Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1879)
WEEKLY (OKYALLiS GAZETTE CORVALLIS. - - NOVEMBER 28, 1879 AT THE SAW-MILL. Yon, 'neatb the mill, I oat one day In peaceful revery sank profound. And watched tbe waters rush away. And marked tbe cumbrous wheel go round. The saws sprang flashing on my view It all appeared a dreamy maze They fiercely tore long channels through A fir trunk prone upon the ways. Tbe tree seemed conscious of Its pain; And, as the rending steel progressed, Thus moaned to me 1U mournful strain. While quivering throes convulsed Its breast. "At fitting hoar wast, thou inclined, O wanderer hither to repair: Thou art the fated one unkind For whom these teeth my bosom tear. " 'Tis tbon, o bopless one, for whom A shrine from me man's band shall make, Wherein, dark-chambered In thy tomb, Thy lasting si umber thou shalt take." Then dropped four planks! I saw and beard; My heart with sudden" fear grew chili; I sought to frame an answering word That Instant, io! the wheel stood still' MA'S OLD BEAD. Clara and Mary Merwin, sisters and orphans, were in the drawing room of their pleasant home on the edge of a beautiful village near the Missouri. Their mother had been dead several years. Their father had lately died, leaving them an estate, as they supposed, of the value of some forty thousand dol lars, but they had learned quite recently that the property was encumbered to such an extent that they were very likely to be deprived of it all. This discovery, as may be supposed, filled them with sadness and anxiety, and they were seated in silence, unable to read, to converse, to work, to do anything but brood over their great misfortune. While they were thus occupied with their thoughts a buggy drove up in front of the bouse, a man alighted, and the buggy drove away. The man must have been on the shady side ol fifty, to judge trom his gray hairs, although his face was indeed fresh and unwrinkled. He was dressed with re markable neatness, and his manner indi cated briskness as well as precision. In one hand he carried a small valise and in the other an umbrella, and he stepped quickly to the door and rang the bell In a few minutes he was ushered into the presence of the young ladies. "I'm obliged to introduce myself," he said, smiling and bowing in a courtly manner. "Abner Pierce. Here is my card professional card. You will per ceive that I am a lawyer in St. liouis, and presumably a respectable man Don't be afraid; I'm not here to hurt you, but to help you. I have the honor to call myself a friend of the family that is to say, although it is many years since I have seen any member of your family, I have always had the highest re gard for your now sainted mother, and nothing would please me better than to be of some service to her children." "We are happy to meet you," mur mured Clara. "Thank you. I happened to hear no matter how that you are in trouble, and have come up here in the belief that I can assist you. I hope that you will feel that you can trust me. I am actually an honest man, although a lawyer, and I mean well, though I express myself clumsily." "I am free to admit," said Clara, "that we need assistance and advice, and that we have not known to whom to look for it." "Very well. It is a good thing, no doubt, that I have come. Now sit down and tell me all about it." Clara Merwin, who, as the elder of the orphans was leader in everything, told how she and her sister had taken out let ters of administration upon her father's estate, when a man of whom they had never before heard put in an appearance, and presented a mortgage, with bond in cluded, executed by the late Mr. Merwin, upon all his real estate, for the sum of $40,000. Not content with prohibiting them from attempting to sell everything, he had tied up their money in bank, leaving them absolutely penniless. They had used their credit, but tradesmen were becoming impatient, and some had refused to supply them any further with out pay. "That's a bad case," said Mr. Pierce. "You need money that is the first thing to be attended to. You must let me act as your banker until I get you out of this scrape, and that won't be long, I hope. How much do you owe?" "More than one hundred dollars," an swered Clara. The old gentleman counted out two hundred dollars from a well-filled pocket- book, and handed it to her. "For your mother's sake," he said, when she refused to receive it, and he forced it on her in such a way that she could not help taking it. tie then ac cepted the young lady s invitation to make their house his home during his stay, and he went into dinner with them is there any place where can smoke?" he asked, when they returned to the sitting-room. "You can smoke here," said the impul sive alary. f& always smoked here, and we are used to it." So he took a meerschaum and some to bacco from his valise, and was soon puff ing away with an air of great content. "I can think better when I smoke," he said. "Did you ever have any legal advice m the matter ot that mortgage, Miss Merwin?" "Yes, sir," replied Clara. "Our law yer said it was a plain case against us, although it was strange that we never heard of the mortgage before." "Very strange. What is the name of the man who holds it?" "Alexander Campbell." "Hum. A good name, but a bad man, I am afraid. When and where can I see this man?" 1 He will be here this afternoon," an swered Clara. "He proposes, if we will make him a deed of the real estate, to give up the bond and mortgage, leaving our money in banks and the rest of the personal property." "Very liberal. Introduce