fY fo Interest to Know That the Smartest Spring Fashions for Men and Young Men Are now here ready' for your inspection and try-on and that we offer you anl your friends the first opportunity of viewing the largest ard most magnificent display of Spring apparel we have ever had. If you can't come to morrow, come ihe day 8iter. If you wish to dress well at little expense if you want a S m ( j ( -wi style and of strict high quality. Its to your interest to ccme here at once and make an early selection. MICHAELS STERN FINE CLOTHING which we show in all the most fashionable fabric3 broad variety of handsome weaves. Look where you rna I you positively cannot find values to equal those we off a ! n Vf L J 1AICH AEL8-8TCRN vJNe C LOTH 1 NO Spring Sack Suits for Men and Young Men at $12 to $25 of most advanced single and double breasted style, with every detail as derfect as if exclusively custom-tailor-made with a special offering of selected styles and fabrics fully equal in value to most$20 suits at $15 I 1 I 1 1 I J :n iXt I I! i il l Gat your Lunch Boxes for the Senior Excursion at Hollenberg & Cady. W. D. DeVarney came up from Albany last night on a brief busi ness trip. E. J. Bellinger arrived here Saturday evening to accompan y his wife and baby borne, who have been visiting friends and relatives. Next Monday and Tuesday, 1 f o 7 11 nvr i SI Tti- T rhiso tlta mall known optician will be at Hotel uorvauis. Have mm test your eyes for glasses, 18 years experi ence. You are cordially invited to call at Hotel Corvallis next Mon day and Tuesday and have Dr. Lowe the eye specialist test your eyes. If you do not need glasses, ne will tranfciy tell you sr. The Independent telephone be gins tomorrow the stringing of a trunk line to Peoria. The poles are already set, and it is expected that the line will be in operation Monday. Rev. Hand'aker and T. T. Vincent leave tomorrow morn'ng in charge of seventeen lads that are ticketed to Salem to attend the Youths' conference to be held in that city tomorrow and Sunday. Tuesday, the 28th, is the date, the Congregational church is the place and Rev. B. H. Lingenfelter cf Seattle, is the speaker, for the union Cbni tian Endeavor Rally. There will be other attractions dur ing the evening. Program begins at 8 o'clock. All are invited . MANY ARE CLAIMANTS. - ev The new spring styles in Hats, both stiff and soft $1.50 to 53.5 ) Tomorrow is Spring Opening day. Coirieearlyt LI NE The People's Store. Established 1864; Perfect Time Inspires Pesf ect Confidence! ; A watch which cannot be trusted to tell perfect time is worse than no watch at all, as it mis-leading and .- causes un necessary trouble and loss of fame. Get a watch that you can depend on at all times, the best on ihe market, to be had in all grades and styles. At PRATT The Jeweler's. Optical work of all kinds a Specialty. SPECIALTIES IN H E S FOR WOMN MISSES AND CHILDREN We have also received our Spring lines of Men's 0 fords, etc, in ali the latest shapes. tall ana Save 5 Per Cent. : ; , Ot your cash by trading with us F. L. MILLER'S " ; f : When you see it in our ad its so Corvallis . Ore arm wOOAL LORE. For advertisements in this column the rate of 15 cents per line will be charged, .j rrai further notice ALL glasses fitted by , PRATT The the Optician will be ABSOLUTELY ; GUARANTEED for ONE YEAR against BREAKAGE of ANY KIND. W. J.Willbanks and J. H. Har ris left Tuesday for an extended fishing trip in the vicinity of Marys Peak. They are to return tonight. Mrs. James Harper leaves to morrow for Portland where she goes to meet a cousin who will ac company her to Corvallis for a two week's visit. Rev. J. W. Armstrong, of Pern, Indiana, has accepted a call from the Vestry to the Rectorship of the Good Samaritan Episcopal Church and is expected to take up his duties about the first of June. Preaching at the M. E. Church South next Sunday by the pastor, Rev. G. H. Gibbs. Snbject at n A. M. "Nature of Rest and How to Obtain It." At 8 P. M. "Ja cob's Ladder and What it Teaches, The Annual Rose Fair of the Presbyterian ladies takes place Wednesday, June 5th.' The prize list lor displays will appear Ine week. The list is an attractive one and is certain to call out many ex hibits. A dinner is to be served at the Opera House in connection with the Fair. -r-The removal of the heavy cyl inder press in use at the Times of fice, and the change of motive pow er from steam to electric involved difficulties and delays that , brought Tuesday's issue to press "behind schedule time, and marred "its ap pearance. The removal from the