LOCAL LORE. NEWS OF VICINITY COR V ALUS AND TOLD IN BRIEF. T ie C jtntngs and Goings of People Social Gossip. Personal Men- isou aiu! Other LetDs 61 Public Iiuerest. ' p. Y. t,nev was a Sunday iter with friend i in Albany. vis- Mi-s Melveii i gin was the o-nr-t Sunday of friends in Silem. to Thomas Poole of Junction City spent Sunday ai the Newton home. Saui Eddy was an over-Sunday guest of friends iu Albany. Clarence Whiteside . spent Sun day witb friends in Salem, return ing Monday morning.-.- Miss McDevitt of Dallas visited her brother Tiavis iu this city from Friday until Sunday. Mrs. John Spangler left Sunday for a month's vi;i- with her daugh ter at Oregon City. The Firemen gave a smoker last night in their hall. Smoke, music, cards and luncrfwere fea tures of entertainment. Mrs. Charles Nichols of Al bany was the guest over Sunday of Misses Ella and lhia Johnson. Invitations are out for the mar riage on March ioth of Miss Bessie Ray and Delbert J. Strong -. Prof. McKellips . resumed charge of his classes Monday, after an absence of nearly three weeks After an absence ,Of three months Mrs. A. L. Knisely is ex nected to return from the .bast m about two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Thayer of Astoria arrived in this city Sunday leaving the next evening for the Gellatly farm near Philomath. Mrs. Clay Starr of. Ballston, and her sister. Mrs. Smith of Port land are guests of Mr. and Mrs Will Schmidt, at the big prune or chard. Joe McFadden, formerly with the Pioneer bakery in this city, is in town for a tew days. Mr. Mc Fadden has not yet located in bust ness. Prof. Raymond's regular Fri day night party will occur Thurs 1 day evening of this week. The date has been changed . on account of the state oratorical contest. Eugene Guard: A press dis patch from Butte, Montana, recent ly stated that FredR D. Herbold. a Eugene boy, who has been in the drug business there for several years, but recently sold out, would coach the- O A. C. football team this year. In denial of this the fv-w:;ig message was received today: Butte, Mont., March 3, 1906. Guard, Eugene. Or. In regard to coaching Corvallis, statement wrong. Please correct. HERBOI.D. About 22 members of the local lodge of United Artisans drove to Wells Saturday night and partici pated in the meeting held there that evening. The principal object of the affair was the voting to se sure a delegate to attend the grand lodge of the order that is shortly to " meet in Portland. The Wells peo ple very kindly cast their votes - with the Corvallis contingent, and Harry Cronise was selected as the delegate. The trip to Wells was one of great pleasure for, a;l, "and he local ' people are ' loud in their praises of the treatment accorded them, especial!' iu the supper served. Sunday's Westside passenger had an accident that brought it to Coiiailis two hours behind time. Wheii some distance north of Inde pendence the shaft of the drive wheels on one side of the locomo tive broke. The shaft had to be taken off and the drivers on the .. other side of the engine were left to do all the work in brineine the tratn the rest of the way to Corval-' lis. A freight locomotive Dulled the train but of Corvallis until it met a special engine sent out of Portland to lake the place of the disabled locomotive. Joe Kehoe,! who used to be a well known en gineer on the Eastside away back in the Seventies, was engineer of the engine that had the accident. He and William Sally, another old timer on the Eastside division make the Portland-Corvallis run on alter nate days. For Sale. Farm and city property. S. L- Henderson, v -Corvallis, Or. If you expect to buy an incubat or :all at Blackledge's. Paul Schmidt,, of Albany, was in t)wn Monday. Mrp. J. M Cameron and daugh ter left Monday for a few days visit in Portland. The i.ew Independent T le phone dite-Morie? will btdeiivered to the central c-ffioe Thursday evening. meeting ct the citizens League ojcurs this evening at 7:30. There wi 1 be an ebcion "of cm :ers and a review of the past year. All members are urged to be preeeut. Wade Mline has eold out in PoitUnd and is returning to Al-ea ti reside. Ha and Mrs. Milone imssed through town ttdayen route ti) t ke charge of the etore in the valley. The statement is that M. Pat terson, who foroueily figured in a al f ir the property, has finally become part owner of toe Cirvalhs saw mill. It ia unders'ood that a part al payment baa been made, and mat the papers are in prepara tion for signature. Hon. J. HobVard Bryant, of Albany, bas been iu town eioceyea- tday. An organization bas been formed for conducting a campaiga