LOCAL. LORE. "The jCbuiC'j ( Advertisement 1 this column eh-rgl"cfor M theraieofli oentt per line. Local newa on fourth pige. Services at the M. E. chorea, South, tomorrow, mornlog acd even ing. , S!J0day school at 10 a. m. Ira Wade, cl rk ot Lincoln coor ty, was a visitor In Corvallls Thurs day. Secretary Stone, cf the Portland Y. M. C. A, paid a visit to the college yesterday. Fred i Walling, a Silem boy, died yesterday from blood poleonlog from the prick cf a buckle. Eail Braodeberry wa9 over from Albany Tburiday od buBloesa and for the pleasure cf meeting old friends. Yldito Bros, have ordered a eafa from the Forlnd braoch of the Hall Bare Company, and it la expected to arrive Mordiy. There la to be a meeting of tha Ccffee Club Monday afternoon at the "usual hcur. M"mbers will please take notice. ' A. B. Coates who wa? oat of col lage week with bDod poisoning fn his kce?. Is about re33vered, aid ba? resumed bis studies. Sublet V. the church cf Christ Sunday, Feb. 28th, 11 a. p.: Once of Qivloo:" 8 p.m.:"Tne Enablished." Mrs. A. M. Wicks entertained the Guild of the Episcopal church, Wed nesday afternoon. The next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Brodsrs Sunday at Congregational church. Subject In the morning, '-The Greatest OtieBtlon That Confronts You;" even ing, "Japan, Its History, People Institutions." Kev. G. S. O. Humbert, former pastor of the Christian Church here, is Id Corvallls for a few days. Mr. Humbert is field secretary of toe Di vinity school at Eugene. Aftsravlslt of several dajs at the home of her aunt, Mrs. Ann Hay&, Mies Naomi Cowan Wt for her home la LebanoD, yesterday. Twenty persons era to be initiat ed into Oorvallls Grange at the meet ing this. Saturdiy af ternoon. A team - from Willamette Grange will conduct the ceremony. TJd to Thursday evenlntr, the to tal reeletration was about 700. The pace will have to quicken, or many vo ters will still ba unregistered when e lection day arrives. Rev. J. Sherman Wallace, now of Rochester, N. Y., lu wilting to a friend says: "The thermometer is bow 10 degrees below. Snow is from four to 10 feet deep. Have not seen the crround since the first of November. and " Wilbur Week8ot Salem, is the gueit cf Ccrvallis fr"e3ds. . - Tiavis McDevltt spent several days this week at bis home at Dallas. . Seth.Fawlk of Marion connty, a former studeot at OAO, vftHtd- Coi vallU f i leads this week. . . . ; Rra at Salem, ta Mr. and Mrs. Fraok Ward, f -rmrly t f Corvaliis, a daughter. Mr3. Bay Bicker 1 arrived from Suver Thur day aid ls the guest of relatives. The Ladles Missionary society of the Presbyterian church met at the home of Mr?. S N Wllkias Wendesday af'erooon. After a yar spnt io this city, 3. B. MaUlacd and fnmily leave "next we ;k to take up their rssldeoce in Portland. ! r-A Pennsylvania mm insured his. life, got married and the same dy commit! el suicide so tba-- his wife could have the money. Mr?. Joseph Smith, who bai bean for several weeks la a Portland hos pital, arrived at be'r home near Wells Thursday. Her health is somewhat Imprjved. Mrs. A. D. Morrison of Carlton, arrived Thursday to super iutend the packios and sblppicg of her house hold euVe'e. The beautiful new borne p Mr. G. B. Farra was tte eceoe cf much merriment Wclneedy aiternoon. The occasion wa the bl-weekly mee'iug of the Lalles Whist Club. While In town Wednesday, John Martin of Irish Bend, contracted for lumber for the erection of a huge barn. The lumber alon f.r . the structure Is to est about $900 Revival services at the United Evangelical church will continue throughout next week. Bev. C. C, Poling Is herd now and will assist in the services. The fourth quarle'ly SELLING HORSES. . -Mordaunt Goodnoagh and Ru tbyn Turney of the musical depart ment at the college, are to give a re cltal In the College of Philomath, next Friday evening. Lester Zumwalt is confined at th Mrs. August Koight borne from scare let fever. The warolDg flag was placed Friday morning. The malady, bow eve., is In a mild form and there Is lit tie apprehension of consequences. Thomas Wblteborn - and eon