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About The Corvallis times. (Corvallis, Or.) 1888-1909 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 14, 1906)
Fall Styles "We now have on display all the new Fall Styles . of Mens Clothing in Worsteds, Cheviots Checks and Shadow Plaids at popuar prices $J0 to $25 conaitKt im a im Mum V MICHAELS-STERN) FINE CLOTH I NO tteHii. rt c'" , w Mxmi.V ' The "Palmer Garment" CloaksSkirtsRaincoats For Women, Misses and Children 1 906 Fall and Winter 907 The Fall Season is riuht at band and il jou have been weigh ing the niei its of different lines the time of decision U now. We will show you the ''Palmer Garment" line the most stylish garment you can find We are not nly showing the beet wo kmansiiip and ment art' u: lied. We Ask ow'iocali -on us whether th pleasure to show THE "PALMER GARMENT" R L, MILLER Sole CLOAK S S U FOR. WELL DRESSED WOMEN. For a Fine Line Guns, Fishing Tackle and Base Ball Goods go GUN HODES- We carry the Famous Bristol Fishing Rods. I MICHAELS-STERN f NG CLOTHING. llCHJin TCTM A CO..' S. L. KLINE The Peoples Store. best styles hut in addition, the qua.ity of the "Palmer Gar you buy ir riot, it will give Corvalis, Or. Agent. ITS S K l R ' to LOCAL LOBE. For advertisements in this column the rate " of 15 cents per line will be charged. Fred Herbold and Miss Minnie Pope were recently married at Hailey, Idaho. They will locate at Sanders, Mon. ; The Commercial Club of Eu gene is to have a class tn Doxing the coming winter and W. L. Hay- ward is to be the instructor. M. E. church South: Sabbath school at 10 a.m.' The regular services at n a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Subject of evening sermon, "The Justified Life." - United Evangelical church: C. T. Hurd, pastor. Regular services. Subjects, morning, "The Best Book and why I love it.' ' Ev- ening, " i ne Beauty 01 me jora. Notice. No school books wil be bought or exchanged during the first three days of school. All par ties having books to exchange must bring them in before the 17th, and get credit memorandum tor tnetu. C. A. Gerhard. A twin ear of corn was ex- hibited on the street yesterday by A. R. Locke, who grew it. Both ears are perfect and are joined to a single stem. Both are in the same husk, and as growth proceeded the husk burst' exposing the grains. The corn is well developed, and the sample a curiosity. It is on ex hibition at Ambler & Watters. Don Morrison, who as a mem ber of the Albany College track and football team many times ap peared on OAC field in athletic contests, was buried yesterday in Portland, He was a brother of Mrs. W. A. Bates of this city, and she went to Portland to attend the funeral. The young man has been ailing for two or three years. He was several times operated on in Portland hospitals. It is stated that his malady resulted from some injury sustained in a football game. The short wheat crops in Eastern Oregon are likely to dimin ish the attendance of students from that section at OAC this year, is the opinion of Harold Wilkins, who re turned Wednesday frem a trip be yond the Ca?cades. Crops in Sher man, Gilliam and Wheeler, are scarcely half the usual yield and in making inquiries, he learned that several former students will not re turn on that account. In the sec tion he visred. he says there is a general complaint with reference to the cri-p shortage. - His friends about town find it hard to explain, but it is a tact that envelopes that usually enclose wed ding cards are being received with out the cards inside. Other of his friends sre receiving the same en elopes, addressed by the same hand containing the wedding cards of Charles L. Johnsrn,-of the mathe matical department at the college. The only explanation so far ad vanced for the fact that some of his friends are getting tards and en velopes and some only envelopes, is that Charles is so excited by his new estate that great and uncon trollable forgetfolness sometimes possesses him. In Portland Saturday was solemnized the marriage of Charles L. Johnson to Miss Margaret Mac kenzie. The