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About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1880)
WEEKLY CORYALLIS GAZETTE CORVALLIS, JANUARY 30, 1880 BOTH SIDES OF IT. t Two steamers am a riogin' de bell, Listen to de warnin'; One goes to heb'o and one to hell Karly in de mornin'. Ob! dorkies git on bo'd dls craft, Listen to de warnin'; We's k wine to start de gospel raft Early in de mornin'. Dls is de only line to take, Listen to de warnin'; To get to beb'n widou t mistake, Early in de mornin'. De debbel runs de ndder line, Listen to de warnin'; He's runners ont to bab yon Jine, Early in de mornin'. Don't beah a word de debbel say, Listen to de warnin'; . Wfe's gwine to start at break ob day, Early in de mornin'. To cotcb all sinners, such as you. Listen tndewar&lo'; D-4 debbel's steamer's painted new, Early in de mornin'. But if yon git on bo'd wld him, Listen to de warnin'; 'TIs bell yon will be landed in, Early in de mornin'. Doom oF the Czar. The Berlin correspondent of the London Daily News has received from St. Petersburg a copy of a proc lamation issued by the Revolution Committee on the day that the Czar returned to &t. Petersburg. Jt reads as follows: On the 9th of this month, on the Moscow and Kursk Eailwa', by or der of the Executive Committea, an attempt was made on the life of Al exander 11. by means of an explosion. The attempt failed. We do not find it convenient to publish at the pres ent time the reason of the failure We are convinced that our agents and our party will not be dishearten ed at the failure of the attempt, but will gain from it a new experience, a lesson of precaution, and at the same time fresh consciousness of their own power and of the possil ility of a sue cessful issue. Addressing ourselves to all honest Russian citizens who value liberty, to whom the national will and the national interests are sacred, we once aain point to Alex ander II. as the personification of a despicable despotism of all that is cowardly and sanguinary. The reign of Alexander II. from the beginning to the end is a lie, in which the fam ous emancipation of the serf ends with Makolfs circular. From the commencement to the end it has been devoted to the consolidation of the classes hostile to the people, and the destruction of everything by which the people lived and wished to live. The will of the people was never so contemptuously disregarded and trampled on. The present reign has supported by every means all those who rob and oppress the peo pie, and at the same time systematic ally exterminate all who are honest and devoted to the nation. There is not one village that has not supplied martyrs, who have been deported to Siberia for supporting communal in terests and for protesting against the administration. From among the in telligent classes tens of thousands drag in an interminable string to Si beria to the mines, exclusively for having served the cause of the peo ple in the cause of liberty and in or der to attain a higher level of devel opment. The ruinous procees of ex termination of every independent element is at last simplified. Alexan der II. is the usurper of the nation's right, and the main pillar of reaction, the chief author of the judicial assas sination. Fourteen executions weigh on his conscience. Hundreds of suffer ers cry for vengeance. Ho deserves to die for the blood he has spilled, for all the suffering he has inflicted. He de serves to die, but it is not alone with him that we have to do. Our object is the national welfare. Our task is to emancipate the people and make them masters of their fate. If Alex ander II. would recognize what a dreadful calamity he is inflicting on Russia, how unjust and criminal the oppression be creates, and renouncing his authority, would transfer such to an Assembly freely elected by uni versal suffrage and provided with in structions by its electors, then only would wo leave Alexander II. in peace,and forgive him all his offenses. Until then, a struggle, an implacable struggle, while there remains in us a drop of blood, until, over the ruins of despotism, there waves the standard of national liberty, and the wLU of the people shall become the law of Rus sian life. We appeal to all Russian citizens to support our party in this struggle. It is no easy task to sup port the whole pressure of the gov ernment forces. Tho failure of the at tempt of the 19th of November is an instance of the many difficulties with which even separate and comparative ly unimportant episodes in the strug gle are attended. We want general support in order to break up despot ism and return to the people its right and authority. We demand and ex pect such support from Russia. St. Petersburg, JNov. 22, 1879. Nobody expects any Congressman to distinguish himself for the first two -weeks. After that it is expected that they will throw thpir whole souls into a "here" at roll-call. A man was standing on a corner the other day, gazing around at nothing in particular, when a friend stepped up and said: "I see you have a mourning band on your hat." "Yes, I have; it's for my