me to him when he comes, as an old friend of the family, and not as a lawyer." Mr. Alexander Campbell called in the course of the afternoon, and was made acquainted with Abner Pierce, at whom he looked suspiciously; but his eyes fell when he met the old gentleman's intent gaze, Mr. Pierce glanced but slightly at the deed that was offered for the con sideration of the ladies, being occupied in studying the countenance of the man in whose favor it was drawn. "I can't decide upon it just now," he said at last. "As a friend of these lan dies standing, as I may say, in loco pa rentis I must make a few inquires con cerning the value of this property. Sup pose you come after supper, Mr. Camp bell, and suppose you bring that mort gage with you. I have no doubt it is all correct, but I would like to see it." Mr. Campbell assented to this and withdrew. Abner Pierce filled his pipe with nervous haste, but also with tobac co, and Mary brought him a light. "I know that you have some good news for us," she said. "I can see it in your face." "Not bad, my child, I hope and trust that it is very good. A good name but a bad man, I said, and it is true. I think I see my way out of this difficulty, and the money that I lent you is safe. But you mustnt interfere with me, young ladies, or object to it. xou must trust me and let me work it out my own way." After supper, when Abner .Fierce had enj'oyed another comfortable pipe, and conversed with the girls concerning their mother, as he had known her in her youth a subject upon which he grew quite eloquent Mr. Alexander Camp bell came in, bringing the deed and the mortgage, both of which he handed to Mr. Pierce for examination. "I have made inquiries concerning the property," said the old gentleman, "and am satisfied that it is not worth more than the amount of the mortgage, and would probably bring much less if sold at foreclosure. Your offer is a liberal one; but I must first look at the mort gage. This appears to be correct," he continued, when he examined the instru ment. "It is all properly acknowledged and the signature is undoubtedly that of Philip Merwin. I suppose the young ladies will go to the county seat to exe cute the deed. The girls' countenances fell at this sud den surrender to execute the deed. "This reminds me," said the lawyer, picking up the mortgage again, "of an occurrence that fell under my observa tion in Tennessee, where a friend of mine died suddenlv. leavincr a widow and one daughter. The widow was about to administer upon his estate, when a man unknown came forward and presented a mortgage similar to this, and for exactly the same amount. It was examined by lawyers who were familiar with the sig nature of the deceased and pronounced it correct. Although there was some thing strange about the affair, they could find no flaw in the instrument. It was particularly puzzling to one of them who thought he had transacted all the law business of the deceased. He got hold of the mortgage and brought it to me when I was in Nashville. I happened to have in my possession a very powerful magnifying glass that had been presented to me the most powerful single lens had ever seen. With this I examined the mortgage, and soon discovered that 'forty' had been raised from 'four. There was no mistake about it. I could easily see the marks of chemical erasure and the difference in the pen and ink between the 'raised' and the rest of the instrument. How the rascal got into the Recorder's office I don't know: but the record there had been altered in the same manner. He ran away, and it was not considered worth while to follow him. Very strange circumstance, wasn it, Mr. Campbell ?" Mr. Campbell was fidgeting uneasily in his chair, and made no reply. "Here is the glass," continued the old gentleman, taking it from his pocket "you can see yourself how well it magni fies. Now, as I look at this 'forty,' why, bless me, the same signs are visible that i saw m the lennessee mortgage! think you will be obliged to drop this Mr. Campbell. My Tennessee man name was Alexander Bell, and he has added a Camp to it since he came to Missouri." Campbell, his face red as flame reached out to take the document. "I believe I will take this, Mr. Camp bell, for fear of accident. What, do von think von can take it hv tnro.p Here is something that shoots five times Croing, are you Verv well, I don think you will be molested, if you will leave this part of the country and never return to it. It is barely possible that the estate of Philip Merwin may really owe you four thousand dollars. If so I advise you not to try to collect the debt, as such an attempt would land you in the penitentiary. Orood-night, Mr Campbell, and farewell." "What is it ? What does tbis mean ? asked Clara, as Mr. Pierce, rubbing his hands and smiling, bustled to fill his pipe. "Are you dull, my child ? The fellow is a swindler, and has been found out I guessed as much when I first heard of the affair, and was sure of it when you told me his name. You will soon be able to pav me my $200, and then we will straighten tip matters. Thank you Mary, you are very kind to give me light." "Don't yon mean to punish him ?' asked Mary. "It wouldn't pay. We could put him in the penitentiary, but you might lose $4000 by the job. By trying for forty thousand he lost the four that may have been justly his due. He will be far from here by morning, I have no doubt and good riddance to him. Ah! this is comfortable. I know that I feel better and I hope that vou do." The girls were sure that a great weight naa been lifted from