Vol. XVlII.-No. 1. CORVALLIS, OREGON; APRIL 19. 1905, isvm Bdito. . nd Prftprlutor We all Wear Shoes! Never befoi e have we received sh quantities PAUL JOHES'BODY FOUND and qualities in foot wear as Ibis SPRING Tans, Browns and Black ; -: - - Low Hirh and Medium cuts - Prices High, Medium and Low But in all grades the very lowest price , for the quality of the shoe. Our efforts ' will be great to increase our shoe sales ; Shoes for all Ladies, Misses, Children, Mens, Boys and Little . Gents. Don't f forget our Shoe Department. - THE BODY OWING TO ITS BE ING IMMERSED - IN ALCO- ; IIOL WAS WELIPRE ."" SERVED. Fine Light Sample Rooms.' i imfWmmm - Hotel Corvallis . Hammel, Prop. -v -.aft - jK Leading HoteVinOorvallis. Recently opened. ' New : j brick bnilding. Newly furnished, with modern con-' H veniences. Furnace Heat, Electric Lights, , Fire Es- Eg capes. ' Hot and cold water on everyfloor. Fine single; ffl rooms. Elegant suites. . Leading house in the Willam-: etteVfcky. ' - . ' . r Bates: j $1.00, $1.25 and $2.00 per day. mm Rubber Goods Millfn( Shoes, Etc. GreT Shoe "Szi: The Largest': Assort ment of Shoes ever offere on "special sale in Philo math, comprising the entire stock of Men's, "Women's and Children's Shoes, will be on sale during thomonlh of February, at . Y - ' J. E. Henkle's Gash Store. Each will be offered at reduced prices, This reduc- Liyu is maue ior casn oniy. mere are special prices , boys', children's We also call your on ivjDoer uooas men s, women rubber boots, rubber and oil coats, attention to our larce assortment 'which, are offered on epecial sale. J. E. HENKLE, Philomath, Or. Found in an Old French Cemetery on Which Buildings Had been; v"' .Erected Was Buried ia a V , it- t'eaden Coffirv-Sema ' v Facis From a-Mag -( - -, 1 , ''r aziae. Paris, Aptil 1 1 4 The -remarka ble search? which Ambassador Por ter has conducted for the body of Paul Jones has been crowned with success byjhe discovery of the body and its identification' today by the highest French, medical experts as unquestionably that ot the lamous American .Admiral who founded the American navy., ; ' . 'r -v Ambassador Porter, cabled to Washington tonight,; announcing the successful results - of bis long and difficult search : The body ia In a good tate of preservation, con sidering that' interment took place over 100 years aeo. v"! - -, The circumstances leading to tne final discovery of the body are par ticularly interesting. General For ter his conducted vthe search for the last five yearSj and when Con grass recently took no action upon the president a recommendation tor the expenses incident to the search, the ambassador continued the ex tensive labors at his own expense A large force of workmen has been engaged, eight and day, ' tunneling and crosErtunneliDg' the " old St, Louis cemetery - This constituted a huge operation, embracing near ly a block covered wilh buildings and requiring a svstem of subter ranean jnining. "'J - i Hundreds of wooden caskets were fourid, but .'not- until 'Wednesday were unearthed four leaden caskets ,wh;!phja, ye nrpmisa .oL containing tt;e Doay oi tne aamirai.- inree ot tfieoi- bora-.platesv designating the uame3 of tbe deceased., The fourth stowed superior solidity -of work- macsbip. , No plate was found on thie catket, and it is euppoeed it was removed, when another coffin w is sdper-imposed on it. The lead--en coffin was " opened in Jthe pres ence of General Porter, Colonel Bai ley Blanchard, second secretary of the Americau.ebaesy,: and Engin eer Weis, who has been directing the excavation. : The body was found to be 'well preserved, owing to its being im mersed in alcohol, it was wrap ped in a eheet with a packing . of straw and hay. ThoBe present were immediately, struck by the resemb lance of the head to that on the me dallions and bust of the admiral. As was anticipated, no uniform, decoration or sword was found.v as all such articles bad been accounted for after the burial. The coffin is shaped like a mummy coffin, which coffins were common at . that - peri- riod, widening from' the feet to the shoulders, with' round top fitting over the head. ' ; " " The coffin was taken to the med ical school, where Drs. Capitan and Padileau, the distinguiehed