JOB PRINTING. li U f c ev THE SAILOR-BQY'S :fST,T TVe know not to whom belor thorship of the blowing" line will agree with as to "saying thi phrase sever was more beautiful i, . Veri fa sentiment of the heart's he? br those we cherish with the hi holiest and purest affection. Farewell to father blessed hulk ! ' , . In spite of metal, spite of bulk," " His cable soon may slip ; Yet while the parting tear is moist, The flag of gratitude I'll hoist In duty to the ship. Farewell to mother first-class she Who launched me on life's stormy sea, And rigged me fore and aft ; May providence her timber spare, . And keep her hulk ingood repair . " To tow the smaller craft . Farewell to sister lovly yacht ; But whether she'll be manned or not, I cannot now foresee ; : May some good ship a tender prove, Well found in stores of tfuth and love, '" And take her under JeC Farewell to George the jolly boat And all the little crafts afloat In home's delightful bay ; When they arrive at sailing age May wisdom prove the weather-guage And guide them on their way. Farewell to all on life's rude main I And though we ne'er may meet again Through stress of stormy weather, Yet summond by the Board above, We'll anchor in the port of love And all be moored together. THE MERRY HEART. 'Tis well to have a merry heart, However short we stay ; There's wisdom in a merry heart, f Whate'er the world may say. Philosophy may lift its head, And find out many a flaw; But give me the philosopher That's happy with a straw I If life brings us but happiness, It brings us, we are told, What's hard to buy; though rich ones try With all their heaps of gold. Then laugh away, let others say Whate'er they will of mirth ; Who laughs the most, may truly boast He's got the wealth of earth. There's beauty in a merry heart, A moral beauty too; It shows the heart is an honest heart, That's paid each man his due, And lent a share of what's to spare, " Despite of wisdom's fears, And make the cheek less sorrow speak, The eye weep fewer tears. The sun may shroud itself in cloud, The tempest wrath begin,-' . It finds a spark to cheer the dark, , Its sunlight Is within 1 Then laugh away, let others say ' Whate'er they will of mirth ; Who laughs the most, may truly boast He's got the wealth of earth." PACIFIC SLOPERS. Wood $6 per cord at the Dalles. Weather intensely cold in the Sound country. Lane county has 200,000 acres of im proved lands. ' - Work has been resumed on the new Court House at Salem. The gold yield of Montana for 1S72 is estimated at $8,000,000. Boats will resume their trips on the upper Columbia on the first of March. Whooping-cough prevails nearly all over the State. It is very prevalent in Portland. A hotel at Marshfield, Coos Bay, be longing to J. S. McNamara, was burned on the 12th inst. . More rain has fallen in Grant county this winter than in any previous year eince its settlement. . . The Coquille valley, in Southwestern Oregon, is said to be one of the best portions of the States. A Walla Walla man, who hails from Texas, swings a 70 pound ax, and cuts a cot d of wood an hour. The new vessel now on the stocks at North Bend, Coos Bay, will be the largest ever lauacnea m Uregon. Marion Gale, fbrmely of Eugene City, will soon commence the publica tion of a Democratic paper at Weston, Umatilla county. James Scott, a student at the Wash ingtw llerrilcrial University, was found dead in his ted at the University board ing house last Monday. . Travel between Seattle and Olympia is very brisk. One of the steamers on a recent trip between the two points 1 tJ - C I ! uwjlcu uue ui uavfug as many passen gers as the law allows her to carry. ' Grant county now makes all the flour she needs for home consumption. It sells at the ;mill at $4 per 100 ponnds. Beef is worth 5 to 6 cents per pound on foot; barley and oats, 1 J ; and , wheat 2 cents. All kinds of home pro juce is abundant. - was ever derV I would sf' from air-castfci The. imagin1' powerful," castles, or visionary t, duced