in behalf of local option in Lion county, and Mr. Bryant baa been elected president. H was in Cor vallis, studying the enect of. the lo cal option law. While in town be interviewed both optiomsts and an-ti-optioniiiti?.' A vigorous campaign is to be waged in Linn county by the organization - to preV'ebt the adoptio nof the Jayne bill which the liquor dealers astoaiatlon bas proposed under the "Initiative, and also to put local option into effect in Linn county. - The law was only d f rated In that county two years ago by 4? votes. The general im uree-ioti is that thecoonty will go for dbtioh "bvri eocKP''niSTafi1y this -I be O. A. C. basket ball men admit. is-ered a secmd defeat to the Dtllas college men " fit basket ball D riday "night.- ibe game was play eS inhe vdollege" armWy , In the presence of ' 800 pfbple?, p-obably the lareest crowd ever' gathered at a basket-bill game in Oregon. A special train brought large: delegja ionsi f students arid others1 from Dillas and Monmouth.-' Interest wks at high tensiorr before-the game began, and it never - nagged until f.'m was called on the last half. With the finish of the struggle, a huge 'banner bearing the legend, "C 1 am pious'" q uick tv u n folded hi g b above the heads of everybody in the building and a it stretched away on a wire that suspended it,; the en thusiasm of : the 0. A. C.' students was of a s'renooua brand. The Dalian merr held the score -down to 9 for O A. C. and 7 for Dallas in ths firrt half. Fquently the score was tied until the arid die of the last hull when 0. A. C pulled into good lead, closing the game with t score of 17 to 11. Up 10 the pres f-nt the O: A. C. men have not been defeated this season. The wonder is though, what will they get against the Chtcagoans Thursday night TOOZE MEN ARE GONFIDENT. Said to Have a Strong Lead in South ern Oregon Counties, Woodburn, Or., Feb. 27. Sun day Oregonian, March 4, '06: Wal ter L. Tooze, candidate for congress in this district, has returned home from a visit in Southern Oregon where he rec ived many assurances of support. . He is etroDgly in the lead in Southern Oregon, while the Coast counties are4yerwBel ml ily for him. .,Xi.,H. Bingham, of Lane Co whi was the most prominent cougressioual candidate in the south has wi hdrawn from' the race, and is a candidate for state senator. The Hawley forces in this county show plain evidences of dieintegra tion. "Mark Skiff, Marshal torn Cornelius and several others of Sa lem who were included in the Haw ley list, are supporting Tooze; while Thomas Kay and others, quoted as "united oh Hawley," declare, such a statement as unauthorized. The straw vote taken y at Albany and favoring Huston was doubtless tak- en among his friends by an avow- ed Huston man. Friends of Tooze assert that be is leading both Hus ton and Hawley in Linn county by long odds. ' The report that Tooze's own pre cinct would not support him is like tbe other reports. He carried Wood burn at tbe last election by a vote of 200 to 99, and this year the peo ple of Woodburn will stand by their candidate by a larger majority, while Marion county will doubtless roll up a good plurality for him on April 20. ' ' " ' ' : Voters all over the district are turning to the support of Tooze be cause he is fought by the Salem school land ring and those who have profited by questionable meth ods iu the procurement of our pub lic lands. A Etrong" point being generally advocated by the electors of the district in favor ot Tooze's .nomination for congress is his ie- cord and services for 2O years in tbe enunciation of th principles of sound republicanism, in marsed contrast to the well-known and ad mitted fact that neither Huston nor Hawley bas ever beeu actively iden tified wi h the republican parly un til they became candida'es for congress. Continued from page 1. the Standard group bossed thing, iu the Mutual. And, to all intents and purposes, they owned $125 00 03 000 in stocks which did not cast them one red cent. For they could vole it at elections and keep them selves in control, which was really all they wanted it anyway. How badly tbey need this stock s a carefully guarded secret, but there is no doubt but that some of the issues mean the practical con trol. But theee distinguished fi nanciers most now go oui into tbe markets and put up $125,ooo,ooo, which is why they are bowlicg dis mally and declaring that tbe coon- try is going to ruin. There is little or no excitement over the fact that the $3oo,ooo,ooo in securities mutt be dumped on the market. The tact that the com panies have five years to dispose of their holdings is expected to pre vent any slump in the market. Av eraging the stocks' abd bonds at' 7$, there are. in rqund figures,. 