !my :da'ughtt H)& CTV-jPift"; petes.one; was iinarjie to retain urine and b.adi io gejt pppany .time's nigUt and day, "Dr,. Darrin cured her, so she never, had any return of the symptoms. t My daughter Resides in West Salem Oregon , ; t ' r - o ? ; - ..G."B.tfovB...' Dr. Darrin can be consulted free at the Hotel Revere,-; Albany, from 10 to5 o'clock daily i;evening.74o8: Sunday,10 to, 3; until November 15, after that time at Corvallis -at the Dew Hotel Corvallis , November 15 to December 1 only. . . ' The doctor makes a specialty df all diseases of - the reye;s- ear, vnose and throat, catarrh, deafness, blad der and kidney , diseases or those who suffer from apathy and indif fereuce; also consumption, genito urinary and e kin diseases in either sex,. ouch as blood taints, seminal weaknees.and lost vigoj, varicoctle and stricture. , Eyes tssted, glasses fitted. Dr. Dirrin will treat all who -may ap ply before December at half his former prices. For a Bad Cold. If you have a bad cold you need a good reliable medicine like Cham berlain's Cough remedy to. loosen and relieve it, and to allay the irri tation an inflammation of the throat and lungs- For sale by Graham & Wortham. At Philomath. Eggs and butter 30 cents at J. E. Henkle's. . : - New dress goods just received at lan & Callahan's. h. ' No- Notice. , 0. J. Blackledge having sold his inter est in the firm of JD. Mann & Co to j, D. Mann and D. M. Smith, all persons knowing themselves to be indebted to the firm are requested to call and settle. J. D.Mann & Co.; w Corvallis, Nov 6, 1903. HOW , INDEPENDENT JHE UNITED STATES HAS RECOGNIZED NEW GOV ERNMENT OF PANAMA. State Department Instructs Acting Consul-General Ehrman to En ter Into Relations With -' New' Government s J ' Other News. ' ..r-.w.:,. .. . . .....-:-1 : -j. - if .f. Wa'shiagtbhNovi '6. The Unit ed States government hasjreoognized the de facto government of Panama. It was announced at' the state de partment after the, return of Secre tary Hay from the cabinet, that ' in structions had been' sent7 ta Uuited states Minister Beaupre at Bogota (assuming that he has not lelt the capitahyet),aod :tov M. ' Ehrman, the United States .vice-coDsul at Panama, and now . acting consul there, to inform tbe governments of Columbia and Panama,, respective ly, that the de facto government is recognized. . , , fol the state department today. to lr. Ehr man the , acting-consul general of the United States af Panama: . , "Tee people of Panama have) by an ' apparently unanimous move ment dissolved their political rela tions with thetrepublic of Colombia and aesumed their independence. When y.ou are eatisfied , that a de facto, government, republican ; in form and without substantial .. op pqBitioQ from its own, t people, has been established . jri, the state of Panama, you will enter into rela tions, with it as the responsible gov ern'ment.of the, territory, and look to it for all du action to protect the perV ons and, property of the citizens of -the United States and " to keep open'the" Isthmus, transit in accord-? ance with the obligations of exist ing treaties governing the' relations of the United States to that territo ry." .Immediately . afterward an in struction was sent by . telegram to Mr. BaupreVhe United States mln' ister at Bogota,,,, in A ,be(ollqwipg 'TJje pepple, pf jPanamaj Jiavijpg by an apparently onanirjuoua move rhenj; dissolved Jhelr political cqn neptioii .wb, "the ipfo blic pojopi ba'aod resumed, their independence, and having ; adopted a government pf iheir 6wn; republican ' in form, th' wtlch lle. ;government9f:; the UnitedjStea qfAmejriJiaB .ent.e.f-. edinta relations: the pxeeident jof the United States,' in accordance with the 'tjds :pf ,fr,lep.ctship which bavp i.lqng flnd1 BQhappyyxietf ed between the -respective nations, most earnestly recommends '. to the governments of Calombia and ' of Papapoa the peaceful and equitable, settlement of allquestions at isjsue between them. ' He holds that she is bouhd not merely by treaty obliga tions but by the1 interests 'ofc! vi li ztion to see. that tha peaceful traffic of the world across the Isthmus of Panama shall not longer be disturb ed by a constant succession of un necessary and wasteful civil wars' At Philomath. Last Thursday Dr.; Carter was summoned from Yaquina by tele graph on account of a rather seri ous accident to his wife. 1 Mrs. Car ter is here with her .daughter who is attending college, .'and while stand ing on a box, fell, striking on her outstretched hand, causing a frac ture of tbe arm just above the wrist joint. Dr. Newth was called and set the broken arm. . ... , The road to Alsea has become eo bad that Mr. Vidito has laid off bis stage until spring. , Grass is growing and stock is looking well i -. ,. . Mr. V Burnap is talking of build ing 'an addition to his hotel to ac commodate his increasing patron- Mrs. Elva Aiken is, taking a va cation. . - - Philomite. GetTyour ribs fixed Hospital. 