their minds and hearts. Alexander Campbell, alias Bell, decamped, and Abner Pierce stayed a week with the orphans, during which time he arranged all their affairs satis factorily, and won their lasting gratitude and love. "How can we ever thank you for all you have done for us," said Clara, when he was about to leave. "It was for your mother's sake, my child. And for her sake, if I can ever help you, all I have is at your service." Abner Pierce has made visits to the orphans frequently since the event above narrated, and they have always had a cordial welcome for "ma's old beau." Genebous Feeding Pats. Creamery butter has gone to 30 cents per pound. Cheese has jumped to 10 cents per pound. The reason undoubtedly is the continued draught, which has kept pastures as bare and sere almost as in winter. Good dairymen commenced feeding in season, and thus kept their their stock up to a tolerable now oi miiK, what was lost in quantity being made up qualitv. Thaap, the grain leu mauetne milk rich in tJweonstituents that go to to make up butter and cheese. Those who have neglected to feed will suner, for, once a cow shrinks in her milk from lack of feed and water, it is impossible thereafter to bring her back to a full flow. Those who have suffered most are those who do not believe there is any good in agricultural papers, and those who read them superficially. The good dairyman never allows his stock to suffer even during the summer for want of food. The stock-breeder who keeps pace with improved agriculture never allows his stock to cease growing from the time it is fit for market until ready for the butcher. The progressive farmer never loses a crop for want of feeding to the soil. How to do all these in the most economical manner is the problem that each must solve for himself according to the snecial requirements in the case. There is one point in dairy-farming not generally considered, and that is that the larm should be getting richer every year. The products are hay, grass and corn, fed on the farm, and the products sold are simply the condensed product in the shape of butter and cheese, and the nogs fed upon the buttermilk and whey while the manure made may be applied to the land to keep up its fertility. Thus when necessity requires, maximum crops of grain may be raised at a maximum cost. Thus, although the dairyman may think he is getting light profits (and that they have been light for the last last two years is acknowledged) every thing now points to good prices the com ing winter. It is true, only those will reap the benefit of this who keep well posted as to the ways and means, through the reading of carefully edited agricul tural papers, and their own correct judgment founded thereon. It must, of course, be satisfactory to those who have not done this that have nobody to blame but themselves. Poisoning Heb Relatives. Investi gations in Madison county seem to indi cate that Mrs. Francis Shrouder, of Chit tenango, not only poisoned her mother, Mrs. Lowery Barnard, but also Mrs. Pope, aged eighty, who died in July, 1876, and Mr. Barnard, who died over a year ago. Dr. Manlius Smith, of the Syracuse University, found positive traces of arsenic in Mrs. Pope's stomach. The old lady had $800 in United States bonds in her bed, which were never found after she died. Mrs. Shrouder spent money very freely after the funeral. Mrs. Pope was buried in Truxton, Court land county, the day after her death. It is alleged that a Chittenango man se duced Francis at fourteen, and she lived as his mistress for some time. Mrs. Barnard opposed this, but her father up held the girl. She is now twenty-five years of age, and not very prepossessing in appearance. At the recent term of court in Madison county she and her husband were indicted for the murder of her mother. The testimony against her is said to be very strong. 1 A Day With Wagneb. Dutton Cook contributes to Belgravia an interesting chapter on the music of Wagner, with special reference to the work of the librettist. An extract is given from Roche's account of a day passed with the musician of the future, the former ham mering out the words, the latter the music, which is worth reproducing: "He came," says Roche, "at seven in the morning; we were at work without rest cr respite until midday. I was bent over my desk, writing, erasing: he was erect, pacing to and fro, bright of eye vehement of gesture, stiking the piano shouting, singing, forever bidding me "Go on! go on!" An hour, or even two hours after noon, hungry and exhausted, 1 let fall my pen. I was in a faint state "What s the matter .' he asked, "l am hungry." "True; I had forgotten all about that; let us have a hurried snack and go on again." Night came and found us still at work. I was shattered, stupefied ; my head burned, my temples throbbed. I was half mad with my wild search after strange words to fit the strange music. He was erect still, vigor ous and fresh as when we commenced our task, walking up and down, striking his infernal piano, terrifying me at last. as I perceived dancing about me on every side his eccentric shadow cast by the fantastic reflections of the lamp, and crying to me ever, "Go on!" go on!" The Aspabagtjs Bed. It is a good time now to prepare the ground for set ting out a bed of asparagus in the spring We have been just enlarging one made two years ago, and have proceeded in the following manner: First, a trench was dug two feet deep. This was filled half-full of rotted manure. Another trench was dug by the side of it, and the top dirt thrown in to nil up the farst hole