4,000, poo that the compapit-s'V'must get rid of. A good day 's business on the Stock Exchange is l.ooo.ooO shares, so this only means a buBine'ssof fbur full days, scattered over five years. Financiers who have become rich through life informce", wealth de clare the outlook is 'dismaT, and that policy; holders will soon .".complain when they, fiodlbdr mVaey is earn ing' only, a. Vrifle,w waeb ooofioeJ, practically, to steady, conservative real eetate and aiortgase ' iovest- mentsr '." '. ' Chicago, March 4.--Two thous and socialists, some of them of the mo?t radical stsmp, held two meet ings today abd pr- ctically pledged armed revoluiion and their lives to the workingmen's causf, if Hay wood, Moyer and Pettrbone, the of cers of the Western Federation of "M ners, should be railroaded to tbe gallows by the greedy- capitalists, who charged them with the murder of Steunenberg." ' ( There were speakers whu urged a revolution by means of the ballot and. others who advised tbe taking up of arms to avenge the: dettb of tbe accused men if they should be conyic'.ed and bung. Those who admonished the ways of pt ace to ac complish their ends were beard in silence. Those who preached for violence and the resort to arms were wildly, cbee-ei again and again. The tem per of both meetings' plainly was in favor of radical action: One of the speakers improvised a P'vtical platfom and when it was r-cited . there was great appUuee a-'i-i shouts of "Gool."- H-reris the w-y the lines read : . "Will. Moyec and Haywood die? I bey die ' H re's our crj: IU -re are twenty million working- misn who'll know the reason why." Hay mour Stead man, a well-known lawyer and a leader of the socialists of Chicago, warned the audience at one meeting that there is a gigantic plot among the capitilists of the country to bring about ihs disfran chisement of the workingmen. He at tha same time said if Moyer and Haywood should be hung and the plot for disfranchisement should show signs of development, this country would witness tbe bloodi est and worsUrevolution'the world bas ever seen. Mrs. Lilliin M. Forberg, an or ganizer of the Industrial Workers of tbe World, denounced the police men, mayor uanne, aown 10 me bluecoated men who patrol the streets of Chicago, she said, were the instruments of and co-workers with the capitalistic class of the nation.- '.--(-.-; Notice to Creditors. Notice la hereby given to all concerned that the undersigned has been duly appointed the executor of the last will and the estate of Har riett Hill, deceased, by the oountv . nourt of tha state of Oregon for Benton county, and has duly q allfied for the duties ot said trust. All per sons having claims against the deceased, or her estate, are required to present the same duly venueu w uie unaersignea at m9 residence Id Philomath, Benton county, Oregon, within siz uiuutuH irom wis aaie. i,. w. HILL. Executor ot the last will and estate ot Harriett mil, deceased. ; . Dated Feb, S, 1908. ' . . ' CHOLERA INFANTUM. Child Not Expected to Ijive from One Hour to Another, but Cured foy : uoamueriain's tiolic, Cholera ana Diarrhoea Remedy. ' . Euth, the little daughter of E, N. Dewev of Agnewvilie, Va was seriously ill '-of cnoiera lniantum last summer. - "We gave her up and did not expect her to live from one hour to another," he says.. "I happened io uiniH 01 namDerjain sJolic, (Jliolera and Diarrhoea Kemedy and got a bottle of it from the store. In five hours I saw a change for the better. We kept on giving it and before she had taken the half of one smaH bottle she was well." This remedy is for sale by Graham & Wortham. . - I J. G. MORRIS " SUCCESSOR TO A. M. AUSTIN I SUCCESSOR TO j Practical Shoer & General Blacksmith j I Prices for general shoe- s -Careful attention given 5 j ing. Setting 25c a shoe, j knee hitting, interfering, I New shoes $1.50 a horse, f lameness. Treatment f 1 No 6 and over $2. without extra charge. J ALL WORK FIRST CLASS. j-ii- Remember Hedge is Here We have just received 45 lable Iron Beds, all prices, - an t it... j vu up. wiic uiuusana yarus Matting, just in. New wall Paper just received. Lower than any house in Benton county The new- folding Go-Cartsjare here. '"" "-" '"' : JAP-A-LAC We dont have time to change our ads every week, but r: ' we sell goods tq beat the.band. ... , Dont buy until you see our large stock of House Furnish ing Goods Tooms fuU, , Acme Washer. ., Remember "it . : Blackledge QKall; Sa Wdrds -Ever Spoke The! Saddest are these, That r Shoe Hurts my Corn. 5 If youiad been -wfearig'a Packard ' foot -form shoe, that corn would not have been there to hurt , Packard Shoes, no corns. A, K: RUS S Corvallis, - " "! " : " Oregon. Corvallis' only exclusive Mens Furnishing Store Moses Sure Pop You will always- find us up and coming r i and our prices reasonable. .