by this faculty - Imagination is that p we take part of our bine them into new forms andT In more striking and more delightful than those of ordinary nature; it creates by laws more closely connected with" the reason ; it has strong emotions as its actuating and formative cause; if -aims at a weighty and definite character. Milton's Fiery Lake, and the exquisite pleasures of Paradise are products of the imagination. By this faculty we view the coming future, and silently revel in bright visions painted by it. Before we engage in any laudable pursuit we look out into the future and picture out the road we intend to travel and the object we desire to occomplish. How silly is the person who starts out in this world to accomplish some great achievement, without first making a survey of what he is about to enter up on, or building air castles, as it is called. To him who has not erected one ot those magnificent buildings, but is carelessly passing through life, I would say, let him pause for a moment, consider where he is going, and mark well the paths he would tread through life. When the laborer has toiled faithful ly until night has closed the door, it is very pleasant for him to withdraw his mind from the burdens by which he is fatigued, and contemplate grander scenes. When the student has wearied and pondered over bis books nntil all is hushed by the silence of night, it is then sweet to cast them aside, let the thoughts of imagination take their sway, and the hoarded treasures of the mind burst forth in visions more sublime. As we draw nearer the close of life, we lose sight of the things of earth in visions ; our minds grapple and revel on the unknown beauties of eternity. By imagination we can wander back to the source of time and converse with succesive generations of men. By the pinions of imagination we can soar aloft where the eye has never penetrated ; where other stars glitter on the mantle of night, and the morning dawns by the rays of a brighter sun. Disctptjxo. "-' DIVISION OF LABOR. All vocations are respectable, and a man should be honored for the proficien cy he acquires in the position he fills. Therefore no station in society should be despised. The time has been when the ancestors of those who are at pres ent masters of the arts . and sciences, lived as do the savages of the present day. If this be true, much honor is due those who have raied man to his resent exalted station. Let us then consider who is entitled to the credit of this great work. Is it the farmer, the mechanic, the teacher, the . doctor, ' the statesman or the minister 1 or can the credit be given to any one profession, or have they all contributed to the accom plishment of this work 1 To answer this question we must look upon man, when, in his primitive state, he depend ed for subsistence upon the fruits of the chase, and mark how he has continual ly advanced to the present time. In the days of primal man, but little difference in the situation of man could be seen, yet some must have shown greater skill in fishing, hunting, etc., and that prac tice improved tbeir rude arts, and that a division of labor- was - advantageous. This must have been the reason why every man began to apply himself to some particular occupation. Hence arose the different professions in which men were eneaged, but one was not more honorable than another for one could not prosper w ithont the others. Thus each contnbu ted to the welfare of man kind, and as' time advanced, man was continually discovering new wants, as the division of labor was continually making men more skillful. Thus it is that man has acqu'red his present situa tion; not tnrougn any one profession or trade alone, for every department of la bor contributes its part for the benefit of others. Then since the farmer, ' the mechanic,- the doctor, the statesman, and the minister are all necessary for the welfare, of. man, .they are all entitled to credit. Therefore, let eveiy young man choose that field of labor for which he is best qualified, and persevere, for every man can occupy some respectable place in society if he is so disposed. Uni rtroKUM. JU BY : O- '' Pox: M bro.. A LARGE STOCK OK DHY GOODS, gLOTHING, BOOTS AND SHOES, GROCERIES, - , FANCY tiOODS, CROCKERY, HARDWARE, CARPETINGS AED WALL PAPER, HATS AND CAPS, TltTJUXJtW JSc VALISES; LADIES' AND GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, Everything else usually found in a First- (Jiass Country Store. 