Corvallis Times CORVALLIS, OREGON, FRIDAY EYENING, MAR. 15, 1907 As to a President A president is sought for OAC. " That is part of the errand of a board ' meeting today. Tt will be the hope of a multitude that wisdom may . prevail. The possibilities of the institution are boundless. They mean so much that few, if any, have adequate conception of them. Thev involve a line of work that the fe deral government considers so important that congress has recent ly raised the national endowment from $35,000 to $60,000 a year. It is to be prosecuted in a state yet in its infancy, so far as develop ment is concerned. It is a state with a population of less than 500,- ' 000 souls but capable of giving thrift, home and life to several millions. The education of young men and women for finding and ex ploiting its resources and for direct ing investigation into what those manifold resources are, is the er rand of the institution. Faithfully done, it means untold benefits for Oregon. It is a field of so prodig ious import that the best talent to be obtained in the country is not too good for OAC, For president, the institution should have a man worth while, one.who can go for ward with the great work that President Gatch and his assistants have so creditably begun.. Homeseekers. iS Homeseekers are pouring into Oregon at the rate of a thous?nd :a day, and Corvallis has nothing to apologize for. Her house is in or der. She has the best water system and the best water in the state of Oregon, as good in fact as there is in the world. It comes from a snow peak and its flow is through a pipe line that leaves no taste' of iron rust. It is as pure as the crystal spring that is its source of; supply. The town has electric lights at less cost by 35 per cent than any other town in Oregon. ; It has a system ot sewers , that perfectly perform their function. At her door is reared the gteatest educational in stitution in the state, the good in fluences of which permeate the so cial conditions of the town. At her feet flows a beautiful river stretch ing away on every horizon are piles of hill and mountain range of every varied hue and shape to de light the eye. She has no hoodlum gang and is without a place of shame. She is the heart of a coun ty of uplifted moral and stable citi zenship. Her growth and her busi ness conditions are unsurpassed by any ot her sister towns. Why should Corvallis apologize when her house is so well ordered ? Attention Ranchers. We are cash buyers of all sizes of veal, and can net you more than you are receiving. Exp-ess your calves to our address, and mark your address plainly to insure im mediate payment on shipments. For reference write or call Aber deen Bank, or Corvallis Creamery Co. West Coast Produce Co. Aber deen, Washington. TIMES FOR JOB PRINTING FRUIT TREE spray any quanity at Smith & Dawson's next to J. R. Smith & Company. Notice to Bidders. Bids for painting the exterior of the opera house will be received by the management, work to begin as soon as the weather will permit. Material abd labor to be figured separately. Propos als are also invited for the constrncdon of an incline floor in the opera house For specifications , call on W. F. Groves FOR SALE a good all round team of gray four year olds, can b seen at George Smith place nea. Catholic cemetery. For further particulars inquire of B. I,. Tay R. F. D. 3. Independent phone 702. WE CAN FILL your wants. Write us. Do you want to sell your property, farms, or business. Call on us. We furnish partners and cash. Loan your money. Sparkman & Company Main St, Corvallis Oreg. What to Do "When Bilious. The right thing to do when you feel bil ious is to take a dose of Chamberlain's Stom ach and Liver Tablets. They will cleanse the stomach and regulate the liver and bow els. Try it Price 25 cents. Samples free at uranam wortnam s drug store. WOULD SEND THEM EAST. Students Want Basket Ball Team to go to JamestownRaising Funds. OAC students want to send the basket ball team to Jamestown, and will make an effort to do so. In September a series of world cham pionship games is to be held, and their admirers in and out of college are anxious for Captain Swann and his men to try conclusions with the big Eastern teams that will be there. It is estimated that it will cost $1,- 500 to pay the expenses of the team, and leading students at the college are making an effort to raise the money by subscription. A pa per was started yesterday' and the first twenty names, all of whom were students, yielded a nest egg of more than $ 1 50. Many of the boys contributed $10 each. The can vass will be continued and the pro moters of the movement have high hopes that it will end in