The bottom of the second trench, being clay, was carried away and manure filled in, in its place. Thus the whole bed was gone over, and although it involved a good deal of hard work, yet we are sure it will pay. In digging the last trench, next to the plants set a year ago last spring, we were surprised to find the roots down in the ground to a depth of nearly two feet, and thoroughly perme ating the manure which was trenched in there before the asparagus was set. So it pays to take extra care at the start. A well prepared asparagus bed will last a family a lifetime, furnishing each spring, before any other vegetable arrives, one of the most delicious dishes from tha garden. It is classed everywhere as luxury, yet is so easily attained that any one if he chooses may have it, providing he is the owner of a spot of ground. Old Musical Scales. The important part played by music in the worship of Jehovah, and the development of the Jewish choral service, is sufficiently proved by the Old Testament; and there is an abumdance of treatises, both ancient and modern, on Greek scales or modes. But all this is of comparatively little importance to the musician and the student of modern music. It is true that some of the Greek scales the Dorian, the Phrygian, the Lydian and the Mixo-Lydian are said to be identical with the four authentic modes attributed to St. Ambrose, and to be still surviving in the Gregorian chant, and on rare oc casions modern musicians have made use of them. Beethoven, for instance, heads a movement in his great quartet in A minor, "canzona di ringraziamento in modo lidico ofi'erta alia privinita da un guarito," and Liszt and Rubenstoin have borrowed the augmented intervals of the old Eastern scales, which have survived in the music of the gypsies and of some Salvonic nations. The gypsy heroine of Bizet's Carmen also is well characterized by a theme containing the superfluous second. But these few survivals, intro duced with the distinct purpose of gain ing local color, do not constitute a real organic connection between the ancient and modern systems. London Quarterly Review. Dr. R. V. Pierce, the Representative in Congress from the Buffalo, New York district, is said to be worth $1,000,000 or more. In 1872 he went to that city, a penniless vender of patent medicines of his own manufacture. His success illustrates the advantage of judicious advertising. Miss Linda Deitz is winning golden opinions in London. She has been transferrel from the Haymarket to the Prince of Wales Theater, where the play "Mother and Son," has been produced under the title "Duty," Miss Deitz play ing her original role of Marcella. Scientific Intelligence. Underground telegraph cables are now in successful operation between a number of European cities, such as Cologne and Berlin, Cologne and Elberfield, Frankfort and Strasburg. and Hamburg and Cuxba ven. Their tatal length equals about 1,500 miles. Peterman's Mitthciiungen estimates the population olthe world for 1877 at 1,429, 145,000 souls, distributed among the con tinents as follows, viz: Europe, 312,498, 480; Asia, 813 000,000; Africa, 205,219,500; Australia and adjacent Islands, 4,411,300; America, 86,116,000. A Prussian inventor has patented, as a new article of manufacture, a material for clothing, consisting for the greater part of sponge. Tbis material, it is claimed, rapidly absorbs tbe perspiration, is a poor conductor of beat, can be readily cleansed, and is very flexible, and so pre vents chafing. Dr. Anderson gives iodine instead of quinine in cases of intermittent fevers, with, he claims; highly satisfactory re sults. Tbe iodine is administered in the form of the tincture, with some potassium of iodide added to prevent the precipita tion of the iodine. If the facts are as claimed, the discovery is a valuable one, owing to the cheapness and inexhausti ble supply of the substitute, Our readers who are subject to the disa greeable and painful effects of poison ivy and other vegatable poisons, will be glad to learn that Dr. Ward finds a valnable antidote in Labarraque's solution of chlo ride of soda. The solution is applied three or tonr times daily, to the skin. When the latter is broken, the solution should be diluted with from three to six parts of water. Prof. Rcvnold8. of Dublin, has discov ered a new explosive compound which, it is claimed, is safe to transport, since it is composed of two separate substances, which are mixed only when desired tor use- These substances are potassium chlorate seventy-five parts, and sulphurea, tnenew explosive cotnpouna, iwenty-nve parts. Sulphurea is obtained chiefly from one of the waste products in the manufacture of illuminating gas. The depth of the Niagara River below the falls has at last been satifactorily measured by a corps of government sur veyors. Approaching the American Falls in small boat, they cast the lead so near the foot of the fall's that great jets of waer were occasionally darted over them. The lead ran down to 83 feet. This was quite near the shore, where an eddy en abled them to make their first measure ment. Passing out from this spot they were carried rapidly down stream, and their next two measurements were 100 and 192 feet. Had it been possible to safely approach tbe middle of the river near the foot of the falls, the depth would most probably have been greater. A Notobiotjs Duelist. In most coun tries where the practice of the duello still prevails, there are a few persons who in dividually illustrate the absurdity of this mode of settling disputes. They pass their leisure time