profes sora of the school of Anthropology, recognized authorities on euch in vestigations, were charged with caking a thorough examination for the purpose of identification. To facilitate this, the ambassador famished them with poitraits and medallions, two busts by Houdin acd authentic descriptions of the color of the admiral's hair and the height and measurement of his body. After the most minute ex amination the following facts were fully substantiated: . " - Length of body, five feet, seven irche; the admiral's height. Size ami shape of the head agree, with several peculiarities, identical with the head of the admiral. Hair, dark brown,, the same as the ad miral's, ia places slightly gray, in dicating a person of -hia age, 454 years. The hair is long, reaching below the shoulders, and is combed back aud gathered in a clasp at the back of the neck. The face is clean ehaveD, all corresponding exactly with the descriptions, portraits and busts of the admiral. The linen is in good condition. One article bears an. initial, either, "J" cr au inverted "P." The body was carefully packed.' The limbn were wrapped in tinfoil, presumably for eea transportation, as indicated in a letter 'ot the ad miral's nearest friend and a pall bearer at hia funeral.Colonel Black? den. who said: - ;.-., "HTi body was put in a leaden coffin, so that in case the - United States, which he had so essentially eerveu,' should claim his remains, they might he more easily remov ed.'-' Finding that all the-Internal or gans vrsre singularly well-preserved the doctors made an autopsy, which howed distinct tiroofs- of the dis ease from which the - admiral - is knovrui to .have died The identifi cation was pronounced complete In every particular, , Care has be.eji taken to keep the body jrn its present state of preser vation-. J t, will be placed in a hand some casket and deposited in the re ceiving - vault vof ;the American church, orthe Avenue de TAlma, until the ambassador can learn the opinion of the government concern- . . -" . r ing ice most appropriate means oi transporting it to the United Slates and giving v"a - fitting sep- ulcher to the body of the illustrious sailor whose place of burial had eo long remained a mystery. - Washington," April 14.' Ambas sad or Porter's dispatch announcing the finding of the body of John Paul Jones reached the Btate depart ment today.- It is probable that . a recommendation will be made to congre ss at its- next eession looking to Ambaseador" Porter's reimburee- ment., " ' . The remains ot John Paul Jones are to be brought here and to be in terred in the national cemetery at ArliLgton, and jt is likely that the transfer will be made the occasion of a i interesting demonstration It is probable that Secretary Mor ton will send a battle ship to France to briag the body .home. .- ....- - Tom' WatsouTs Magazines When John Paul JoBes-? old, broken, and poorlay dying ia Paris,- our high HAN PATTERSON HER THIRD TRIAL" FOR THE MURDER OF YOUNG BE- -GINS TODAY. Attends Church in the Tombs- Showgirl io Good. Spirits- . Pawnbroker Unable , to y - Identify Mao Who ,T Bought Pistol. New 'York, April 16.--With her third trial on the charge of. murd ering Caesar Young, the bookmak er, set for tomorrow. Nan Patterson today attended religious services in the Tombs, for the first time, it is eaid, since he was placed in the prison following ,. the tragedy in June last. When her sister, Mrs. J. Morgan Smith, who is in the Tombs under indictment charging conspiracy to extort money from Young, the Patterson girl went to the Catholic chapel and listened to the sermon preaohed by Rev. Fath er Luke Evers. - To- friends who saw. her today Nan Patterson said she was in ex cellent spirits, and ' was anxious that the trial should go on tomor row without further . delay. . The first trial of the girl was suspended after several days had been consum ed in securing a jury, and after the taking of testimony had progressed to a critical point one of the jury men became ill, the attack " becom ing so serious as to necessitate the declaration-of a mistrial. , The sec ond trial went to a conclusion, but resulted in a disagreement of the aha third trial was set ior Mon day, April 10, but was postponed