wedding was a very quiet affair, only relatives being preseni. It occurred at the home of John MacKeczie, the bride's father. The groom is second in command in the mathematical de partment at OAC, and oue of the most popular members of the facul ty. The bride . was formerly a student at the college, and is the sister of James and Donald MacKeu zie, both ot whom were formerly employed at Horning s grocery es tablishment in this city. Mr. and Mrs. Johnson are expected in Cor vallis Sunday. A new residence built this summer is rapidlv Hear ing completion, and will be their home within a short time. Engineer Habersham has gone to Yaquina to make the survey for the extension of the C. & E. to Newport. It is supposed to be the plan of the company to make the survey now and later on, perhaps in the winter, to begin building op erations. By that time it is believ ed men will be mote available and that the work- can be rjrosecuted more economically. It is believed to be certain that the same com pany will enter upon the extension of the C. & E. across the mountains in the early, spring, and that it will bethe plan to get the Newport ex tension out of the W8y before the cascade ; project ; is ; begun. -. Mr. Hammond and his general manag er, George McCloud, together with many other assistants and officials are all in Portland now, and, ac cording to the times informant, are the busiest men in that busy town. . CAUGHT IN THE ACT. How a Deputy Game Warden Surprised a Luckless Pheasant Shooter. This is what happened to one of the Benton county game wardens. There are five of them altogether, and which it was is not to be told. He was out looking for lawbreak ers. JL bough hunters don t per- haps know it, these sleuths are afield nearly all the time, listening for the reports of shotguns and watching for the smoke from the pheasant shooter's weapon. One was thus engaged the other day. He heard a shot. He stow ed his bicycle hastily in a fence cor ner and slipped noiselessly away in the direction of the report. By and by he discerned the law-break ing hunter. He crawled along the fence, then through a patch of low brush. A bird suddenly rose ap parently from the grain, and the hunter again fired.. With renewed excitement over the certainty that there was a victim for the Justice of the Peace, the warden resumed his crawling. After a full hour of hard pursuit he suddenly appeared directly in front of the hunter. It was done so suddenly and dramat ically that it was almost an appari Jtion. And there in the hand of the' guilty hunter was the bird, mute evidence of the slaughter. But, it wasn t a pheasant, nor any other game bird. "It was a nasty, stink ing timber hawk," meekly confess ed the warden to his wife, later. I was looking for where Smith lives; can you tell me the way there?" the warden said to the sup posed hunter, and by that token he fooled the farmer who doesn' t know yet how and why he was pursued. MANY WORMLESS APPLES. Oldtime Fruit This Year for Everybody The Spray Pump and the Sprayers. With other geod things that are happening to Willamett? valley this year, either by dispensation of Divine Providence or a republican congress, is the welcome fact of red apples that are wormless. The con dition is true, not only of one or chard, as in the case of George Armstrong, but of many. ' There will be mote good apples in the Willamette valley this season than there has been in ten years, said Robert Johnson, manager of the big prune ot chard, . this morning. ' In our orchard scarcely a wormy apple is to be found; the spraying has been so efficacious that it ought to be an object lesson to our or chardists to persist in application of the cura ive next season." Wherever the inquiry has been prosecuted, the answer is that the orcnaras tnat were sprayed, are purged of worms. The fruit is fresh and vigorous like it used to be in the old pioneer days when ev ery apple was as fair to look upon as the olush of an Oregon maiden. It means that more apples will be consumed because surrounding: them will be less of association of