in shooting galleries and fencing saloons, and when any one calls them out they pink him or shoot him for a certainty, thus proving, ac cording to the test of the trial by battle, that they must be always right, though, as it happens, they are generally not. France abounds in such individuals, and Spain possesses at least one in the person of the Marquis de Gil d'Olivares. This hidalgo is master of all possible weapons, and has the mania of fighting for his friends. It is no doubt, an - amiable feature in a man's character to defend the absent; but when he carries the principal to the length of slaying the backbiters one is compelled to admit that virtue in the superlative degree has a strong sem blance to the opposite. The Marquis has just fought a duel at Ostend with a French gentleman who ventured to steal the good name of Marshal Martinez Cam- Sos. As always happens when the arquis d'Olivares is a combatant, his adversary got the worst of it, receiving a fearful saber-out, which renders his re covery extremely doubtful. If M". de Bouvie dies, he will be the third victim offered up by the Marquis on the shrine not of friendship merely, but of his friendship for Spanish Marshals. In 1858 he killed his man for backbiting Marshael Jxarvaez.andm 1862 he avenged an insult to Marshal O'Donnel in similar deadly fashion. Anne Boleyn and Henby VIII. I wrote lately to your Majesty that if the lady (Anne) could only be kept away from Court for a little while the Queen might still regain her influence over the King, for she does not seem to bear any ill-will toward her. Quite lately he sent her some cloth, begging her to have it made into shirts for him. The lady, hearing of this, sent for the person who had taken the cloth one of the principal gentlemen of the bed-chamber and al though the King himself confessed that the cloth had been taken to the Queen by his order, she abused the bearer in the King's presence, threatening that she would have him punished, severely. In deed, there is talk, as I am told, of dis missing, to please the lady, some of the officers of the royal household, and if so, the said gentlemen will not be the last, for some time back, tha wife of the young Marquis (of Dorset) and two other ladies, most devoted to the queen, and in whom she found more comfort and con solation than in any others, were at her request dismissed from Court and sent home. Simancas Archives. A Queen's Mishaps. The old, old stary. Great effects from trifling causes, Do you know the original cause of the dethronement of ex-Queen Isabella of Spain, the coronation of Amedee, the un timely death of his wife, the German French war, the fall of the Empire of France, France's loss of Alsace and Lorraine, $1,000,000,000, and heaven knows what besides? Thumb on nose and twirled fingers. 'Pon my word! Twas in this wise: One day Marshal Prim called upon Queen Isabella to beg her to change her Ministry. She re ceived him kindly and begged that he would call the next day with a list of the new Cabinet. He retired delighted, un til, as he neared the door, he saw in a mirror Her Majesty's thumb on her nose and her fingers twirling. Quick as lightning he turned, bowed low, and left to exert all his power to dethrone the Queen, to whom until the hour he had been devotedly attached. Paris Cor respondence N. O. Picayune. There are some things that are as well kept dark. It isn't policy to throw light upon such a subject as an open barrel of gunpowder, for instance. f Yonkers Gazette. We hear that Mrs Julia A. Smith has given her husband a wig, and the ques tion is, was - Mr. Parker bald when she married him, or have the exigencies of married life already removed his hair? Physical Education For Girls. BY NATHAN ALLEN, M. D. Fifty years ago or more, scarcely any attention was paid in education to tbe physical system; the body was not recog - j nized as of any account in mental im- j provement. But as tbe principles of j physiology became better understood in their practical applications, it was found j that they sustained most intimate rela- i tions to education, and the more thor- j ougbly this science is understood, the ; more profoundly is one convinced of the 1 importance of observing the laws of the j physical system in their connection with i mental culture. Great advances have been made in the i physical sciences, and in the application j of sanitary law to the prevention of dis- i ease, to preservation of health, and to human welfare; but in every stage and department of education, the importance of physical development in its relation to mental culture is underrated. When it becomes fully understood that education, in all its manifold parts and applications, is dependent upon the brain, and that the functions of this organ are very de pendent upon the condition and develop ment of the body, then it will be seen that there is a right and a wrong way in 'all attempts at mental improvement, and that, in order for the greater success, an observance of physical laws is indispen sable. In no part of female education is there so much need of reform as in that of ohvsieal culture. If the standard of scholarship is to be raised higher and higher in all our schools for girls, and no greater attention is to be paid to the laws ot lieaitn ana me, grave consequences may well be apprehended. If this educational pressure was con fined to a few individuals, there would not the same danger, but when the great majority of our girls are thus crowded, its effects become widely extended and far- reaching into the future, lhe remark has