Claude etatt today for Oakland, Calif., where they will join Mrs. Wblteborn, who baa been In that state during a large part ot the winter. The f dually will return to Oorvallls in about a month. The Leona has completed the transfer of the Benton Flouring Mills' wheat from up-river warehouses, and abojut Wednesday the boat will have completed the work of moving tbe Oorvallls Mills' wheat f rem above. Seven tons of baled hay came up from Welle' Landing on tbe Pomona Thursday night, consigned to W. L. Wells, who Is fsrmlog eight miles from Peoria. The Leona will convey the hay from here. Thomas Day and family and P. A. Walton and wife start for Buck Greek next Tuesday, or Wednesday, with household goods and provisions sufficient to last until tbe roads are better. Mr. Day recently purchased the Wilson place on Buck Creek, and Mr. Walton last fall filed on a home Btead In the same vicinity. An unusually agreeable time was spent Tuesday at the meeting ot the Degree of Honor. In addition to in itiation and refreshments an excellent programme was rendered, consisting ot instrumental solo; recitation, A. H. Campbell; reading, Mrs F. G. Clark; recitation, Mrs. Edgar Jackson; read ing, Mrs. Jesse Spencer; vocal solo, Mrs. A. H. Campbell. "It doesn't look like you Corvallls ites took much pride in the appear ance ot your town," said a stranger, the other day, as he pointed to big pools of water standing along the edge ot the pavement on a principal block on Main street. He was one ot three moneyed Easterner sout West, looking for a location. "It you would drain that water off your principal street, it would look more like you bad some interest In your town," he continued. J. M. Porter received by express Thursday, eight silver spangled Ham burg chickens, six females and two males. They came from Dixie, Wash. Of these birds, three were first-prize winners last year at the Walla Walla poultry exhibit and ail are first-class fowls. The three Hamburgs purchas ed at the Portland exhibit for Mr. Portsr were first-class prize winners, and he therefore has the' foundation for seourlng the best yards ot silver spangled Hamburgs la the Northwest. meeting will be held over Sunday. The Lord s Supper will be commemoiatFd on Sunday morning. -i-Tce carload cf dried prunes from tbe works if the Corvallls Prune Processing Company, ie't for Mdwau kee, Wisconsin, en Thursday's freight It was an Immense car, ca'rylog - m tbe aggregate over 54,000 pounds, In eluding the weight of the boxes. In fruit, tbe aggregate weight was mora than 49,000 poucds, or nearly 25 tone. - - With a price already of 20 cents for next season's hop crop, bop yards are about the best property in the country. .Interest in tbe industry in hop centers is inteuee. Down at Bueoa Vista, according to tbe ac counts, they are offering as mucb as $50 per acre for rent cf ya'ds. A renter offered to pay 81,000 for the rent ot one small yard, and the own er refute i the figure, but accepted a subsequent offer of more than $1,100 cash rent for one ye ir's use of the yard. Four hundred and fifty three tax receipts bad been Issued at the sher iffs ofhVe tip to Wednesday evening as against 333 on tbe same dy last year. A noticeable feature of this year s payments la that nearly every body Is paying tbe whole tax. while last year a lare nurabrr paid but half, leaving the balance to be set tled io October. The Indications so far' are that nearly all are reaching for tbe tbree per cent rebate, and that tbe greater per cent cf them, will get It. A brother of G. H.Root, thewell known OACstudent, is a resident of Toklo. the capital of Japan. He is a teaober there In a Japanese commer cial school, having secured .the po sition after bis graduation from tbe University ot California in 1901. For a time be was engaged in a similar capacity in a sobool in one of the in terior towns of Japan, where be was tbe only foreign resident of the place. About a year ago. however, he was transferred to tbe Tokio institution, where be meets many Americans. He has a very high opinion of tbe Japan ese people. Nine Head for the Portland Market They Wanted no Early Morning ': Boat Ride. Nine head of Benton coun!y horses are to go at auction in the big sale of horses to be given by McCarthy & Son at Irvington Park Portland, on the ist, 2nd and 3rd inst. The sale is attracting the at tention of horsemen all over the Northwest. At a similar sale, last year,. 