Vol: XX.-No. 1 CORVALLIS, OREGON. . TUESnXYVEVENIKGi FEBRUARY 19. 1907; B. r. IBTTJOI fl . andProprieto - ', i , Summons. In the circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Benton County, E. W. Durkee, Plaintiff, vs. Annie E. Darkee, Defendant To Annie E. Durkee the above name 4 defendant:. Id the name of the State of -Oregon you are re quired to appear and answer the complaint filed against you In the above entitled cause on or before the 23th day of March, 19J7, and If you fall so to answer, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded la hit complaint, to-wit: lor a decree of the court dissolving the contract of matrimony now existing between the plaintiff and defendant and for the cire and custody of Frank B. Durkee, W. P.! Durkee, and S F. I. Durkee, children of plaintiff and defendant, and (or such other and further decree as to said court may seem equit able. This summons Is served on you by publication pursuant to an order of the Hon. . Woodward, county judge for Benton county, Oregon, made on the 5th day of February, 1907. The date of the first publication hereof is Feb ruary 8, 1S07 and the last publication thereof will be on Match 22, 1907. Dated February 8. 1907. McFADDEN & BBYSON. Attorneys for Plaintiff; Notice to Creditors. George Beamie, Estate. Notice is hereby given that the under signed has been appointed the executrix of the last will and, testament and the estate of George Beamis, deceased by the Connty Court of the State of Oregon for Benlon county. All persons haying claims against eaid estate are hereby no tified to present the same to said execu trix at the office of McFadden & bryson, at Corvallis, Oregon duly verified within six months from the date hereof. Dated February 8, 1907.- . : Onie Beamis, - v . .- ' Executrix of the estate of " - George Beamis, deceased. I ' V ' ' ... iun t' . jj l U. j no j'.lhti-yt a t 01 ia-y:a z-itidili Our Store will offer a1 wltole'i A.r..:... . , lot of articles .1 1 DURING fiEBRUARY At a price that will make them move. B X f A HIGH FALL-, .v..-:t (. .1 . 11 h FIVE MEN GO DOWN IN COL LAPSE OF BRIDGE OVER ; ' A GULCH. ' ' Buried in Debris of Heavy Timbers ' Without Warning Gulch Near Willamette' Heights is the ' i Scene of the' Accident.' -- Gifl r Bandages k -' Wounds.:: , Phone Ind. 384. Dr, Hanford Successor to Bowen Lester Burnett Bldg. : Corvallis, Or. E. E. WILSON, ATTORNEY A7 LAW. BJ A. CATHEY Physician & Surgeon - ; Office, room 14, BanK Bldg. Hoursi V; IO 1 ui 9 lo 4. ........... Phone, offica 212 ":"' Residence 150 - , Corvallis, . Oregon. A big lot of odds and ends remnants at bargain prices i Overcoats ,or men and boys at cost ' . . ; ' Ladies jackets at one ;half price. ' We are receiving by every freight some new goods and will be prepared for the early buyers this month. Don't forget that we handle Sewing Machines, Carpets, .Bugs, Lirieolums, Etc. : Call and See Corvallis, Oregon DR. E. E. JACKSON Veterinary. Surgeon & Dentist O&ce 1011 Main st Ind 204 Residence 1220, 4th st Ind 389. J. A. WOGD3 General Auctioneer. A Square , Dea - -:- and charges right1: ' ; Corvallis, ' Oregonl ; JFRED fATES j ATTORAn l-AT-LA W. Zierolf Building. V Gl K. JFAKRA Physician & Surgeon, Office rap stairs in Burnett Brick Bee idence on the corner of Madison and Seventh st. Phone at honse and office. H. S. PERNOT, Physician: & Surgeon : ,s -'. - v- ' - 'Office over postoffice.v Residence Cor Fifth and Jefferaon 'streets.'" Honrs 10 to 12 a. in., 1 to 4 p. m. Orders may be en. at uranara at --"lam 8 drag store ,: , Willamette Valley ' V 'Banting Company ; ' Corvallis, Oregon. RESPONSIBILITY $100,000 .Deals in Foreign and Domestic' . . . - Exchange. s ,-' Buys Connty, City and School , Warrants. Priticipalieorrtspotidents. AN FRANCISCO PORTLAND 8BATTI.K ' TAOOMA ; - ' HEW fOBK Messrs. J. P. Horna A Co CHICAGO National Bank of Thm Kepab .110. LONDON; ENG. N M BathiahUds Son . CANADA ; OnlooKsvBk of Canada ii-j'i orrcsponaenis. ) :- t The Bank o . f - California' Fine i . " y ; ' : Job Printing at Times OfFcc ITea j J.Afolger&B? If CrlONK x Satisfaetiohi 0 ,i H wm :l LBBlB&BXSBBBBBKsB j ! Ill ! SEVEN FLAVORS Golden Gatfe Japan i " ; Golden Gate English Breakfast Golden Gate Ceylon Golden Gate Oolong Golden Gate Fancy Blend ' Golden. Gate1 Gunpowder ; : Golden1 Gate Black: and Green ; 'Pacled m Flavor-Tight Cartons - ' J. A' Folger Ck CO., San Francisco in our store