been made"Educate a woman and you educate a race." This saying is full of meaning, and capable ot different inter pretations. Its meaning or application must depend upon the term "educate" how and in what way it is done. This "educating" should have reference to the future, as well as to the present; to the body, as well as to the mind; for the highest developments of the brain and nerve tissue, alone will never go far to wards educating a race in fact, it will in evitably run out. God has established most intimate rela tions between one generation and anoth er, by the laws of inheritance. As yet these laws are very imperfectly under stood, but enough is known to show that these laws depend upon certain condi tions, which must be carefully studied and taken into account. These condi tions and laws cannot always be ignored or set aside with impunity. While it may require several genera tions for the development of these laws, the first links in the chain seem the more important. If an education that breaks down and impairs the physical energies of the system tends to defeat the wise operations of those laws if this supreme devotion to mental culture alone, combined with other influences in society, is calculated to establish gener ally a "standard of living so high and ex pensive that the great majority of the young people have neither the means nor the physical strength to adopt and carry it out if such is the result of this state of things, that it must and does interfere di rectly, with the duties of domestic life and the objects of the marriage institu tion, is it not time to pause and consider whither, as a people we are drifting? It may be said that education is not the cause of such a state of things or con dition of society, and the evils that threaten, but it constitutes the leading, if not the most powerful, agency in society. This education commences ear ly with tbe girl, shapes her character and habits for life; and the influence of women dictates the fashions of tbe day, and moulds our domestic institutions. The high pressure of educational influ ences does not extend much farther back than one generation, and, as a people, we are just entering upon the second, but we and already unmistakable signs of phys ical degeneracy. The registration and census reports are bringing forth startling facts in respect to decline in the birth rate, to the diminution of marriages, to the permanence of the family institution and changes in population, etc Should the same causes continue and increase, as they may, Corresponding results may fol low, and the next generation will witness in tiiose matters still greater changes. Inasmuch as the primary cause of the evils that have been alluded to is, we be lieve, closely connected with the school system, we would earcestly call the at tention of teachers and the friends of ed ucation, to consider if some reform can not be effected, and especially in tbe case of girls. Said President Elliot a few days since, in addressing the Alumni of Harvard University: "Now everything depends with us, and in the learned pro fessions, upon vigor of body. The more I see of the future of young men that go out from these walls, the more it is brought home to me that professional success, and success in all tbe learned callings, de pends largely upon the vigor of the body, and the men who win great professional distinction have that as the basis of their activity." Now if young men must depend for success in life upon the vigor of the body is it not equally important for young wo men, who are to be their competitors in the learned protessions, and in various departments of business, but what is more important, who are to be, in the broadest and fullest sense, the "educators of the race?" $66 A WEEK in your own town and no capital risked You can give the business a trial without expense. The best opportunity ever offered for those willing to work. Tou should try nothing else until you see for yourself what you can do at the business we offer. No room to explain here. Tou tan devote all your time or only your spare time to the business, and make great pay for every hour you work. Women "make as much as men. Send for special private terms and par ticulars, which we mail free. $6 outfit free. Don't complain of hard times whileyou have such a chance. Address H. HALLETT k. CO., Portland, Maine. 16:31yl $15 TO $6000 A YEAR, or $5 to $20 a day in vour own locality. jo nsit. wo men do as well as men. Many make more than the amount stated above. No one can fail to make money fast. Any one can do the work. You can make from 50cts to $2 an hour by devoting your evenings and spare time to the business. It costs nothing to try the business. Nothing like it for money making ever offered before Business pleasant and strict ly honorable. Reader, if you want to know all about the best paving business before the public send ns your address and we will send you full particulars and private terms free; samples worth $5 also free: vou can then make up your mind for yourself Address GEORGE STINSON CO., Portland, Maine. 