150 head o fast horses were sold at an average price of $300. I he Benton county horses .' that are to go under the hammer are from the stables of R. O. Kiger Among them are Silverlight and reek-a-boo, well known in this community. The bunch left for Portland on ; yesterday - morning's boat, and are to be sold on the 3rd. There was a high old time at the boat landing when the horses were taken on board. They had n'o predilection for a boat . ride, and were finally gotten aboard after a delay of two hours and at a vast expenditure of patience and effort. Even, alter that task-was complet ed, the troubles were not over. Ev ery time the boat creaked or other unaccustomed noise was heard there was a general stamping of feet and tightening of halter ropes. The climax was' reached when the boat whistled as she pulled out. There was a chorus of wild snorts and a noise of feet that indicated that evr ery horse was either standing on his head or trying to turn a back somersault. Above the 'din was heard the voice of Reubsn, com manding the peace, but there was no peace. As the boat continued down stream the racket was still on, and it was surmised that Mr. Kiger and the boat's crew would have the time of their lives C before reaching their journey's end. The horses in Mr. Kiger's bunch are from four to eight years old, and are expected .to go at good figures. - MINING FOR GOLD Near Corvaliis Operratioss are Head of Oak Creek. COLDEST PLACE ON EARTH. FourteenRussian Exiles are There- Two are Criminals and the Others Innocent. A. J. Hall has been for several days a visitor at tbe home of Mr. and Mr?. Harlev Hall, near town. Jack's new story is tbai since be was la Oor vallls two or three weeks ago, be has cleared tbree acres ot land, cut 13 cords of wood, built a new ash hop per, been to church twice, licked the hired man, contributed four dollars to the support of the minister, broke a mule colt, and prayed five times for the success of tbe - Japs. He is a bandy man in the community. Tbe sophomore and freshmen at the college have chosen delegates to the s"tate oratorical association to meet at Forest Grove March 11th. The full representation of OAO at tbe meeting will be, seniors, John Witty and Mary Sutherland; juniors, Earl Wallace and Maud Hays; sopnomores Archie Bums and Maud Graves; freshmen, Belle Bonney and Glen Goodman. A. L. McFadden came over from Lincoln county Thursday, and is to be in Portland today. His case in the circuit court there is expected to be heard within a short time after the 15th Inst. Mr. McFadden's lawyer Is Mr. Gleason, a well-known Portland attorney. The casej it will be remem bered, is one In which Mr. McFadden collected his claim off of oneTlllotson, and it so angered the latter that he seeks to transfix Mr. McFadden on a ) charge of forgery and fraud. In College Chapel next Friday night, Harry DeWindt, made famo us by an intrepid journey f romjRns sia through Siberia to Alaska is to deliver a lecture. On his trip which for daring aud hardships al most equals those of he ' -arctic: ex plorers, but three of the six men who started, lived to tell the story. The other three died before the journey's end was reached. The trip was made on sleds, and inclu ded visits to the far-famed Siberian mines to which Russian political suspects and criminals are banished for life. At Sredni-Kolymsk the coldest place in the world they visited the remotest political settlement in Siberia which Mr. DeWindt descri bes as "an'Arctic Inferno." Out of the fourteen exiles there, only two are criminals, the others being ab solutely innocent according to Mr. DeWindt. This little band of ex iles.suffers so greatly from the ex treme cold hunger and the madden ing silence that reigns all around, that