because. : they, know that here they are always sure to - get goods 'j of undeniable fine, . aliy. and lowest pnces. ; f OUR STOCK includes all the requisites of every game and sport. We can fit you out with all the latest things whether you want to row, play base ball, tennis, fish, hunt or go bicycling.' E "We also sell Olds Gas Engines, Oliver Typewriters, ;Victor Talking Machines and Sewing Machines. Ind. Pbone l?6.. ;;;. V,U -.Vc Mi M NG'S ' : , - Corvallis, Oregon. imiina I.T-'OiLf-ftil OO M El I N O N G5 tI And you will sure come again after seeing our - Fine New: ;:: . Line of Base Ball Goods Just in . :; i Portland, Or.,. Feb - I5. Five (bridge carpenters,' of whom one 1 j:. : m ijrouauiy uie, were eeriousiy in jured this morning by jthe collapse of .B bridge that is being erected, by the Lafe Pence company ' acroes Balch'e gulch near Thirty-flret and J"liurman streets. ' ' , ( :) ' Bight men were at woiknponthe euperstrqpture at the time. 7 Beatty, one of the number, was at the edge of the bridge when it col lapsed.' He clung to a huge girder Etretcbed in mid-air and esoaped in-' jury. He climbed from liia peril ous position and alone began-the Work' of rescuing his wounded com rades from the wreckage. ; ; ' . The men who were caught', were buried beneath, a great pile of gird ers and heavy timbers. They fell into the bed, pf '.'the creek 'which flbw" beneath the bridge ; , ' ' j Other workmen who escaped in jury quickly weut to the rescue) of thfi men anrl oiAeA in drairolnp- them jfrom the debris. , r The . scaffolding on which the men were -workine at the time pf the accident was 40 feet high. , : ,(',:. Prominent, among . the. rescuers was Miss Maud Howell, who' lives on Willamette Heights, near , the the scene of tbe accident. One of the uninjured carpenters rushed in to her home in order to call assist ance by telephone and in that way she learned of the wreck.- . o - Miss Maude Howell proved a splendid heroine, for as soon as she heard oi the accident, ehe grabbed a bottle of brandy, all the bandages and absorbitant cotton, : liniment and other .1 medicines ' she thought might alleviate suffering, dashed to the brow of the. hill,, picked: her way down through the treacherous defiles of the ravine, and was first person there to render emergency relief. She really took' ebaree of mattere, ordered the men , to, bring water in cups .or anything they could find: She bathed tbe gaping wounds, placed cooling drafts of wa ter and invigorating sips, of brandy to the lips of the suffering unfortun utes.1 Jewell, when be smiled tbe brandy, was . still in a daze, but murmured that he' had never touch ed liquor and wouldn't begin now. 1 Miss Howell with deft ha'nd ' rip ped up clethei int(rr. bandages for head, rme and feet, and -6 00a had swathed the wounds in ootton and bound thami'sScnrely. ' She bad started to' make a splint for Jewell's arm,: which; was ' broken in three places; wheri Dr. Thornton: arrived, making the splint oat af a piece of board.' Without thought of the shocking injuries of . the men, the sight of blood, the curious crowd,: the pluoky girl worked valiently until all that she could do had been done. Thenf ; with words of oom- fort to the sufferers, thoee-whowere conecioue, i Bhe struggled 1 back up the steeps to her h ome. I 1 ; ! 1 Tbe Lafe Pencef Company, after completing a 75-foot flume trestle a few hundred feet beyond ithe- one which gave way, began erecting the ill-fated one. " The main bents, . the false work,' and the' dock j were in place but an order ro raise the west bent to a level with the east . one, which is built on a high elevation, it was neoessary to construct a '"po ny" bent on top of the former.' The pieces of the pony bent ; had been put together In the canyon below, end it was being hoisted by 1 block and facKie tp tne top 01 !tne- main bent of the west side. ' ( ' Two men were hauling away on the line and the six men were ready to make tbe bent fast as soon ; as it had been, jockeyed into place by the block and fall. . ; ! - i Tha bent, which is ' composed ol timbers about 15 feet long, three inches thick (and about I4 inches wide waB almost' in 1 place; being lees than' three . feet out of; plumb, when something gave way.' . , Itiseupposed the bitch 'in the sling around one end. of .the bent flipped, and released the top of the bent. : Ik went crashing down on the deck of the trestle'on