mother-in-law," replied the man in mourning. "Why, I did not know she was dead." "Well, she isn't, she's re covered." A "drummer" for a New York house called on a merchant recently and handed him a picture of his betrothed instead of his business card, saying he represented that establishment. The merchant examined it carefully, re marked that it was a fine establishment, and returned it to the astonished man, with the hope that he would soon be ad mitted into partnership . The last sean of the drummer and merchant they were talking about the outrages in Maine. A Literal Application. Professor H., one of the oldest tu tors of one of tho oldest colleges in the country, was as accentric as he was I earned. His j udgment any w here in the field of natural science and philosophy was to bo taken as law. No one ever thought of questioning it. The mathematical knot was never wrought which he could not sever. On a certain occasion Professor H. wanted a servant. Several applicants presented themselves were tried and discarded. Finally one came whose looks the pedagogue liked. "Now, look ye, my man," the sav ant said, "if you can remember and carry out one course of procedure, I think wo may get on. I cannot afford to waste words, nor can I afford to find thoughts for a stupid servant. You must do your own thinking and understand my wants at a hint. For instance, when I say 'Bring me a ra zor, you will comprehend that 1 am going to shave; so you will under stand that I want hot water, soap, towel, comb, brush, and so on. And so with everything. My initial order you will take as a cue, and of your own thought supply all possible ac cessories and contingents. Tho new servant proved himself equal to the occasion, and his master was more than satisfied. One day the professor came home pale and shaky. Said he to his ser vant: "John, I am not feeling well. Go and call the doctor." The man bowed and departed. An hour passed two hours and yet no doctor and no servant, rinal ly, however, the doctor arrived, and in a moment more in came the ser vant. "How is thin, John," demanded the professor. " Why bavo you been so longr "You told me to call the doctor, sir." "Aye, you could have dono it in ten minutes. "But, sir, you told me you were not well. 1 took your simple order as a cue to all you might need. 1 found the doctor absent and left word for him. Then I went to call watchers in case you should require attendance through the night. Then I called upon your lawyer, in case you should desire to make your will. And then sir, I had to hunt up the undertaker, that he might have all in readiness in case" "Stop, stop, John! That will do. Bless me! you can be literal in yoar application of a hint." "Yes, sir. Any further orders, sir?" "Not now, John. You may go." The professor is still living, and John still serves him American Cartridges. Russia was among the first to make use of the American metallic cartridges, and she attempted in vain to imitate them. After wasting 10,000,000 of cartridges made of inferior material, she wisely con cluded to buy here, as other foreign na tions have since done. Some of the American cartridge sent to Russia were subjected to the unparalleled test of a five weeks soaking in the waters of Mew York haibor. the vessel carrying them having sunk off Staten Island on her way out. They were fished up as good as new, ana, triumphantly passing the or deal of a new test of their firing quality, went on their way again, and have, no doubt, long since added their quota to the return of casualties, rorgood cart ridges American copper is needed, a fact which the Europeans are beginning to learn. Even so long ago as the days of the mound-builders it was discovered that our Lake Superior region produced a copper ore of uncommon purity. Ore of ei al purity is not, it would seem, to be found elsewhere, and perhaps the pro cess of annealing is not so well under stood abroad. At all events, the brass made of the foreign copper, abounding in tne suipnurets, lacks tbe necessary strength and ductility, and for some rea son the metallic cartridges made abroad are liable to deteriorate in quality. Dur ing her war with Turkey, Russia pur chased large quantities of brass here, one Connecticut hrm alone supplying $2,000, 000 worth of sheet brass. Other govern ments have, no doubt, been purchasers. Ready-made cartridges have also been sent abroad in such quantities that a mil lion has become the 'init of calculation. Three forms of cartridges are given in the illustrations one showing ihe United States Government cartridge another the Peabody-Martini cartridge, and the largest the Sharp or Remington special long-range cartridge. The Gov ernment cartridge contains seventy grains of powder and a hardened bullet, com posed ot one part ot tin and sixteen parts lead, weighing 495 grains. The Peabody Martini has eighty-five grains of powder and a bullet of the same composition, weighing 480 grains The long-range bullet has one part of tin to fourteen parts lead, and weighs 550 grains, the charge of powder being 100 grain-. The advantages of the heavier cartridge