worms, bugs and creepy things. It means that the man of the house arriving late at night, can, in the darkness, reach into the apple box without danger of seizing a serpent or swallowing a forked tongued boa constrictor. It means that spraying is as fatal to codlin moth as Mr. Heney is to land exploiters. God bless the spray, the spray pumps and the sprayers. CLOTHES CLEANED and pressed at lowest prices one door., souta of mar ble shop on Main street. ' Galveston's Saa Wall. , makes life now as safe in that city as on the higher uplands. E W Goodloe, who resides on Dutton S., in Waco, Tex., ii--ils no sea wall for safety. He writes: I hdve used Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption the past five years and it keeps me well and safe. Before that time I had a caugh which for years bad been growing worse. Now it's gone." Cures chronic Coughs, La Grippe, Croup Whooping Cough and prevents Pneumo nia. Pleasant to take. Every bottle guaranteed at Allen & Woodward's drug store. Price 50c and 1.00 Trial bottle free. Economy fruit jars at Thatcher & Johnson's.' Hop Growers One hundred " dollars will buy a Franklin Hop Baler. For sale at Fanklin Iron Works, Corvallis, Ore. . A Mystery Solved. "How to keep off periodic attacks of bilhousness and habitual constipation was a mystery that Dr King's New Life Pills solved for me," writes John N Pleas ant, of Magnolia, Ind, The only pills tnat are guaranteed to give penect satis faction to everybody or money refunded Only 25c at Allen & Woodward's drug NEW ADS TODAY. WANTED A good, steady single driv ing horee. Apply at Victor Moses store, Corvallis. FOR SALE Four-horse steam engine, good as new. Inquire at Times office. WANTED. WANTED. Oak wood. Inquire at Times office, phone or otherwise. WANTED. Eight or ten tons of hay and 100 bushels of oats. Inquire at Hus ton's hardware store, by phone or oth erwise. WANTED 50 cars of oats and wheat. Will ship from nearest K. K. station, get the prices of others, then get mine. Send sample of grain. I beep all kinds of farm seeds. Yours for business, L. L. Brooks, Corvallis, Or. FOR SALE. FOR SALE. All my agricultural Imple ments and machinery, horses, cattle, sheep and hogs, wagons, harnesses and other appliances and articles kept - fcbout a well stocked farm. Sale to be t public auction at my farm near Bell fouatein, Saturday September 29th at jQ o'clock sharp. William Rees. FOR SALE. A good farm team, 7 and 8 years old, well broke and true, well matched. Call on or address B. Ham ar, Nashville, Ore. WORMLESS APPLES. Clean and per fect. Write for them to George Arm strong, Corvallis, Oregon. FOR SALE. A good heating stove, cheap. Applv to Mrs. Fitzmaurice, 8th St. Wuestefeldt block. FOR SALE CHEAP. Cart and harness. Hollenberg & Cady. FOR SALE. A good buggy at a bar gain. Independent phone 238. Cor vallis. Mrs. Annette Jacobs. BUGGY FOR SALE. Splendid, nearly new top buggy, with pole. Also young Jersey-Holstein cow, fresh this fall. Inquire of Milton P . Morgan, Iude . pendent phone 3O0. FOR SALE OR TRADE. No 1 clean cheat seed. Phone 51 Mt. View line. Joseph Bryant. For Sale 1 offer my entire poultry out fit and businf sa consisting of 200 fowls, three incubators, one bone grinder, one grit grinder, one clover cutter. Cheap it taken foon, S. H. Moore, Corval lis, Ore. RFD 3. Ind. phone 713. FOR SALE Two good cows, both will be fiesh in September, one a register edjersey. One fine Hickney year ling colt. One pony cart; all at a bar gain if taken soon. J. A. Gilkey, Col lege Hill, Corvallis. FOR SALE. Six horse engine and 12 horse boiler in good repair, and cream ery fixtures, to be sold separately or as a whole, and at a baagain. lieorge lav lor. Independent phone 497. MISCELLANEOUS. FOR RENT CHEAP . A good seven room hou?e, 6 horse barn, hen-house, yard and garden. Six blocks from college. L. L. Brooke, phone 155. SEE THOSE New Axminster Columbia Brussels and All wool Art Squares at Hollenberg & Uady's. Good and Extra Good Boys School Suits at Nolan s. Portrait coupon offer closes Sat urday, 9th inst. Be sure and buy at least