which the: six men were at work. : The! weight of the bent sprung the planks of the deck, breaking one or :t wo of; them; and the ' w' o'.e mass of . writhir g timbers', ' 'wiib the men On : top, plunged to the: rocky; bed of the stream, 40 feet, below. : r r . i .. Besides the injuries sustained from the high fall on) the sharp rocks i the men twere-tsanght pinned in by the mass of wreckage Their startled companions lay to with vim. first digging the victims out of the- debris., saving- two of them from drowning in the shallow water, stanching the flow of blood as best they could, and making their companions as comfortable as poesible. UTTERLY. SMASHED I ! f LTWENTY -PERSONS ''n,LBDj.r THBI5E - SCORE INJURED ' ON CAR IN NEW.YORK ' 5 ' :' ;- a 1 1 ill! New York Central Suburban1 Tfaiari , at Terrific Speed Jumps Track ; , and Strews Mangled PaB5 ' ' 7 ; .--, : senge'rs a the 'yjif? ' " ! ' New' York, Feb'.' 16 Sixteen' passengers Were killed . outright, four others had died of their; inja ties up to midnight, and at leas &X, more were more,or leea'asriousiy in jured in, the wreck, of the ' White i-iaina ana urewsier express on me' Harlem division of tbe New York. Central & Hudson River Railroad,, near Woodlawp road in the (Bronx, TIMES FOR 1 JOB ' PRINTING Borough of Greater .New York' to day. . '" ' 1 ' The train left the Grand Central' station at 6 :1$ o'clock, ; drawn byi two heavy electrio motors and load ed with a matinee crowd . and. com muters, on. their way, home' from' business in the city. It consisted of a combination baggage and smok iDg car and ' five : coaches.: After: stopping at One Hundred and T wen-. ty-fifth street, the train' was sched uled to run express to White Plains. At Woodlawn road the four track pass through a rough,' rocky cut; and take a sharp curve. When the; tram reacnea tne curve it was run ning; . at a speed estimated "at 60 miles an hour. ' Both motors ' and the smoking car swung Bafely around the curve, but the other v cars left,: the rails and. plunged over the sldea, with a terrific crash, tearing up the tracks, for a hundred yards' before' they collapsed.' ' ' - ' (- i Of those' instantly killed,1 by 'fait the greater number were .- womeu, Many were mangled beyoad recog nition. f lhose mpst seriously in jured were hurried to hospitals, where coroners took charge of the BicH dead as fast as bodiee - were .recov ered. ' Fire started in the overturn ed cars, but the flames were eoou extinguished and firemen lent their aid to the injured. ...... The rear car, containing more women than the others, suffered greatest, as it overturned and, breaking off the conpling, was re leased from the cars ahead, and it was literally torn to pieces and scat scattered for a hundred feet across Woodlawn avanue. Many passen gers, practically uninjured, tumbled from the cars and hurried to tele phones, summoning aid.: i . f : The cause; of the. wreck was not ' continued on page 4.: Base Bail! : Bats-;-- :' Masks ' . :' ' : Mitts V2 j. . Gloves , , Etc.'.:.'.',.; ' r : . .i : .1 . ; :-.( 7 .-.-v i : 1 "'.') i. 'ftcn-Tenib Sets' ;;t).y d .Balls '- t ; . . -: . ; Boxing Gloves 7 f -. Striking Gloves , ; . .. Indian Clubs' ,,; i a ' 'if' ; 1 Etc- K' 1 ' ; 1' ' r- f-oa 'font ;!:; o-') :U r ( I- f-t.- Vr. '-s-r- ,ri; .on W Y1 your tongue to :.'. 1 : :.:;;:" t. .' . : i U y anxl look in the glass-you will see the effect ; You:can't help puckenng it jnakes jougucker. "'tdahinic nastifie'it: 0 ':.r-l r 1 V .r r'..! : v;1 5 v. ly the; uise o s6 called. s;cheap ? Baking c-" ifowders younaketoiSTpuckenng, injurious Aiam ' nghitnto'you systejn-rryou, , inju;e:t,4igStioft, ?'and ruih'fyour; stbrhach;1" A - :5 :,vr 0 "5 : AVOED (A) i ttt: i .: - i t. : . -i i , :, I . ..':.- wT, : . 11 -V ''! ."i .-' a :-'4 "'"-'''I' .1 - ;-f .'H.- t.-f-T-:!.i I I "-imim 11111 ' 7 TTTT nil - im nn im III! nn i i n- - '-. ;.....,rfc., in -:; 07 ij'-'r) A O v ! Si", culr.f f . .- !-) gJ1, joyat isrriaae irpra puiet rene vrape vream oi f i ariarr-uosts more have the profit pf. quality, the profit cf good health , . ! . -if , .1 s I THJ r -r ton;' Alurrt bjuf you 1 w II a i .i i ... SA f M IM I C - - Si.fl-?, A T"Tv!.v:,f ir4t ' , r J I : .11 iott .ill ::.: -: : T J i . : t i i 1 I ; : WW8MWgliWMI rr ssiwwsTi'-rrrrsif- ' " ' " 11 . ' ... . u .,:h:t:t ifiS.fi fii1 3ikUuLM;'.J yr-t ? i t ,' '' '' ' ; -'' o) ,;i:;; :'? -,?' I-'IT '! 'r ' "... . .:?.,.-.:, .-' ,