are well known in the experiences of the Turkish war already referred. Whatever else they may lack, the Turks have cer tainly shown superior intelligence in the armament of their troops. The English, who use the same gun, had on a smaller scale an experience similar to that of the Turks. The rifles used by the rifle bri gade in the campaign against the Afghans were sighted for 2,000 yards, and at 2,100 yards were found effective. The rifles with which our own army is provided are sighted to 1,200 yards, as will be seen from the cut on page 450, showing the military sight. Some of the sights used by riflemen in long-rango shooting are also shown, the Vernier sight and a sight combining a spirit-level and a wind gauge. The ordinary Vernier will regis ter to the thousandth of an inch, and Verniers have been made so as to regis ter the twenty thousandth of an inch, these finer sights being used to regit' ate the ordinary r'ghts. These very fine sights are not adapted to military ser vice, in which the rifle is subjected to a very different usage from that prevailing at Creedmoor, where the long range rifle man is able to give his weapon all the Care that a musician would take of his precious Stradivari us violin or bis Tourte bow. Scribner's Monthly. An English paper advertises a book entitled "The Amateur Poacher." Some thing in the way of "Hints to Young Burglars" and "The Complete Forger" tioir annn 1 ik nTtOnlol Austria and Prussia in European History There is nothing more remarkable in history than the simultaneous aggran dizement of the House of Hapsburg, both eastward and westward, at the close of the fifteenth and the commencement of the sixteenth century. Before that date it had indeed occupied a consider able position. On the extinction of the House of iJabenberg it nad wrested Aus tria, after a sharp struggle, from the Ot tokar of Bohemia, and had given more than one Emperor to Germany. But its position was the reverse of undisputed. It was in reatity tne iear oi tne mrKs and of the French, and the consequent recognition of the necessity of some kind of union among heterogeneous princi palities and powers which finally made the Empire of Germany hereditary in the House of Hapsburg and united it to the crowns of Bohemia and Hungary. The union was not altogether willing; the decree of fate was long struggled against. But t'ae fall of Constantinople in 1453, the warlifce poncy oi tne X rencn Kings and the all but successful in trigues of Francis the First to be elected Roman Emperor settled tbe question. The history of the House of Austria in its broader features for the two centu ries which followed is the history of the double struggle against her two great enemies east and west. The final defeat of the Turks before Vienna, and the vic tories of Eugene and Louis of Baden on the Rhine and the Danube at the close of the seventeenth and the commence ment of the eighteenth century, altered the situation forever. The huge ever grown dominion of the House of Haps burg was no longer a necessity as a de fence against the Turks, and tbe world soon began to find it out. It may sound paradoxical, but the fact is that the pow er of the Hapsburgs was destroyed by its own victories. Meanwhile, in Ger many anotber power was arising wbicb had no foreign dominions or alien sub jects, and therefore considered itself a better guardian of German interests at home and equally able to protect tnem to the West. The statesmen of France made no short-sighted calculation in allying themselves with the Hapsburgs against the Hohenzollerns in the great struggle of the Seven Years' War. But the stars in their courses fought against them, and against the French Empire when it aimed at accomplishing tne same object. Jttos bach was in this sense the forerunner of Gravelotte, and Leuthen of Sadowa. The peace of Hubertsburg led inevitably to that of Jfrague, and tne treaty oi jcres- bure was their connecting una. ine nis tory of Germany from 1756 to 1866 is the history of the attempt of France to im pose the headship of a weakened House of Hapsburg on a weaker Germany, and of the determination ot tne Honenzoi lerns not to allow it. Austria by 1866 had ceased to be a necessity to Germany and the peace of Prague only sanctioned the decree which fate had long since registered. Lady Fitz Maurice in the Academy. A Gbeat Gbandmotheb. To the latter venerable condition our Queen attained before she had completed her sixtieth year, a circumstance which we believe cannot be said of any of her predecessors on the throne: scarcely any of whom indeed, lived to see their children of the third generation. There was a time " 'tis sixty years since" and more when tie nation was conndentlv looking lor ward to the birth of a great-grandchild of the reigning monarch and Jus Queen a child who might now have been our King had he lived. Who shall say that Providence has not ordered events other wise for the great good of this nation ? Who that considers the parentage from which she sprang can wish that tbe Princess Charlotte had lived to succeed her father? Little did those who