they go insane or commit sui cide. ' 'This spot should be wiped off the face of the earth," is the speakers comment upon it. The journey from Sredni-Koly msk was continued in the face' of terrible dangers. In the days that followed, the reindeer died off leaving but two or three. The dogs too, died, went mad with the cold, or were seized, with hydrophobia. The travelers suffered agonies from the cold and were obliged to travel on and on, exhausted or no, until they found drift-wood with which a fire could be made to thaw out the food frozen as hard as a stone. They pushed on over 1200 miles with despair in their hearts and death almost staring them in . the face. 1 ne 100a tney ate wnen tood was obtainable and the foul huts of the natives in which they slept as de scribed by Mr. DeWindt seem in credible. -" The story of the terrible journey , his observations of Russian life and customs, and many facts of extreme interest at this time, will be told by Mr. DeWindt in his lecture in the chapel Friday night, when his sub ject will be. "Russia and the Si berian Mines." Reports of blasting operations often heard to the westward of eve nings nowadays are tokens that gold ruining -is in progress there. ; The scene is five miles west . of ' town, and on ' the head waters of Oak Creek. The investigations have been going on at intervals, for al most a year. 1 More development work is being done now, however, than at any time in the past. Sey mour Simpson and John Slater are among those who are pursuing the prospect. . What the promoters have in the way of gold bearing ore, is not known, save to those in terested. Old residenters in this section are . always incredulous of any proposition to take gold out- (of the Coast range hills. That fact causes the present operations from being regarded as likely to result in profitable or even paying returns. Mr. Simpson, however, has un bounded faith in the prospects, and expects the operation to yield profit able returns. ; He has had large ex perience in mining in the Black Hills. He claims that the deposit he and companions are working , is free milling ore, and that all the conditions are most favorable for working it most economically; Several assays have been made, of which the lowest is 88 cents, and the highest $4,50 per ton. The ore is not in a ledge,' but is a soft rock deposit, all the rock as far as investigations have proceeded carry ing the mineral. It is said to be a deposit very similar in appearance to that of the well known Treadwell mine in Alaska and of the. famous Homestake mine of the Black Hills. The ore is easily mined and can be worked at a very small cost, in case future operations make con tinued expenditure profitable. The ore carries in addition to the gold, a considerable per cent of silver. There have often been reports of small gold finds in the country to the westward. One of the Dutton brothers worked for ' several years on a lead beyond the Summit on the Little Elk, but nothing ever came as a result of his efforts. A few years ago there was consider able excitement in the same vicinity over reported discoveries, and most of the native population- from Elk City and eastward hurried to the scene, prepared to mine, . but like many an incident of the kind, it all came to naught and is remembered now only as a bright dream that never had it's fruition. So many instances of the kind .have happen- ed.that old residenters are skeptical of all propositions to mine gold in this locality. ilSBRTJARY INVENTORY SALE 'This month is cleaning $p month,; stock adjusting time cleaning the deck, for spring : business. ' There fore if you will find here that goods are lower in price, not because they have decreased in value, but because our policy will not permit carrying them ; over another . season. ' . . .' ' , Ladies' Jackets. Brussels Garpet $3 00 Ladies' Jackets $1 50 50c Per Yard. 4 00 Ladies Jackets 2 00 35c Cottage Carpet 25c yd. 5 00 Ladies Jackets 2 50 40c Win. Shades, 25c each. 7 50 Ladies' Jackets 3 75 '1-3 off on all small pieces 10 00 Ladies' Jackets 5 00 of Matting. Children's . 