- .. FOR Boots and shoes for meifwpmen and children, hats. ' capSj underwear, everyday and Sunday shirts , ..j ladies skirts, mens and boys suits' in fact ' .things to" numerous to mention, ALSO A fine line of groceries, crockery and everything that is needed in a grocery department, LOOK OUT For Moses Bros auick deliverv wason. Listen for ihe L bell and you will find . B. The f: .C .,- We are not inclined to spend much time in writing advertisements we prefer to let our goods and customers speak for themselves. . . -, 1 .t . i t ...... " OUR TRADE IS GROWING FAST. : WE WANT. YOUR TRADE. . 1 r WILL ASSURE SATISFACTION - . " i , . I A. M. AUSTIN I Mai from P j f is Here there is something doing fiorriitig, Grocer Brothers BANKING. The First National Bink of Corval lis, Oregon, transacts a general conservative banking business. Loans money on approved secu rity . Drafts bought and sold and money transferredto the principal cities of the Unitad States, Eu rope and foreign countries DR. E. E. JACKSON .. Veterinary Surgeon Office Winegar & Snows Barn Office Phone Intl 328 " Bell 441 Resident " Ind 389 E. E. WILSUN, A TTORNEY Al LAW. H. S. PERNOT, Physician & Surgeon Office over poetoffice. Reeidesce Cor. Fifth and Jefferson streets. Honrs 10 to 12 a. m., 1 to 4 p. m. Order may be eft at Graham & V ham'- drug store. J FRED FATES ATTORKt. 1-ATrLAW. First Nat'l Bank Building, Only Set Abstract Books la Benton County B. A. CATHEY ' Thysiciaj &jStogbon Office, room 14, Bank Bldg. Hourii lO to 12 and a to 4. Phone, office 83. .-, ; ResldSDca35U Corvallis, Oregon. E. R. Bryson, Mtornev-Ai-Law, G. R. FARRA, Physician & , Surgeon, OfBce a i -sr.iirii A i ;-.t 3 -ijfe idence oa txt zi-.nc :' vlilmi Seven tint. tiii4 i C. H. Newth, .... Physician and Surgeon .... Philomath, Oregon. fJeu7 J'me. ard for f. V EA Taking effect January i, 19O6, the new time card of the C. & E. will be issued, changing the times of trains between Albany and Corvallis as follows: Leavs Albany for Corvallis : 8:00 "ai m. 12:45 p. m. and 7.35 p. m. . ,' Leave Corvallis for Albany: ,6:30 a; m. 11:30 a. m. and 5:00 p. m. . Sunday Trains: Leave Albany for Coavallis at 7:3s p. m . Leave Corvallis for Albany at 6:30 a. m. The afternoon tram leaving Albany at 2:40 p m. will be discontinued. WILLAMETTE VALLEY Banking Company, Cohvallls, Oregon. Responsibility, $100,000 . Deals in Foreign and Domestic 'Exchange. Bays County, City end School . ' ' : Warrants. Principal Correspondents. SAN FBANCISCO PORTLAND : SEATTLE ,. TAOOMA The Bank o California - - NEW YORK Messrs. J. t. Morgan A Co. CHICAGO National Bank of The Kepub . llo.i LONDON, ENG. N SI Rothschilds & Sons CANADA. OnlceMfe ( Canada " Summons. In the Circuit Court of the State ot Oregon for Benton County. V Myrtle BensCn, Plaintiff.i versus Johk T. BensoK, Deft. ) To John D. Benson, the above named defend ant: In the name of the State of Oregon, you are hereby summoned and required to appear' and answer tbe complaint of the pUlntin In the above entitled suit in the above entitled court, now on file in the ollice of the clerk of said court on or before the last day of the time prescribed in theorder f- r publication of this summons made by the cuuuty judge of Benton county, state of Oregon which order is hereinafter re ferred to to-wit, March 23d. 1906, and you are hereby notified that If you fall so to appear and answer the said complaint as herein required, for want thereof tbe plaintiff will apply to the above entitled court for the relief demanded in her said complaint, namely, for a decree of divorce from the said defendant forever "lssolv lng the marriage contract existing between the plaintiff and said -defendant, and for such other further and different rule, order or relief, as to the court may seem proper. This summons is published in the Corvallis Time's once a week for six successive nd con secutive weeks,- Beginning with the Issue of February 9, 1906., and ending with the Issue of March S2S, 1966, nnder and iu pursuance of the directions contained In an order made by the Hon. Vlrgll E. Watters, county judge of Benton county, Oregon,"! being the county where the above entitled suit is pending in the above entitled- circuit court; dated February 8, 1906. Date ot first pubUoation hereof is 1-ebruary 1906 E.E.WILSON, .' . Plaintiffs Attorney.