16:31yl SAFJ & LOCK COMPANY, C4PIIA!. - - 1, 000,000 General ( ffifcs Mid 'annfiictory CINCINNATI, OHIO. Pacific Branch, i No. 210 Sansome St., S. F I Agency for Orecon and Washington Territory, with iiAWUBl, ihjuu ac w., romantt. HALL'S PA! EST CONCRETE I FIRE-PROOF SAFES. i Have been tested by the most disastrous confla grations in the country. ! They are thoroughly fire proof. They are free from dampness. ! Their snneriorilv is bevond Question. Although about 160,000 of these safes are now in use, ana nunarcas nave oeen lesieo. oy some of the most disastrous conflagrations in the countrv. there is not a single instance on record wherein one of them ever failed to preserve its contents perieetly. HALL'S PATENT DOVETAILED TENON AND OR00VB BURGLAR-PROOF AFE!S. Have, never been broken open and robbed by burglars or robbers. Hall's burelar work is protected by letters patent, and bis work cannot be equaled lawfully. His natent bolt is superior to any in use. Ilis patent locks cannot be picked by the most skillful experts or uurgiars. Bv one of the-greatest improvements known the Gross Automatic Movement, our locks are operated without any arbor or spindle passing turnugn me aoor ana inwj me iuc&. Our locks cannot be opened or picked by bur glare or experts, (as in case of other locks), and we will put Irom Jji.uuu o iu,uuu ueuiuu mem uj tune against an equal amount. The most skilled Workmen only are employed Thpir work mnnot be excelled. Hall's Safes and Locks can be elied on at all times. They are carsfully and thorughly constructed THEY ARE THE BEM.SaEE Made in America, or any other country. One Thousand Dollars To any person who c?n prove that one of Hall's patent ourgiar-prooi sbics una ever uecu broken open and robbed by burglars up to tbe present time. B. S. WILLIAMS: Agent for Oregon and W. T. Ofller -wills Howlej, Kodd Co.. - ' 28febl6:9tl". Portland Don't Boys. Dont be impatient, no matter if things do go wrong sometimes. Don't give tbe ball a kick and send it into a mud-puddle, because it would not go straight where you threw it. Do not send the marble against the fence, and thus break your best alley, because your clumsy fingers could not hit the center. Do not break your kite string all to pieces because it will not come down from the tree at the first jerk. It will take you three times as long to get it down afterward. Do not give your little brother an angry push and a sharp word if he cannot see into the mysteries of marble playing or hoop willing at the first lesson. You were once as stupid as he is, although you have forgotten it. What in the world would become of you if your mother had no more patience than you? If, every time you come near her when she was busy she thrust you off with a cross word? Dear, kind, lovine mother, who never ceases to think of you, to care tor you, wno keeps you so nicely clothed, and makes such nice things for you to eat. What if she were so impatient that you would be half the time afraid to sneak to her. to tell her of your own troubles at school or at play? Ah, do not grieve your mother by your impatience and your crossness. Eees Hamlin. Emmett F. Wbenn. DRAYACE ! DRAY AGE! Hamlin & Wrenn, Propr's AV1NG JUST RETURNED FROM Kulem with a new truik. and having leased the bam formerly occupied by James Eg- lin, we are now prepared to ac an ainus oi D RAYING AND HAULING, either in tbe city or country, at the lowest living rates. Can be found at the old trucK stana. Jt share of the public patronage resjicctfully solic ited. Corvullis, Dec. 27. 1878. 15:52 JOB PRINTING. THE Gazette Job Printing House IS NOW PREPARED TO DO Plain and Ornamental Printing, At neat and Cheap as it can be done by any Office on the Coast, Mil Heads, Letter Beads Mote heads, sta.einenta, Piotrammet, Ball Tickets. Invitations Circulars, Bulnes Cards. ViBitla; Tarda, Labels. Dodgers, pes eci esal Blanks' Small Pesters, Knveloi tea. sUalpplas; Receipts, Order Books, Unas, Tajrs. ft.te.. Etc jEa-Orders by mail promptly filled. Esti mates furnished. AUGUST KNIGHT, CABINET M4KEBi AND UNDERTAKER, Cor. Second and Monroe Sts., COR V A LL1S. - - OEESOS. Keeps constantly on hand all kinds of PUBNITUBE COFFIN8 AND CASKETS. Work done to order on short notice, and at reasonable rates. Corrallis. Jen. 1. 1877. Utf BOOKS WHICH ARE BOOKS. Good Books for A. II." Works which should t fnilTlr? Ill avanir Ilk.-.. within the reach of , , . . . . .w. Hwaa if en tertain, instruct and improve. Copies will sent by return post, on receipt of price. jxeio j-nysioqnomy : or Burns of Charalr o manifested through TV, ,,,,-, i?'. nal forms, and especially in the Human Face Divine. With more tlian One Thousand Illus trations. By Samuel R. Wells. 768 pages. Heavy muslin. $5.60. Myaropattoc Encyclopedia ; A system of Hveien e 'B oi .anatomy, .Physiology of the Human Body ; Preservation of Health : Dietetics and Cookery; Theory and Practice of Hygienic Treatment; Special Pathology aud Therapeutics, including the Nature, Causes Symptoms and Treatment of all Known Dip eases. By R. T. Trail, M. D. Nearlv 1000 ages. $4.00. Vedlock; or The Right Relations of the Sexes. A Scientific Treatise, disclosing the Laws of Conjugal Selection. Showing Who May and Who May Not Marry. By Samuel R. Wells. $1.00. How to Read ; and Hints in Choosing the Best 13O0KS, witn a Clasaihed List of Works of Bio graphy, History, Criticism, Fine Arts, Poetry, Fiction, Religion, Science, Language, etc. Bv Amelie V. Petitt. 220 pages. 12 mo, muslin. $1.00. How to Write: a Manual Letter-Writincr. Mnalin How to Talk; a Manual of Convenm!;, Debate, with mistakes in Speaking corrected 75c. How to Behave; a Manual of Republican Eti- lc" auu uiue to uorrect .Personal Habits, with Rules for Debating Societies. Muslin 75c. How to do Business ; a Pocket Manual of Practi cal Aiiairs ana a guide to Success, with a col lection of Legal Forms. Muslin, 75c. Choice of Pursuits; or What to Do and How to Educate Each Man for his Proper work, de scribing Seventy-five Trades and Professions and theTalents and Temperaments required , Bv N. Sizer. 