until tomorrow at -the request of the district attorney, who desired to have the matter of - the extradi tion of the - J. MoTgan Smiths from toncvJ minister to rancej,.uouver-4X!iDcInnati settled before the hear- neur Morris, sat feasting with, ftris- iner should proceed. " . ' : : toorfijornpany, and that high. . It is Baid'that Hymtm Stern, the tQa'JS .mete; Jaued tQ mart .tne pawnbroker from whom it . is alleg- dress yesterday afternoon before the mothers meeting, held in the as sembly ball of the Holladay school, under the auspices of the Home -Training Association,. There were over 100 mothers present. In his talk Governor Chamber lain expressed his deep interest in the objects of the association, and said he agreed with President Roosevelt in that he did not believe in race suicide. He was - glad to contribute to the subject from his own experience. The governor.' commended the movements that bring parent and teacher into clos- er relationship and better under standing. Governor Chamberlain eaid in part: "We all have differeatr methods " of managing our children, and we get information by interchange of laeas. - -1 o my mina tnere are sev-. eral things necessary, in the man- agemegtjrf children. . We should reeol v -Srtbat a child un derstands mere than he is usually I given credit for, and when a child is treated unfairly by a parent it does not forget it. An injustice is never forgotten. We should be careful, and be ourselves just what we want our children to be. A, " parent should7 not fall below the ; standard required of ' the child; Truth should be cultivated. Business men encounter untruth in ' their affairs. The principle of truthfulness should be ground into chances might have-done even more. tbao Nelson on the sea. - His grave was made inanobEcure churchyard, his resting place Ineg lected and forgotten, covered with accumulated deposits, and built ov? er with houses. . .i-- Those who seek the "bones are sinkiBg bolesfeventeen feet deep, in the search. ; , Of course they will find the body of Commodore Jones. That is what they are hunting for.- : Therefore, they will find it. " -:;"r:-v But whether the dust they bring back to America will be that of our Paul JoneB no mortal will ever know. ' ; ' '.-'r , In his diary, Gouverneur Morris relates: a"A message from Paul Jones that he is dying.. " "I go thither aud make his will, ' Ssnd for a notary, and leave him struggling with his enemy." : . " The American minister to France left Paul Jones struggling with death! ; - .- '; Left him alone with a French no tary, and went away. To do what? To "dine with Lord Gower and Lady Sutherland!" i;. The American minister knew tljfif'Paul Joces was dying, for' he sa;s so. ; ' After tne dinner with the ling lish Lord and Lady, does the Amer ican minister hasten . back to the bedside of the fellow countryman, whom he had left "struggling with his enemy? . By no means, He goes to the Louvre to look at the paintings; and .then takes- Tal- Jones' lodging. "But he is dead not yet cold And this i3 ill that Gouverneur Morris's diary records of Paul Jones' death, until the indignation aroused in America by his shock ing lack of attention to the dying hero had thrown him upon the de fensive. . . Who paid the burial expenses of Paul Jones? A Frenchman claims that he did Morris, in his diary, certainly seeks to make the impression that he paid them. out of -Jones' estate. The hero left sufficient property for the purpose, as can easily be shown. Further than that we- are left in.doubt . But Morria.was requested to au continued on page four. was killed was bought has been un able to identity, smith, and a seri ous question has arisen at the dis trict attorney's othce as to whether the Smiths will be called as witnes ses at the forthcoming trial. Reno, Nevi, April 14. Hundreds of people flocked into Reno on the Virginia and- lruckee train tonight, fleeing from the sickness now so prevalent at Tpnopah. Every train for a week has been crowded, and, strange as it may seem, the ingoing trains have been .filled also. The people of the town have taken the matter in band, . and - tomorrow morning the Nevada State Journal, of this place, will send in a physi cian, Dr. Heppner, late of the Unit