1 ' . at , the . Bicycle ' Crouse & Brandegee on the label of a coat stands for all that is good in clothes making. ..- Nolan & Callahan, See them WHAT INPRESSED THEM. Benton Delegates Report r Offcially t Court About Good Roads Convention. At last weeks session of the coun ty court,-the del gat js from Benton, -who. attended the Good .KoaJa con vention in Portland, submitted a, report. Much of the matter is of interest to the public, and is as fol lows: J'. . . r, , . The subjects under discussion of which we consider of most impor tance were; The employment of our convicts on tbe public, highways national and state aid for the im provemeut of our highways, tha relative, value and economy of good and bad roads. Th rlatioot the , road question 10 edtic-1 n, and the cost, construction uN'iitjdiiiXainanca of good roads ' .:- .W's-ij .;..,. "With the preseiit o imposition of convict labor they are brought iota direct' communication with free , labor.' " ' ..,- ' ' 0 'CONVICTS ON ' ROAD. ' i-7 . The labor of the convictc of tha state has been leased to the Loe ' wenberg & Going Company, of Port land for 35 cents, per , day of tea hours for each man. The duration of the lease , of Nthe . convict labor will eoon expire and some new - ar rangement lor the employment pf our convicts must be made, ,, .,i . Other states are , utilizing their convict labor in the improvement of their highways, we believe that Oiegon should do the" same. In; tois way their work would b9 of public benefit and would not as is the case " come into competition with free labor. ' , ; Tbe Hon. M. O. Eldridge of the" Office Public Road I oquiries Wash ington D C. showed with the steri- . optica d how the convicts were worked 01 the roads in other states. Views were shown where they were at work with ball and chain 'atta ched. Also the portable steel cage in which they were : enclosed, for safekeeping at night was shown. A., cook wagon goea right; along with. -them. 4 J , We believe that it would be a; good moral lesson to tbe youth of, our ,lands well as the convicts, . themselves to be made to .work, where they can be seen. We agree with.the.Hort. M. 0. Eldridge that N . it is no more than right as .we en deavor to mend their ways tq make them mend our (highways). We' hope that the nextlegislatUre will make proper legislation along this line. v HATIOIf AT AID -F0Bf ROADS, v ' i Ip regard to national, and. sjtatef aid.fortjhe jmprovementofpur, high--ways, . , there - has beeq ,:rjajllun(r appropriated, .by , Cengress for the imorqvement ol rivers and , harbota and we believe the highways of our. land are worthy the consideration of oar congress. - We urge that our . representatiies in congress do all they can toward they enaqtment of the Brownlow Bill which , provides for the appropriation of $20,000,000 for tbe department of Publio Rood. Inquiries inorder that -object les sen roads may,- be made in every state.-. . . - r Oregon's share for such an appro, priation would be about $150,000 Good roads are of .great- value to any country:-" There is no "econe my 'in bad roads. , They cost yearly a great deal mora than the interest on the' price of. good roads. -' It is only to true that our country rchools are not on a par ' with the gaaded schools of our cities. . . " Ti MONEY. UAS BEEN WAFTED. - . .1 ' Our eta'e Super iitcrs e6f-Pub-liu Instructioo auv- -Oat.-s i tte cen tralization of pur bxuty schools, and iothat-way give the 'country boys arid i gitls '"an v equal chance with those in the. tslties.'v; There'? ia . nothing that can insure the success of this scheme -more than" an - early improvement of ofir public roads. ' There should be fome system to our. road work.- As it has been done much lime and - money has been thrown away, The first of . many things that should be done -in the way of improvement of our public roads is straightening the roads aud lessening 1 the : grade wherever nfcessary. , , We found tbe convention very in- -teresting and it wasatreatindeed to , hear what men from tbe industrial and financial' centers of the great . North-west bad to say' about better. ' ment of our public roads. Respectfully submitted. - ' Henry Hector. - J Eli Spencer. . John D. Harris. . - Rebert H Geilatly..