old office is about complete now, and noj further delays or trpubles are expected " ; ' ;'.' Miss Mabelle Mallett of . the class '07 has been appointed 1 3 the chair of floriculture and botany in the Idaho Industrial Institure at Weiser.. A few weeks ago Deau Morrison of that school spent a day or two quietly casting about for; a suitable person for the departments mentioned with the result that Misi Mallett was selected. ' Miss Mallett Is the daugtter of Hon. C W. Mal tett, of Ontario, who is prominent-, ly connected r: with the . .National Irrigation Congress having beta appointed .by. the governor; t j Sixtyone dollars was the gross receipte at the entertainment by the W. C. T. U. the other night. One of the best pleased men in town over - the- result of - the city election is J. W. Ingle.- Though defeated for chief of police, the run made, he says,, is a source of satis faction, and he proposes as a result to retire from politics. If elected, Mr. Ingle would have made an effi cient officer. The annual picnic of the Iowa society occurs June isc in Avery's grove on Marys river. There will be the usual dinner, speeches, music and other features. Though the picnic is conducted by the Iowa colony, everybody is invited to attend. The irrigation experiments to be conducted at the college in con nection with the government, men tion of which is made elsewhere, are to ascertain the effect of irriga tion on Willamette Valley crops In the present test, potatoes, corn and Plfalfa!will be the subjects of investigtion. Will Dunlap was la town Wed nesday to bring his sisters from the farm, where they went on the death of their father "several days ago, Mr. Dunlap' s jaw which recently sustained three fractures is itsalf again, with no preceptible marring of its efficiency or appearance. He is to return to college next year. The Willamette Grange is to give a big picnic Saturday, June 21, the program lor which is now being arranged. Among the fea tures will be an address by Mrs, Waldo, lecturer , of the state grange Farther particulars with reference to the program will be announced later. , Growers look with favor on the result of the wool sales in Pen dleton, where Eastern Oregon wool brought an average of about 20 cents per pound. Local are noping tnat tne fact presages better prices for Willamette Valley wools. 1 All the new furnishings for Hotel Corvallis have arrived and every room in the garret is now equipped witn new furniture, new linen and other of the furnishing incident taa firstclass caravansary The new management is fast -com ing into favor with the traveling public and the house is filled most of the time to its capacity. United Evangelical Church. The Annual Memorial Service of the G. A. R. and W. R. C. will be held at 11 A. M. The Post and Corps will attend in a body and the sermon will be suited to It be occa sion. In the evening the W. M. S. will have charge and Mr. Roberts of the College Y. M. C. A. will deliver an address. C. T. Hurd, pastor. , Demanding That Quarter Sections out of the S. Hirant be Sold to Them. What are known as the O. & C. lands inQsegon have been the sub ject of excited attention in Cor vallis and Benton for several days, and the interest is still at fever heat. A lawsuit of large proportions is apparently brewing in which the people of the state will be the plain tiffs and the Southern Pacific Rail road company the defendants, All through Western Oregon citizens are moving to oust the company from ownership of the lands, and the movement in its sweep has drawn into its vortex amy Benton county people. From 130 to 150 of them have prepared papers de manding that the corporation sell them 160 acre tracts of the land at the price of $2.50 per acre. The contention is that when con gress made the grant to the O & v-. company, it was with the pro viso that the land be sold to actual settlers at $2.50 per acre and in lots of not more than 160 acres. This is alleged to have set up a relation of trusteeship in which the com pany became trwstee ot the gov ernment for the sale of the lands to actual settlers That happened more than 35 years ago, and in the meantime the O. & C. interests have passed into the hands of the Southern Pacific and a claim of ownership seems to have arisen on the ashes of the trusteeship. It is on this point 1 that the persons w.o are after the lands stake their hopes of making the corporation pait with the grant. The claimants make a tender ot $2 50 per acre lor the lands, and at the same time demand that certain quarter sections which they specify