mourned in November, 1817, imagine what compensation was in store for all who loved their country s best interests under the rule of another Princess not born until eighteen months later. That Queen Victoria should have lived al ready to see her eldest daughter a grand mother seems to be in accordance with those outward signs of prosperity which, by the rules of poetical justice, such a life and such a reign as Her Majesty's deserve. And when we pray vivat Itegina, we are inclined to add, "And may she live to be a great-great-grand mother. In the classes who marry early, which are the highest and the low est, it is not such a very uncommon thing for persons to live to be grtat grandparents. Probably every country parish can produce one or two specimens among the poor. And in the annals of the great and noble, carefully preserved by such chronicles as Sir Bernard Bnrke and Captain Dodd, we sometimes meet with curious cases of longevity and (to com a term) great-grandparentage. We could name, for instance, a noble Duke and Duchess who are great-grandparents, though wanting still two or three years of seventy; a Viscountess, some years vounger than the present centurv. who has a great-granddaughter aged twelve; one Earl whose son is sixty-one, and an other whose grandson is thirty-seven. It is less than ten years since the widow of the twentieth Lord Grey de JButhyn died, and had she been living now she would be, though not older than eighty seven, a great great-grandmoiher, for her Ladyship was the grandmother of the late Countess of Loudoun, whose grand son, the Earl of Arundel and Surry, was born last September. London Society. The Wages of Farm Hands. The Department of Agriculture has been collecting some figures of wide interest regarding the rate of wages paid for farm laborers in different parts of the country. The statistics show that, with the exception of Minnesota and some States and Territories still further West, the average monthly rate of pay declined from 3 to 15 per cent, during the year ending last April. But this decline in was more than compensated for by an equal reduction in ths expense of living so that the relative condition of the laborer improved during the year. The pay of farm laborers in New England on yearly engagements, without board, averages $20 31 per month, and the average cost of living 88 02. The average for the Middle States is 816 60; the South Atlantic States $11 19; and Gulf States, 815 80; in the nine inland States east of the Mississippi, from 849 50; south of the Ohio to 829 90 in North. West of the Mississippi the present average is 823 81 per month, a slight increase over a year ago, while the price of subsistence has fallen off. In California and Washington Territorv. the increase has been still larger, and now reaches 838 25, but is more than offset by a much greater increase in the cost of living. There is almost every where a good demand for labor, and there seems no doubt that the condition of the agricultural class is steadily improving along with the rest of the country. Toe Use of Lager Beer. The virulent vaporihgs of the Prohi bition party, reported a few days since in these columns, and its attack upon the ex-President of the State Board of Health ex-President of the American Medical Association, the most honored leader of Massachusetts physicians, a noble gentleman, who has devoted his life to tho welfare of humanity have educed already two responses relative, the one to the moral, the other to the in tellectual value of such statements. As a temperance man of nearly forty years standing, one of the earliest to re ceive,, the pledge at the hands of Father Mathew, and one of the founders of a temperance society when a studennt of Harvard; as one who has examined the principal breweries of the United States from Milwaukee to Machias, and during five years abroad those from Burton to Beersheba, and made a careful study of the statistics of intoxication in the various beer, wine and spirit drinking countries, I may be permitted a word as to the physical consideration involved in the suicidal policy of prohibiting the use of lager beer. 1. It is an incontestable fact that every nation always has used, does and will use, some sort of external agency capable of temporarily accelerating or retarding the action of tfee mental machinery. The finding of the least harmful among such agents is the desid eratum of sensible humanitarians. The least harmful agent is lager beer, the proportion of alcohol in this being no more, may be properly taken as food; for physiologists have now ascertained that alcohol, in small amount, is a normal constituent of the tissues of the human body. I do dot speak of "ale," which is not beer. 2. Lager beer is too bulky to produce intoxication; particularly in the case of Americans, who drink, as a rule "stand ing. If those drinking it would only sit down, as the Germans do, the rest obtained would be as valuable as the tonic effects of the beer, and the sitters would be more likely to substitute beer for bitters. 