1ST GIVE THEM A CALL.IgH September 6, 1872 2:20tf EDUCATIONAL. C0RVALLIS C0LLECE. THE FJILJL. TERM OPENS ON TVEDSESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4th, 1872. FOR INFORMATION, SEND FOR CATALOGUE. B. 2:18tf L. ARNOLD, President. Aug. 23. HHHE SUBSCRIBER WOULD RE- JL specttully announce to the public. that he is prepared to give instructions on the Organ, Piano, or Melodeon. Terms one dollar per lesson. Instructions given at tne resiaence oi pupus u aesirea. .Lessons given In vocal music m classes, or privately. Bai'ersons wishing to purchase Pianos. Organs or Melodeons, can save fifteen per cent, Dy ordering tnrougn tne rrotessor. P. RUTAN. Professor of Music, and Graduate of the .New lork Institution for the Blind, vlno29:tf. SALCONS AND EREWERIES. GEM SALOON. WALL. CCSHMAN, : : : PROPRIETOR. MAIN STREET, . (Opposite Taylor's Meat Market.) FINEST WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS Always Found in the Bar. January J8, 1S73. ' 2-39yl CALIFORNIA SALOON. MAIN STREET, COEVALLIS. A. H. Blakesley, Proprietor. FINEST WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS ALWAYS ON HAND. Dec. 21, 1873. . 35:tf BIRD'S SALOON, CORYAIXIS Oregon. rpms saloon ktfitted rp ur sitfki 1 or styie. jn one Dut tne very best winea HEXBX BIRD, , Proprietor. . Vlno40tf. THE OBIOINAL CORVALLIS BREWERY. Bernard Hunt, . . Proprietor COKNEE id AND JEFFERSON STREET, COHVAL.MS, OBEGOX. Wnere may be found at all times, the best . LAGER BEER AND XXX ALE, made on this Const, and sold by th Wholesale at Linn County Fair. Ber dRllvnmd to ni pni-t of the City or Country, at the low sum o'f "MFANY, """"""En i if' 1,000,000. 1 TON .President. vD...... ....... .Vice President. I 1 1 Secretary J. . .V, .......... . Marin e Seeretary 1 ,';.ijvjvy ....... uenerai juanager. . Oregon Branch i,OBTX,AKD....P. Wasserman, C. It Lewis, B. r iTiiiuinuun, jl. juacicav. l-lovci JUrootte. I ?4EJSUv- Grover. i-??i' ..--y-... ...J. A. Crawford. Jf.ts I. M. French. LEWISTOJf . ....J. Loewenberir. ' IE. A nimmsim. ...Agent.. Corvajlx.13, Oregon. V1 - - ': v2no33vl. THE LEADING AMERICAN Fire., Insurance company ! CM j DEVOTED TC . FIRE INSURANCE EXCLUSIVELY. For the benefit of Oresron natrons, their business is re-insured, Two-Thirds in the HOME IUSUKASCE CO., of New York, and the NORTH BRITISH & MERCANTILE INSURANCE CO., of i,oncion ana t,dinDurgn, thus guaranteeing ia jroncies Dy asrgreaate assets HUlUUIUIUg u 83 ,564,087 &T ! Enabling the Company to take Largest Risks, and Offer the Amplest Security. $50,000 deposited with the State Treas urer, tor further protection or policy holders. Agent authorized to Issue and Renew Policies Direct, and "Without Reference. LOSSES HONORABLY ADJUSTED, and Promptly Paid, in U. S. Gold Coin. Rates on all classes of desirable risks placed as low as solvency to the Comrtanv ana protection to tne assured will admit. B. II. MAGILL, . Manager, San Francisco, Cal. E. Q. McCANDUsn & Co., Agents Corvallis, Oregon. 2.22m3 FIREMAN'S FUND INSURANCE COMPANY, OF SAN FRANCISCO. ESTABLISHED IN 1863 ! Assets, January 1, 1S72, over $850,000, in Gold. Fifty Thousand Dollars Deposited with the State Treasurer, in Compli ance with the Laws of the State of Oregon. - $ FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE I LOSSES FAIRLY ADJUSTED AND PROMPTLY PAID! HENRY DOHSE, AGENT, CORVALLIS, OREGON. GEO. F. GRA5T, Manager, Portland, Oregon. November 8, 1872. . ... 