shall be sold to them under the terms of the law. Tbey expect the company to refuse, and that will be a signal lor a resort to the courts t All the claimants join their issues together, and rely upon the court decision for the re -t. If the decis ion is favorable they figure that the cost of the attorney s fees and the 00 to be paid ,. will be the total cost of a quarter section. Some off the quarters are of course wort a thousands of dollars. The fact that they will probably have to live on the land for a tkne has deterred a few people from try ing to get claims, bnt so many have sought , them that it is said all the railroad lands in Benton have been taker. The outcome of the contest will be watched with much interest. Three law offices in Corvaliis have been running almost day ajd nighi for two or three days preparing pa pers for the claimants. Oi her ma & a 1 : - .1 & . m k. found in an articte on another page, prepared for Tuesday's issue, but unavoidably left out of the paper in the clamor and bang of the removal of the times office. . Mr. Winkley has made ar rangements for reports of base ball gane3 and track events on OAC field and will hereafter report them on a bulletin board in front of the Palace of Sweets where those busi ness people unable to attend can see the results. Negotiations for the purchase of the Old Soldiers monument are in progress. Perry Eddy of Kings Valley was in town Wednesday at the reauest of the Monument Asso- growers cjation with reference to a new kind of monument for which he is the agent. It is known as white bronze, and is a metl monument. If is said to preserve its appearance of newness much longer than is the case with marble or grani'e, and on that account is coming to be much sought. ' Building operations in town are scarcely less active than they have been in the last two years, during Benton County delegates are to leave tomorrow for Hood River to attend the Oregon State Grange; They are. Mrs., Whitby and Mrs. Porter of Willamette, Mr. and. Mrs. Thorp of Alseav : Mrs. Whitby and Mr. Thorp are delegates and Mrs. Porter and Mrs, .Thorp alter nates. Mrs, Whitby was named by Corvallis grange as its represen tative. ' The county has five granges. . ' . ' " ' Preaching at the Presbyterian church Sunday ' morning , by . the pastor, Rev. J. R. N. Bell. Morn ing topic; , ' Our Complex, Rela tions." 'At the evening, service a talk on John Howard . Payne's "Home, Sweet Home." The song as originally composed by ; the au thor, will be sung ar a solo and chorus by the choir. .All made welcome to all of these services. -' I which Corvallis has seen the great est growth in her history. One contractor r" has six houses under way, and all others are crowded with ; work that is of greater vol ume ' than they are able to take care of with promptness." Every carpenter , is driven from pillar to post with demands fcr his services, and the music of the hammer and saw is everywhere. The town has no boom because its people are not boomers; but it has a steady, straightforward : growth such as town situated in one of 'the most delightful spots on the green earth deserves to have. - ' In the probate court: I. H. Jackson has been appointed as adr mimstrator of the S. W. Jackson estate with a bond fixed at $12001 The appraisers are W. T. Wiles, S. H. Henderson and John Rowland.. Ella Berreman is the executrix of the James W. Berreman estate and W. F. Caldwell, George A. Ben nett and J. E. Henkle, appraisers. The administrator of the estate of Alexander Bennett has been given authority to sell the personal prop erty at private sale. fl,afayette Stewart has filed his bonds of $500 as guardian of the estate of Jehial Stewart, insane. Mary E. Avery " has been appointed administrator of the estate of Eliza Chrisinger. L,OST. between Main street and the S. P. Depot on Wednesday, a pocket book containing $175. Finder will be liberally reward ed. WANTED. WANTED Teams to plough on the streets. Apply to J. B. Irvine, chairman of street committee. WANTED at once. A man to contract logging with teams at at saw mill "on P. A. Kline's west of town. Enquire of S. H. Moore, Corvallis. For Sale. Times Office .for Job ;Work. THE McCORMICK CATA LOGUE contains something of value and interest to everyone needing harvesting machines. Call and secure one at Huston's hard ware Store. FOR SALE. All kinds of rough r lumber at mill on P. A. Kline's ' ; ranch, also slab wood . 4 . f t. length Before buildipg see S. H. Moore, Corvallis. - . - FOR ' SALE, IFurnlture, carpets, wall paper.opposite Hotel Corvallis.