3. Beer is not a stimulent, like spirits, which are like an application of a whip to an already over-tired horse; it is rath er like a good meal of oats. It is a tonic and fattening food (being composed of malt) and a nervous sedative (from the hops in combination.) i. While spirits stimulate to violence and lust, beer produces merely somno lence. 5. A taste for beer drives out or de stroys the liking for spirits, thus proving its raison d'etre, if only as the lesser of the two evils, one of which must exist in answer to the demand (real or fancied) of humanity. 6. The physical and psychical abnor malties of the JNew Engtander are gaun- tiness of the body and nervous excita bility. The characteristics of the beer- drinker are adipose tissue and a mental placidity bordering upon stolidity. The philosopher, the philanthropist, the patriot and the physician may well pon der upon the relations ot cause and effect, and be grateful for a fluid so anmirably caculated to obviate the effects of our every-day atmosphere. Acs a step in the right direction may be noted in a little announcement in the Advertiser on the 11th inst., viz. : "The grog to be served on the Jeanette is to be, not spirits and hard fiquors, but beer coffee and tea. 7. In Maine, where beer is prohibited bad whisky, being of lesser bulk, is tak ing its place with bad effects. Boston Advertiser. SHORT ITEMS. Paris High Life. A' Splendid Gem. I have recently been favored with a sight of one of the most famous jewels of the world a stone that has its mstory and its pedigree, and is celebrated in the annals of the noted gems oi Europe. i have held it in my hand and admired beneath the rays of the sunlight the finest sapphire that is known to exist This beautiful and well-nigh priceless stone combines in a singularly perfect degree the leading qualifacations of size, shape, color and water. In form it is a flat oval, being about two inches long by an inch and a half wide. It is cut slightly en cabochon on top, and into a multitude of small facets beneath. Its hue is perfect, being a warm, lustrous Marie Louise blue, not so dark as to show black beneath the gaslight, but having all the velvety softness and purity of tint that is required in a really fine gem of this description. Its weight is 300 carats, and it belongs to a noble and wealthy Russian family, in whose possession it has been for the past two centuries, and it has been placed by its owner in the hands of one of the great diamond merchants of Paris for safe keeping. One of the Rothschild family has offered for it no less a sum than $300,000 but the offer has been refused. Ij asked the courteous gentlemam in whose care it has been left as to the actual value of the stone. He told me that, as it was perfectly unique, no pre cise valuation could be set upon it, but that he was inclined to estimate it at some $400,000. He also showed me a string of enormous- graduated pearls of extreme purity and fineness (the center one was as large as a small cherry) and he told me that the necklace belonging to the noble Russian was composed f six similar strings of equal beauty and ex ceptional size. The great sapphire was mounted to be worn as a brooch, being surmounted with large diamonds of some twenty carats each. Its guardian informed me that the pendant belonging to this brooch was composed of a large pear-shaped sapphire, weighing sixty carats, and set in diamonds. The whole collection of jewels belonging to this one family is worth over $2,000,000. "There is no such sapphire as the largest one," continued my informant, "even among the crown jewels of Russia. I furnished myself two very fine ones to the Em press, each weighing six carats, but they do not compare with this magnificent gem." The gentleman who spoke was well qualified to give an opinion, as he is one of the few diamond merchants of the world, and is, moreover, a noted expert. He it was who was recently sent for by the Russian Government to go to St. Petersburg to make a full esti mate of the value of the crown lewels. and he furnishes whatever ornaments in precious stones are purchased by the members of the Imperial family. "No man on earth can move me from my position, says' Lucy Stone. Let her sot. Who cares whether she moves or not? ' The man who marries under the im pression that his wife gives up every thing for him father, mother, brothers, sisters and home finds out sometimes that, however much the wife may have given up, the father, mother, brothers, sisters, etc., have not given her up. J. C. Flood is about to retire from stock operations. M. Leon Chotteau is again en route for America. No lady can wipe her nose too often on a $10 lace handkerchief. A French cook can take a rib of mutton and turn out a spring pullet. There are 5000 trees in Joe Jefferson's orange orchard in Louisiana. The Empress of Austria visits Ireland again in February for the hunting season. Rochester men prefer death to being quoted "N. G." in the Mercantile Agency. Ohio's first colored jury found a verdict of: "Not guilty, 'cause he didn't done it." This is good weather to "freeze out" college professors and freeze in boxing teachers. Frank Leslie has many different publi cations and he steals the matter for all of them. Mr. Moody isn't a man of the world, or he'd a' known better than to have tackled St. Louis. Mr. Holyoake, the English apostle of co-operation, is praising America since returning home. Ex-Governor Seymour has a complete collection of biographies of American statesmen in his library. A Mexican Governor at a dinner had seventeen courses of hash served before the main part of the meal. A cur that no one will own will get a tin kettle over a given distance as quickly as a $100 imported dog will. Venus was the first person who had her boat sawed in half, when she came ashore on the half -shell. 