one dollar's worth this week and secure one of these valuable coupons at Kline's. TO ALL CONCERNED. I hereby give notice that I will not, hereafter, be responsible for any debts contracted by my wife or ' any one, other than myself. J K Berry. The End of the World of troubles that robbed E H Wolfe ot Bear Grove, la, of all usefulness, came when he began taking Electric Bitters. He writes: "Two years ago Ridney trou ble caused me great suffering, which I would never have snrvivedhad I not tak en Flectric Bitters. They also cured me of General Debility." Sure cure for all Stomach. Liver and Kidney complaints, Blood diseases, Headache, Dizziness and Weakness- or bodily decline. Price 60c. Guaranteed by Allen & Woodward, drug, gists. Mr. J. Mon Foo, an experienced com pounder of Chinese medicines, successor to the late Hong- Wo Tone, of Albany, Oregon, is now prepared to furnish Chi nese medicine to all. . The undersigned recommends him ; and guarantees satis- iacuon. ,. r . . :. : Call or write him at N0. .117 West Sec ond Street, Albany, Oregon. , Jim Westfall.- Sunday Excursion j on the Corralis & Eastern Railroad .,. To Newport and Return. ' Sunday excursions will leave Albany at AO, Corvallis 8, Philomath 8:12, Wren fco, F-lodget 8:50, Summit 9:05, Nash lle 9:25. Eddyville 10, Morrison 10:21. suk Ciy 10:30, Toledo 10:55 a. m. Eueryjurjday durinD$ tb upayer , Fairj or Sbjn Season or 3-day tickets good going or re turning on bunday excursions trom att points. Fare for round trip: Albany, Corvallis, Philomath $1 5O ' Philomath to Chitwood I 00 Morrison to Storrs 75 Toledo, Mill 4 and Oysterville 50 Numerous attractions, including band ' concert, furf bathing, life saving drills, beating, fishing and gathering pretty water agats. B. A. CATHEY Physician & Surgeon Office, room 14, BanK Bids'. Hottrai 10 to 1a mad a to 4. Phone, office 83. Residence 351.. Corvallis, Oregon. DR. E. E. JACKSON Veterinarv Surgeon & Dentist Office lOli Main st Ind 204 ' Residence 1220 4th st Ind 389. J. FRED FATES ATTORMil-AT-LAW. Zierolf Building. . Only Set Abstract Books in Benton County G. R. FARRA, Physician & Surgeou, idaace 1 ! SeraatSi u. 3 n 1 : . 1 l 1 . a H. S. PERNOT, Physician & Surgeon Office over ncstoffice. Residanca no Fifth and Jefferson streets. Hours 10 tc 12 a. m., 1 to 4 p. m. Orders may tie eft at Graham & -ham's drug stoe ' Go East at reduced rates. The Southern Pacific company announces reduced round trip rates to the East for the season of 1906 as follows: Corvallis to Chicago and return. $73-95- St. Louis, $69.95. Mil waukie, $72.15. St. Paul and Min neapolis, $62.45. Sioux City, Conn cil Bluffs, Omaha, St. Joseph, At chinson, Leavenworth and Kansas City, $62.45. Sale dates June 4, 6, 7, 23, 2;, July 2, 3. August 7, 8, 9, ;Sept. 8, 10. - Limit going, 10 daySi Return limit 90 days but not af ter Oct. 31st. Corvallis & Eastern RAILROAD TIME CARD 33 Trains From and to Yaquina No 1 - Leaves Yaquina 6 .55 a. m Leaves Corvallis 10:45 a. m Arrives Albany 11:40 a. m No 2 - Leaves Albany. , 12:10 p. m. Leaves Corvallis 1:05 P- m Arrives Yaquina 5:00 p. tn TRAINS TO AND FROM DETROIT No 3 LeaTes Albanv for Detroit. . 7:30 a, Arrive Detroit 12:30 p, m m jno 4 Leaves Detroit 1:00 p. m Arrive Albany 5;5s p. m TRAINS FOR CORVALLIS . " NoS ' - Leaves Albany 7:55 a. m Arrives Corvallis 8 -.35 a. m jno 10 Leaves Albany , . 3:50 p. m Arrive Corvallis... 4:30 p. m No 6 Leaves Albany 7:35 p. m Arrives Corvallis. 8:15 p. m TRAINS FOR ALBANY No 5 Leaves Corvallis 6:30 a. m Arrive Albany...... 7:ioa. m No 9 Leaves Ccrvallis 1:30 p. m Arrives Albany 2:16 d. m No 7 Leaves Corvallis 6:00 p. m Arrive Albany 6:40 p. m No 11 Leave Corvallis 1 1 :oo a. m Arrive Albany 11:42 a. m No 12 . s83 Leaves Albany .12:45 p. m Arrives Corvallis 1 :33 p. m h 11 the above connect with Southern Pacific company trains both at Albany Bnd Corvallis as well aa trains for Detroit jacent beaches, as well as Brei ten bush Hot Springs. : . - - For farther information apply to 1 - J. C. MAYO, Gta Pass Agt B. H. Boles agt Albany, - H. H. Cronise, agt Corvallis. ' " " store.