2:20m3 GREAT EXCITEMENT " AT ' The Bazaar of Fashion! MRS. E. A-KNIGHT HAS JCBT RECEIVED FULL STOCK CF FALL AND WINTER GOODS, COKSISTISO OF Millinery Articles, Hats, Sonnets, Rib- bong, Trimmings, Etc. - DBESSMAKING, And cutting and fitting ladies' and chil dren's garments In all tne Latest Styles. Great pains will be taken to show Goods. 37"Rooms first door South of City HotcL Mns. E. A. KNIGHT. A JOB WORK. WB ABB PBSPABKOTO EXECUTE EYER Y, DESCRIPTION PLAIN & ORNAMENTAL JOB WORK At Prices that Defy Competiton. ORDERS SOLICITED fOR POSTERS, (Plain or Colored) BILL-HEADS, LEGAL BLANKS, CIRCULARS, CARTES DE VISITE, BUSINESS CARDS, Etc.. ....Ete. ...Etc. I CALL AND EXAMINE SPECIMENS. AT TBS BENTON DEMOCRAT OFFICE, ! LIVERY, FEED, AND SALE INSTABLE.. O.W. HOUOK, Successor to Olark & Houck, ; PROPRIETOR. f HAVING PURCHASED THE IN; terestof Mh. CLAWKin the Ilorsesf. Buggies Carriages, etc. of the' above Estab lishinent, I am now prepared to carrv o the business in . SPLENDID STYLE I will spare neither labor nor expense to render my establishment a success. ' I will keep constantly on hand a supply ot ' GOOD HORSES, , ' SINGLE AND DOUBLE BUGGIES, CARRlfAGESP and everything connectth a first class - 1 Thankful for Dast natronasre. I exnect by honest and liberal dealing to deserve the continued natronase of the nublic. i Give me a trial. G. "W. HOUCK. vlno26tf. CORVALLIS Livery, Feed.andSale STABLE Main Street, Corvallis, Oregon. - SOL. KING Proprietor. HAYING PURCHASED THE ABO YE well-known Stable, I intend to make it one of the best in the State. Mv Rtoelr I is of the finest, and my turnouts always iieai, aiiu cieau. 1 mean business, and. I you want GOOD TEAMS AT LOW RATES, give us a call before going elsewhere. We invite the natronasre of the traveling public. Horses boarded bv the dav or week, and satisfaction cnarantepil. ThA best KCRSES and BUGGIES in the State al ways reauy lor use. "We have made this Stable FIRST CLASS m every respect, and NOW we say to our patrons, friends, and to everybody, knewn or unknown by us, or who know us; to strangers, or "any other man," call at the Corvallis Livery, Feed, and Sale Stable and you will get the worth of your money.: SOL. KING. Apktt. IStti 1S72. vlno52tf. F. E. EOBIKSOS. B. F. EOBINSOX. CORVALLIS, SAW . AND NORTn END OF TOWN P. E. Robinson '& Ero. PEOPEIETOES. HAVING LATELY RE-FITTED and improved oiir machinery, and Having a good Stock of MOUNTAIN FIR , Logs on hand, we will endeavor to keep such a Variety of Lnmber on Hand, that any and all Customers can be fi( tprl out IMMEDIATELY, or we can fill their bills on SHORT NOTICE. - Customers from a distance, sendins their orders, will receive AS PROMPT ATTENTION as if personally present. Rustic and Ceiling of all Kinds . made to order. :!:;; Flooring, Either Matched or Square Jointed, as desired. ALL LUMBER DRESSED BY OR UN- der the supervision of a Pbacticai. Me chanic, and will be done ia as good style as can be done elsewhere. i SEND IN rOUK ORDERS S I ("Remember the place North end o : a own. j&iao vvooaalwavs on hand."ra vlno49tf. PAINTING AND GRAINING. JACK SKEFPARD, HOUSE, SIGN, CARRIAGE AND ' ORNAMEKTAL PAEfTER. ' GLAZING DONE TO ORDER. ALL, JOBS PROMPTLY attended to with neatness and dispatch at my shop on Main street, Corvallis, Oregon, UuAFEB THAS THE CHEAPEST i v2uo7tt - , FARM FOR SALE. ; A FINE TRACT OF LANDj SITITA ted about ten miles South-west from Corvallis, and containing 320 acres, is com posed of prarie and timber land, is weH watered and is suitable for a grain or stock ranch or for both purposes. There is a line young orchard of about 500 choice trees on the premises. This ranch will be sold on reasenable teams. Terms of payment. $600.00 down and balance on time with le gal interest. .-..:; For particulars enquire at the Democrat; office, of G. W. OUIVEY. ... I Cohvai.lis, December 28th 1871." DR. J. W. VANDEN RERGH'S Celebrated Worm Syrup: V- FOR SALE BY - i ALLEN & WOODWARD., ALL ORDERS FOR WORM SYRUP ' should be addressed to J. W. Vanden . VlDOS'f Corvallis, Ocj. 11. 1S72. v2nolyl. CORVALLIS.