'Can a man marry his widow's sister?" He can provided he is a "California widower," and his wife is willing. London police stations have hot and cold water. The hot water is to throw over prisoners who kick the bars. The Kev. Morgan, of iioston, can see no difference between church fairs and lotteries, and is aiding to suppress both. Col. Robert G. Ingersoll, from his profession and lectures, earns from $40,000 to $70,000 a year, and spends most .oi it. Owls talk with each other by each one holdmg the end of a straw m his mouth That's what gave birth to the audi phone. A minister in one of the small Illinois towns was the unfortunate loser of sev eral dollars the other night. He had i donation party. Ohio school girls drink red ink become very ill, send for their lovers, make up get well, and are heroines for the next four weeks. Lovers in New Jersey now get married at midnight, so as to be joined between two days and be a little more spooney than other folks. Susan B. Anthony has just celebrated her twenty-second birthday. Jf ree Jfress Does this mean that she was born on the 29th of February. It was a happy thought that suggested during the war, the using of cotton for breastworks, and the practice has been kept up ever since. Don Carlos, of Spain, swears that he will have his rights or perish; but we all feel tbe same way, and are as much of hero as he is. Mr. W. W. Corcoran of Washington, is the owner of the beautiful Sevres dessert service which was once owned and used by George Washington. Nevada has a town named Zero, and neither the weather nor the thermometer man can get the start of the place Strangers may expect a cool reception New Jersey wants to make a legal holiday of the birthday of Christopher Columbus. She believes he discovered New Jersey when he did the rest of America. Just as soon as a man imagines that the world owes him a living he will seek to collect the debt from which some one has gained his own living and laid up something besides. "How far is it to Butler if I keep straight on?" "Wall, if you're a goin' to keep straight on, it's about twenty -five thousand miles, but if you turn round t other way it s about half a mile! Observing little brother's remark be fore a room full of company: "I know what made that red mark on Mary' nose; it was the rim of John Parker's hat." And there are girls who believe that little brothers never go to heaven. We feel obliged to remind the Presi dent again that the country is getting on swimmingly without any minister at either the .English or Kussian Court But we admit that Ohio is being neglect ed. Boston Globe. A contemporary says Eve is as de serving of a monument as Adam, and he surgests "Give them a monument apiece. But why not treat them as this country has George Washington give them a piece of a monument. It will soon be time for the members of the New. York Legislature to have their button-holes lined with sheet-iron to save them from breaking out when the Senatorial candidates hook their fingers in them. Commodore Vanderbilt once visited a spiritual medium, who commenced busi ness bv saving. "Your first wife wishes to communicate with you." "Perhaps so." said the Commodore abruptly, "but that is not what I came here for.' "Why, Dick," said a lady teacher the other day, "you are ge ruing w ue an awfully good boy, lately; ever so much better than you were lastyear. How is it?" "Oh. pshaw! Miss Hetty," said the youngster. "I don t have so much tum- mick-ache now." A school teacher, who has just been telling the story of David, winds up with: "And all this Happened over duuu years ago." A little cherub, its blue eyes dilated with wonder, after a mo ment s thought: "UU, aear, marm.wnat a memory you must have. A little girl passing the Washington statue.lately asked a lady who was with her if Washington was buried there. "No," said the iady. "Where is he buried?' said the little girl. "I don't know," said the lady. "Then I guess you don't read the Bible much," said little innocence. Remarks a writer: "A gentle hand can lead an elegpant by a hair." Now, what foolishness that is to put into the minds of children? Why, bless you, elephants don't have hair; they have just maes, that's all. Perhaps a gentle hand might lead him by tho tail, but, mind you, we have our doubts even of that. The curtain rises on "Cendrillon" at 7:30. It is true that the adorers of the diva are always certain