ed -States army, who f has been through a number, of plagues. ; He goes to find the true conditions in the camp, and will submit a. report soon after his arrival there , Uov- ernor Sparka tomorrow will also ap point a special medical commission and send the members into Tono- pah. Theee men will co-operate with the pbysicians ot tne camp and at once begin a campaign to check the disease that is mowing down people at the rate cf from five to 25 each day. Yesterday 12 bodies were stretch ed out on slabs in the onlv under taking establisnment in the camp An equal number at least, were dead around the town. The disease strikes without warning, the healthy being the most susceptible, and ia j from 12 to 24 hours are dead, the bodies blackened by the mysterious poison that saps their lives away. A quarantine has not been de clared as yet, but probably will be witnin the next. 24 hours. . Every train into Reno for the past week has been bringing all the way from iOO to 250 people, bound anywhere to escape the ravages of a dread disease or plague that has fastened itself upon the great min ing camp. Some are terror-stricken Others frightened, but all are Intent on the one object to get to a coun try where people are not stricken without warning and die in , a day. They. all bring storits oi death. With it all, the people of Tono pah held a mass meeting. In less than an hour $2,000, was raised, and now tba fight to stamp out tha dread malady, whatever it is, is in progress. . ' ' the child i' Home should J be made pleasant! , ; The r home :: should be . made the most attfgfitive place to -the child in the wijrpt,; The boy 6hou'd be permitted'- to bring his wagon and drum into the house and make all the noise he sees fit. In my t9rm as district attorney I found " ; many boy s. had become criminala' by being driven from" their homes, ': and through lack of pleasant home . surroundings. I have talkedi with - boys between 10. and 20 arrested, and found their homes were cot at-V, tractive, though their 'fathers and ' mothers were good people. I repeat - that home should be made attrac tive, and that the parent should be' i a companion 01 tne cnna. nuareu should not be repelled by too mcch austerenessvi w ; :s A5i together in all things. I believe in the public schools. I have 6ent mv children to them. They represent . our democratic institutions, which -does not place the rich man's son above those of the poor, but all are ' equal and have the same apportun- lties. "' . .. " For Sale, Good milch cows. m29-im I'1 WH.Tsh, navale. Ore Broke into His House. S. LeQainn of Cavendish. Vt., was robbed of his customary health by inva sion ot chronic constipation, wnen JJr, King's New Life Fills broke into hia house, his trouble was arrested and now : he's entirely cured. They're guaranteed to cure. 25c at Allen & Woodward' drug store. . Dry Fir Wood At $3.50 per cord. Orders solicited for grub oak for summer delivery. . - Frank Francis co, Corvallis. Saves Two From Death. . "Our little daughter had an almost fa tal attack of whooping cough and bron chitis," writes Mrs. W. Haviland, of Armonk, N. Y., "but, when all other remedies failed, we saved ber life with Dr. King's New Discovery. Our niece, who had consumption . in an advanced stage, also used this wonderful medicine and today she is perfectly well." Des perate throat'and lung diseases yield to Dr. King's New Discovery as to no other medicine on earth. Infallible for coughs and colda. 50c and 1.00 bottles guar anteed by' Allen & Woodward. Trial bottles free. '.-;,.-. Blocks for piers at Whitney's, ; - r-. y ; "Short" on Peruna but "Long" on prunes. Italian prunes, 50-pound boxes, $1.50. . L- Miller. ,ire you going to build? about concrete blocks. ' rock or brick. SseWhitney e than ' For Sale. - Cigar clippings of our own roanufact-m ure, - Hose & Son. 11125 tf SalemOr., April 15.-Gov Georga E. Chamberlain delivered . an . ad- CoHege View Poultry Farm. Barred Plymouth Rocks. Brown Leg ' horns. Egs, 1 per 15 at yards. . My BavrMl Rock hens are of the best laying strsia on Coit: I have added cockerels from Parks world's best egg strain. jCrown Leghorns as good 3 t&e best. " :.. . - " s , V ' S. II. Moore. Ind. phone 555. " ,,; ' . Corvallis, s.