success. They say the basket ball men have achieved more marked and consist ent successes than have ever been reached by any athletic team at the college, and they believe the ad vertising already done and that the proposed trip will give to Corvallis andtthe collegewill more than coun terbalance the very large sum that the trip will cost. And they are correct. IT BROUGHT $36. At Eleven Months-And Netted its Owner Twenty-nine. Thirty six dollars is the price at which George Horning recently sold an 11 -months old calf. At such figures farmers ought to see a straight read to prosperity. A tew head of cattle at that rate will beat a big field of wheat.specially when the latter goes at only 60 cents. It ought to be a live hint to grow less wheat and more livestock. An attractive feature is that the live stock will walk to market itself, while the wheat has to be hauled. This Horning calf weighed dressed at 1 1 months, 480 pounds. . It was sold for beef in the local market at four cents live weight. , It was fed chop for two months and., during the period consumed 500 pounds that cost $5, and no more. Its mother Was a milk cow and through out the summer furnished milk and butter for the family table. A little hay went to the calf occas ionally, but the rest of its ration was grass from the pasture and milk from its mother. Its whole cost to the owner was perhaps $7. Its net return was nearly $30 with in the 1 1 months. What better in vestment can the thousands of homeseekers pouring into Oregon find, than a Benton farm from which hogs can now be sold in Portland at eight cents, mutton sheep at $7 per head, ewes with a lamb at her side for $10 and a good horse at $300, all with farm land selling at less than half the price the same land in the East goes at? When the bottomlands are seeded to alfalfa and the foot hill farms planted to apples, and when her farmers become growers of more livestock, and sell less of their grain and feed more of it, Ben ton will come into her own and be a county whose annual prodnctf. wrt run into tne muuonsj - Nolan's white Carnival next week. K. 0. T. M. Notice. ' All members of the Maccabees are requested to be at lodge Wed nesday evening. March 13th 1907, TEAMING wanted. All kinds of jobs in teaming done. Residence Ninth and Jackson, Independent phone." O. T. Murphy, Corvallis. NEW TODAY, I have established a junk business on Main street near the soda works where I will bny all kinds of junk, including rags, rubbers, lead copper, brass etc. J. J. Brown, Call For Warrants. Notice is herehv mvcn that t tiara la monev nn hand at tiro mntih, trooetiro.'c office to pay all orders endorsed and maraea not paia sor want ot funds up to ana including August 2nd 1906. In terest will be stopped on same from this date. Oorvallis Or. Mnn)i fat-It TnnT W. A. Buchanan, Treasurer, Benton, ,f to. Uregon. PIANO TUNING up to May 1st at special prices. - Also music tought in all grades of difficulty, Frank A. White, phone. 405 Corvallis, Ore. Skin Disease of Twenty Tears1 ' Standing Cured. I want you to know how much Chamber Iain's Salve has done for me. It has cured my face of a skin disease of almost twenty years' standing. I have, been treated bv sev eral as smart physicians as Ve have in this country and they did me" no good, but two boxes of this salve has cured me. Mas. Fannie Grtffen, Troy, Ala. Chamberlain's calve is tor sale by Uraham & wortham. What fou are Looking for is Here IF you are a young men; if you want more style in your clothes than you've ever had; if you are looking for the merchant tailor fit, or better; if 3our mind is set on a bright, rich patterns-come straight to us. We have it all. Jnst the colors and patterns a smart dresser will admire. There are blues, browns, grays, black, fancy mixtures, plaids, checks and stripes, '.in worsteds finished and unfinished, tweeds and Scotch cheviots. They come in single and double breasted 3 $15 , button sack, and are the celebrated Longworth and Yale models. $20. WAS AGED EIGHTY FOUR. Death of Mrs. William Wyatt Her Funeral Next Sunday.. Mrs. Mary Wyatt, widow of the late William Wyatt, died at 'the family homestead, a mile and a half north of Philomath at noon yester day. Had she survived till 1 the 31st of the current month she would have attained the age of 84. She had been in feeble health ever since the first days of Februrary. The funeral will occur Sunday, probably irom the late home, and the inter ment will be in Newton cemetery. . The deceased resided fort sixty years at the home where she died. She-was born in England in 1823 and at the age of 13 crossed the At lantic and settled with her parents in Illinois. -April 13, 1838 she was united 'in