of seeing a good deal of her from their avant scene toward the middle of the piece. But this was not sufficient for Theo. She desires that they should also see her in the first act, in which lies the principal feature of attraction. It is an appearance so mar velously lovely that it suffices to explain the popularity of the new "Cendrillon." The pretty head of Theo rises suddenly in the center of a corbeille of flowers illuminated by electric light. Tho coup d'oeil is indescribably beautiful; no effect like it has ever been seen at the theater. When any one goes to her box to congratulate her upon her perform ance she always eagerly inquires: "Did you come to see mo in my corbeille?" When she receives a reply in the nega tive she usually dismisses her visitor without further remark. This peculiarity has naturally caused a great deal of disturbance in the gastro nomic habits of the jennes elegants, who would do anything rather than displease the star of their dreams. Some break fast later, some dine earlier, and all arrange in one way or other to go to the Porte St. Martin before 8 o'clock so as not to miss the corbeille. It is a settled habit. When the Russian Grand Dukes passed through Paris they twice advanced the hours of their dinner to go and see Theo in her corbeille a couple of even ings in succession. .Prince Vladimar even made Theo promise that she would introduce this luminous corbeille- in all all her operettas when she goes to sing in St. Petersburg. Hut this is not all Theo is daily invited to go and give seances de corbeilfe at parties or at large clubs of the capital. The newspapers have given the name of corbeillomanie From afl this Theo derives a fresh celebrity. It had enabled her again to rally round her that court of platonic adorers which for some time past had been on the point of deserting her Among them are rich, intelligent and well educated young men, the bearers of great names, and who for the last six years have had but one idea, one object in life that oi devoting themselves to Theo. It is a devotion more inexoli ble from the fact that they derive but little satisfaction from it. The diva of their affections is faithful to her husband a working tailor, and she will not permit any one to make love to her. .Notwith standing that the fact is indisputable, her sighing swains persist in ther attentions Do they each entertain the secret hope that some day or other Theo will be less cruel to them? It is probable. Thev continue, despite all discouragement, to send her flowers and presents. She deigns to accept them, and they com mence over again the same game without ever tiring or uttering the least complaint. She has organized and regulated the whole of her little court, establishing and defining clearly the duties and rights of each of its members. The visits which she receives at the theater are divided into series. Certain admirers can come to her dressing-room on the Mondays others on the Tuesdays, and so on during the week. These visits are more or less long, according to the degree of con siderations in which the visitors are held And she presides over their receptions with the most perfect tact, taking care always to mark the rights of ancients and to avoid bringing together people who detest each other or adorers who belong to the same clique. All these couriers obey Theo as conscripts obey their in structing captain. The diva moves about, and powders and dresses herself in the midst of the dazzled faithful. She places them all under contribution, and is careful not to be ceremonious with any of them, knowing that this off-hand mode of proceeding renders her Btill more seductive and charming in their eyes One holds a looking-glass before her. an other searches for something she has lost on the carpet. She asks for infer mation of this gentleman and for her her powder box of that, and orders them all to close their eyes while she changes her costume. There is no court, even a court d'amour, without a certain degree of discipline. Theo frequently exhibits great severity for the slightest infraction of her rules. The delinquents those who in despite of their pledges try to make love to her or to kiss the tips of her fingers are immediately punished with a suspension of their privilege of visiting her, more or less prolonged in proportion to the gravity of the offense Those who repeat it are liable to be sen fenced to perpetual exclusion. Corr J. x. neraia. When to Marry. HALL'S SAFE & LOCK COMPANY, CAPITAL - . 