1 .00. 1 Expression, its Anatomy and Philosophy, with vt,(n.nw.n T.i 3 1 . . . . uuuiciuub j.,uia, auu upwaras oi vo illustra tions. $1.00. How to Paint; Designed for Tradesmen. Mer chants, Mechanics, Farmers and the Profession al Painter. Plain and Fancy Painting, Guild hag, Graining, Varnishing, Polishing, Paper Hanging, Kalsominingand Ornamenting, For mulas for Mixing Paint in Oil or Water. By Gardner. $1.00. Combe's Constitution of Man. Considered in relation to External Objects. $1.50. Combe's Lectures on Phrenology. With an Essay on the Phrenological mode of Investigation, and a Hit torical Sketch. By Andrew Board man, M. D. $1.50. How to Bead Character. A new Illustrated Hand-book of Phrenology and Physiognomy. With 170 engravings. Muslin, $1.25. How to Baise Fruits. A Guide to the Cultiva tion aud Management of Fruit Trees, and of Grapes and Small Fruits. By Thomas Gregg. Illustrated. $1.00. Letters to Women on Midwifery and the Diseases of women. With General Management of Childbirth, the Nursery, etc. For Wives and Mothers. $1.50. Science of Human Life. By Sylvester Graham. With a Copious Index aud Biographical Sketch of the Author. $3.00. Phrenological Journal and Life Illustrated. De voted to Ethmology, Physiology, Phrenology Physiognomy, Psycology, Biography, Educa tion, Art, LiteTature, with Measures to Re form, Elevate and Improve Mankind Physi cally, Mentally and Spiritually. Published Monthly in octavo form, at $2.00 a year in advance, or 2 cents a number. New volumes January and July. Inclose amount in a registered letter or by a P. O. order for one or for all of the above, and address S. R. WELLS & CO., Publishers, 737 Broadway, New York. Agents wanted. RUPTURE CURES! From a Merchant. Dayton, W. T. Feb. 10, 1879. W. J. Home, Proprietor California Elastic Truss Co., 720 Market street, San Francisco Dear Sir: The Truss I purchased of you one year ago ha j proved a miracle to me. I have been ruptur ed forty years, and wore dozens of different kinds of Truaies, all of which ruined my health, aa they were very injurious to my back and spine. Your valuable Truss is as easy as an old shoe and is worth hundredsof dollars to me, as it affords me so much pleasure. I can and do advise all, both ladies and gentlemen, afflicted, to buy and wear your modern improved Elastic Truss imme diately. I never expect to be cured, but am saty isfied and happy with the comfort it gives me Ko wear it. It was the best $10 I ev-r invested .in my lite. You can relerany one to me, ana l win be happy to answer any letters on its merits, remain, yours, respectfully. D. D. Bunnell. Latest Medical Endorsements-. Martinez, Cal.,Fob. 17, 1879. W. J. Home. Proprietor California Elastic Truss Co., 720 Market street, 8. F. Dear Sir : In regard to your Cal. Elastic Truss, I would say that f have carefully studied its mechanism, ap plied it in practice, and I do not hesitate to say that for all purposes for which Trusses are worn it is the b st Truss ever offered to the public. Yours truly. J. H. Cabothers, M. D. Endorsed by a Prominent Medical Instl tale. San Fbancisco, March 6, 1879. W. J. Home, Esq. Dear Sir . You ask my opinion of the relative merits of your Patent Elastic Truss, as compared with other kinds that have been tested under my observation, and in reply I frankly state, that from the time my at tention was first called to their simple, though highly mechanical and philosophical construction, together with easy adjustibility to persons of all ages, forms and sfzes. I add this further testi monial with special pleasure, that the several persons who have applied to me for aid in their cases of rupture, and whom I have advised to try yours, all acknowledge their entire satisfaction, and consider themselves highly favored by the possession of your improved Elastic Truss. Yours tiuly, Barlow J. .Smith, M. D. Proprietor of the Hygienic Medical Institute 635 California street, San Francisco. A Remarkable Cure. San Francisco, Oct. 26, 1879. W. J. Home, Proprietor California Elastic Truss, 720 Market street, San Francisco Dear Sir: I am truly grateful to you for the wonder ful CURE your valuable Truss has effected on my little boy. The double Truss I purchased from you has PERFECTLY CURED him of his pain ful rupture on both sides in a little over six months. The Steel Truss he had before I bought yours caused him cruel torture, and it was a hap py day for us all when he laid it aside for the CALIFORNIA ELASTIC TRUSS. I am sure that all will be thankful who are providentially led to give your Truss a trial. 'Vou may refer any one to me on the subject. Yours truly, Wm. Peru, 638 Sacramento St. This is to certify that I have examined the son of Wm. Peru, and find him PERFECTLY CURED of Hernia, on both sides. L. Dexter Ltfobd, M. D. Surgeon and Physician. Trusses forwarded to all parts of the United Stales at our expense, on receipt of price. Send Stamp tor Illustrated Catalogue and Price List. Giving full information and rules for measuring Califoria aMJSBiSSr 720 Market Street, 8. F, AAAA A MONTH guaranteed. $12 a fj JlllM day at home made by the indus- ZraJnll I trious. Capital not required; we (IVU W will start you. Men, women, boys and girls make money faster at work for us than at anything else, xne worn is ngui, ana pleasant, and such as anyone can go right at. Those who are wise who see this notice will send us their addresses at once and see for themselves. Costly outht ana terms iree. now is we vims. Those already at work are laying up large sums of moner. Address TRUE 4 CO., Augusta, Maine. 16:31yl