marriage to William Wyatt, and in 1847 she crossed the plains to Oregon, and settled on the present homestead in Benton county. Her husband, who for a long time was a well known figure in the county, died February 10, 1904. The surviving relatives are, John, Samuel and Frank Wyatt, sons, , and Miss Eva Wyatt and Mrs. A. J. Williams, daughters, all of Benton county. , . Garden Beeds, timothy and clover seed and all kinds of field seeds at Zierolf 8. NOTICE. I will pay the highest Mark- et price in cash for Poultry, hogs, . veal calves etc. at Bolden's grocery .store corner Second & Monroe streets opposite Corvallis Hotel. Vour cash is always ready and a square deal guaranteed to all. Thoa. Boulden. L. IBROOKS. Seed store,? Phone 655 second door north of express office, a large supply of fresh garden seeds in bulk just received.- Also farm seeds, wheat, : oats beardless and hulless ' barley potatoes, artichokes, :feed .oats chicken feed, land plaster, seve ral kinds : of clover. Vpl'rhes. Can furnish vetch and clover seed in car lots. Ederheimer, Stein & Co, MAKERS No Prizes go with our Cbase & Sanborn Higb Grade COFFEE In fact nothing goes with our coffee but cream, sugar and SATISFACTION P. M. ZIEROLF. Sole agent for Cbase & Sanborn Higb Grade R. J. MOSES. Something Doing Begbning March 9th there will be something doing in our De partment Store you will, find us as usual up and a-conring in our great Reduction Sale for'March. i; Call in and we will convince ybu. R. J. MOSES & SON m f: J L J. MOSES. Summon. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for E. W. Durkee, Plaintiff, vs. Annie E. Dorkee, Defendant To Annie E. Durkee the above named defendant: In 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 SSth day of March, 19)7, and If yon fall so to answer, for want thereof the plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded In his jomplalnt, to-wlt: lor a decree of the oourt dissolving the contract of matrimony now existing between the plaintiff and defendant and for the care and custody of Frank B. Durkee, W. P. Duikee, and 8 F.I. Durkee, children of plaintiff and defendant, and for 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. E. Woodward, oounty judge for Benton county, Oregon, made on the Sth dey of February, 1907. The date ot the first publication hereof is Feb ruary 8, 1907 and the last publication thereof will be on Hatch 22, 1907. Dated February 8. 1907. McFADDEN &BRYSON. Attorneys for Plaintiff. Notice to Creditors. George Beamis, Estate. Notice is hereby given that the under signed has been appointed the executrix Of the lat Wl' 1 1 a-nA tAotamant ,. estate of George Beamis, deceased by the wwuukjf wuui l ui uiti oiate oi uregou ior Benlon county. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby no. titled to present the same to said execu trix at the office of McFadden & Brvson, at Corvallis. Orecon rinlv vMlfirl within six months from the date hereof. Dated February 8, 1907. Onie Beamis, Executrix of the estate of George Beamis, deceased. For Rheumatic Sufferers. The quick relief from pain afforded by ap plying Chamberlain's Pain Balm makes it a favorite with sufferers from rheumatism, sciatica, lame back, lumbago, and deep seated and muscular pains. For sale by Graham & Wortham. Phone Ind. 384. Dr, Hanford Successor to Bowen Lester Burnett Bldg. Corvallis. Or. E. E. WILSON, ATTORNEY Al LAW. F. C. M'Reynolds Teacher of Violin, Mandolin, Banjo, Guitar, Viola and 'Cello OAC School of Music. Music furnished for all oc casions. Large or small orchestra. B. A. CATHEY Physician & Surgeon Office, room 14, BanR Bldg. Hours. 10 to la and a to 4. Phone, office 2 1 2 Residence 1E0 Corvallis, Oregon. DR. E. a JACKSON Veterinary Surgeon & Dentist O&ce 1011 Main st Ind 204 Residence 1220 4th st Ind 389. J. A. WOODS General Auctioneer. A Square Dea and charges right Corvallis, . Oregon. J. FEED STATES - ATTORMil.AT-LAW. Zierolf Building. G. LI. FAKRA, Physician & Surgeon, Office no stairs in Burnett Brick Rea idence on the coiner of Madison and Seventh st. Phone at house and office. H. S. PERNOT, Physician & Surgeon Office over postoffice. Residence Cor. Fifth and Jefferson streets. Hoars 10 to 12 a. m., 1 to 4 p. m. Orders may be eft at Graham & v-ham'a drug store. Willamette Valley Banking Company Corvallis, Oregon. RESPONSIBILITY $100,000 Deals in Foreign and Domestic Exchange. Bays County, City and School Warrantw PrincipaHeorrespondcnts. BAN FBANCISOO ) PORTLAND' ( The Bank o SEATTLE f California TAOOMA J NEW YORK Messrs. T. P. Morgan A Co. OHIO AGO National Bask of The Bepnb lie. liONDON, ENG. N M RrtluelUlds 4k Bon CANADA . TJnlcr Bank f Canada Fine Job Printing at Times Office