81,000,000. General Offices and Manufactory CINCINNATI, OHIO. Pacific Branch, No. 210 Sansoxne St., S. F Agency for Oregon and Washington Territory, with ll aw 1j xajuu a, uu., roruana. HALL'S PATENT CONCRETE FIRE-PROOF SAFES. Have been tested by tho most disastrous confla grations in the country. They are tnorougniy nre-prooi. They are free from dampness. Their snperiority is beyond question. Although about 150,000 of these safes are now in use. and hundreds have been tested by some of the most disastrous conflagrations in the country, there is not a single instance ou record wherein one of them ever failed to preserve its contents perfectly. HALL'S PATENT DOVETAILED TENON AKB GROOVE BURGLAR-PROOF llavo never been broken open and robbed by DUXgiara or nrawm u..iHn 1... wnrlr in rvffftfi(l hv letter Alalia uigioi " " J li patent, and his work cannot be equaled lawfully. ir: t la annar!nt in nnv in USA. Tr;. mimit 1,K-ks ttiunnt be nicked bv the most skillful experts or burglars. iiy one oi me greawssb nuyiwcmciiw mw"i t.. V'n A nfitniai.in Mfivcmpnt. our locks are operated withont any arbor or spindle passing r inua nanrtf hf oivinprl fir ninked bv bur- VUI lUtM i "J - i J - glare or exiierts, (as in case of other locks), and wo Will put I rum .;i,i.iw v j time against an equal amount. Th. most gltillvl workmen onlv are employed. Their work cannot be excelled. Hall's Sates and JjOCHs can do renea ou uv an times. . . . , They are carefully and thorughly consiruoieu. THEY ABE THE BEhT SAFE Mode in America, or any other country. One Thousand Dollars Jm To any person who cm prove that one of Hall patent Durgiar-prvui ummw broken open and robbed by burglars up to the t resent time. In Hungary, males marry at fourteen and females at twelve, whereas in Austria, persons are minors until they attain the age of twenty-four, and they must not marry before that time without the formal consent of their parents There is no restriction on the ground of religion, however, although children of both sexes under fourteen are forbidden to marriage. In Denmark a man may not marry under twenty, nor a girl un der sixteen, but in other parts of Scandinavia a man must be twenty -one. In Belgium and France, eighteen and fifteen are the respective limits, and in Bavaria there are no less than four laws in operation, each having a reference to a particular district. The ages fixed by these range from twelve to fourteen for girls, and fourteen to eighteen for bovi for so in truth we must call them. About two or three and twenty years atro, a law was passed in Hesse-Darmstadt prohibiting males from marrying before they had attained the age of twenty-five, but since this law has been amended, and twenty-one is now the limit. In (Switzer land there is no uniformity at all, each canton apparently having gone its own way in the business. The ages appointed there range from twelve to seventeen years for girls, and fourteen to twenty for the other sex the lower ages being always found to obtain in those districts where the old cannoa faws are still re spected. In two cantons people may marry at any age after their first com munion. In Greece the ages are eighteen and fifteen; so they are in Boumania, but in Russia they are eighteen and sixteen. In Turkey there are no laws on the subject at all, but it is worthy of note, remembering the social affinities of the -Laps, that in Lap land boys marry at seventeen, and girls at fourteen, provided they haye attained the requisite knowledge of the Christian language. Senator Plumb's new article of war provides that no senior officer at gambling shall win the money of a junior, under penalty of dismissal from the service. The article is a good one. The junior officers of the army reeeive the least pay, and they should rake in the pile when they sit down to a little game of draw. B. M. WILLIAMS, Agent for Oregon and W. T. office wiib Hawley, ltodd 28:'ebl6:'Jtf. Portland. Bees Hamlin. Emmett F. Wbenn. DRAY ACE ! DRAY AGE! Hamlin & Wrenn, Propr's. HAV1M5 JUST RETURNED FROM 8alem with a new truek, and having leased the barn formerly occupied by James Eg lin, we are now prepa:ed to do all kinds of D HAYING AD HAULINC. either in the city or country, at the loweat living rates. Can be found at the old truck stand. A. share of the public patronage resiectfully solic ited. ... Corvallis. Dec. 27. 1878. 15:52tf JOB PRINTING. THE Gazette Job Printing House IS NOW PREPARED TO DO Plain and Ornamental Printing, A neat and Cheap as it can be done by any Office on the Coast,- Mil BleaUn, Uiier Heads Mote henrix, mh emrntn, ft oKmmniH, Ball TlrbeiB. Invitation Ctrrulnra, HuHlne.a nrriH, Vialt iuir Tarda, Labr'S Iiodifera. K km.ll fikNlnr.. I.CKIII mUl4 Bwh Ho tea. atilvpioa Kecelpta, Order Hooka, linui, Taea. .., Elo, Sr-Orders by mates furnished. mail promptly filled. Esti AUGUST KNIGHT, CABINET MAKKU, UNDERTAKER. Cor. Second and Monroe Sts., CORWAliUB. ORMOH. Keeps constantly on hand all kinds of TURNITURE COFFINS AND CASKETS. Work done to order on short notice, and at reasonable rates. Corvallis. Jan. 1. 1877. I4:ltf ROBERT N. BAKER. Fashionable Tailor, "FORMERLY OP ALBANY, WHERE HE bas given Tiis patrons perfect satisfaction, has determined to locate iu Corvallis, where he hopes to be favored with a share of the public paironage. All work warranted, when made under his supervision. Retiring and cleaning promptly attended to. m Uorvanis, Jan. J.iJSBo. ia:oit. tttlatfl IH PAIITUnOM ! rnnFna'n wmw nvnnt m vf PHYSICIAN ANL SURGEON, Corvallis, On'gon. Snecial attention given to surgery and diseases of the Eve. Can be found at his onice, in rear of Graham, Hamilton A Co.'s Drug Store, up stairs, day or night. June 3, 1879. lfl-23tf