1-3 off on broken lines of . 5 00 & 6 00 Jackets 2 50' i Lace Curtains. 1-3 off on Ladies' Furs. 1-3 off on Wool Waists 1-3 off on Ladies Wrappers $1 25 Ladies Waists $1 05 1-3 off on Ladies Skirts. 2 00 Ladies Waists 1 35 Corsets in broken lines 50c 2 50 Ladies Waists 1 7.0 on the dollar. - , ' 3 00 Ladies Waists 2 00 A few pieces of 50c Dres? 1-3 off on Ice Wool Shawls Goods at 25c per yard. and Fascinators. . Values and the worth of materials not considered. It's only how quickly we can clean up and make room for the new spring fabrics. At S. L. KLINE'S, Regulator of Low Prices. - 1 I M -Mr IrV tf"l I To Show off at the 1905 Fair The Is Official Don't forget to try Alden's fresh tafiv and pinoche at Hall's, Remember Nolan & Callahan's Rem nant and Rummage sale will close Wed nesday evening Veb 23. E. Holgate ATTORNEY AT LAW JUSTICE OF THE FEACB . Stenography and typewritine done, Office in Burnett brick Corvaliis, Ore BENTON IS INVITED. IP YOU ARE LOOKING FOR SOME REAL, good bargains in stock, grain, fruit and poultry 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, T- t T . 1 T- . 3 T - - M K.eat JiiSiaxe, ljoan ana insurance. Philomath, Oregon. g W4 j Carbon, Platinum and Platino Portraiture EMERY'S ART t ' South Main St., Corvaliis, Ore. STUDIO ? The official invitation for Benton County to make an exhibit at the 1905 fair has been received from Henry E. Reed,- director of exploi tation. In it, Mr. Reed gives as surance . that any space desired will be assigned, either in the build ing with other counties, or that the county will be given space and al lowed permission to erect a build ing of its own. Assurance is also given that every effort will be made by the fair management to assist the county in any design it may have in making an exhibit, and that Hearty accord in all particulars will be certain., Of course, a large part of the ex hibit will have to be prepared this season. Grains, hops, many fruits and other agricultural products that do not mature until the autumn months, will have to be set aside this year or they will not be avail able for the opening of the Fair. For this reason, in order to get the best results, provisions will have to be made in the near future for prep aration and care of such products as must be saved from this year s cropping. Benton can, if she will, make an exhibit to startle the East ern visitors with its magnificence, but in order to do so there must be an early beginning, and a persis tent campaign. 1 Lost. Roll of music between Corvaliis and Plymouth chapel. Flase eeave lat Times office, - Wells, Windmills and Pumps. I am now prepared to do all kinds of well, windmill and pump work. See me before yon have your work done. Send orders to Simpson's Hardware store. A. N. Harlan. Are Ton Restless at Night.? And harassed by a bad cough? Use Bal 1 lard's Horehonnd Syrup, it will secure you sound sleep and effect a prompt and (radical cure. 25c, 50 and 1.00. Sold 1 T- a TIT ll O. A. C. ATHLETIC AND SCENIC VIEWS. Art Calendars, Sofa Pillow Covers, And other Photographic Novelties. .-' Reductions for February GROCERIES. ; Look our list over, see the reductions, and save money while it rains. D. G. Sugar, 100 pounds.. $5.65 A. &L. Rid. Oats, 22 pounds... 2,00 Padlock brand Peaches, 35e-cans, for............ .25 Palo Alto brand Peaches, 25e cans, for ....... . .20 Extra Standard corn, two eans. for. 25 Extra Standard tomatoes two 3-lb cans for.... -.25 Corned Beef, 20c cans, three for 50 Dried Beef, 20c cans, three for 50 Three cans fancy sardines in oil .25 One pound Seeded Eaisins in bulk .10 Two 1-pound packages Seeded Raisins .25 Four packages A. & L. Soda .25 Two pounds 15c Coffee .. .' ,25 Three pounds 20c " .50 Three pounds 40c " : 1.00 Six bars Silk soap 25 Seven bars Daisy soap ;. 25 Young America Full Cream Cheese 17J DISHES. One set decorated cups and saucers 50 One set decorated dinner plates 50 One set decorated soup plates..: 50 One set decorated breakfast plates '40 One set decorated pie plates : 40 . . When you see it in our ad. it's so. r. L. Miller, Corvaliis.