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About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1882)
Published Every Friday Morning jsl. s. woodcock:. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: (Payable in Advance.) PwYe&r S2 SO Mx Months 1 60 I'hree Months 1 00 single Copies. 10c All notices and advertisements intended for pub Htion should be handed in by noon on Wednesdays. Rates of advertising made known on application . ATTORNEYS. M. S. WOODCOCK, -A-ttornev at - Law, Corvallis, - - Oregon. KELSAY & KEESEE. .A-ttorneys - at - Law. Corvallis, - - Oregon. 19-22-yl. A. CHENOWETH. t. M. JOnNSON. CHENOWETH & JOHNSON, .A-ttorneys - at - Laws Corvallis, Oregon. l-26yl E. HOLGATE, .Attorney - at - Law, Corvamjs, - - Oregon. ftp mtttt VOL. XIX. CORVALLIS, OREGON, SEPT. 1, 1882. NO. 36. City Stables a Daily Stage Line FROM ALBANY TO CORVALLIS. TEE OS. EGLIN, Proprietor. SPECIAL attention riveo to collections, and money collected promptly paid over. Careful and prompt attention triven to Probate matters. Con veyancing: and searching uf records, &c LOANS NEGOTIATED. Will give attention to buying, selling1 and leasing- real estate, ana conduct a general collecting ana ousi ncss airencv. Office on Second Street, one door north of Irvin's snoe shop. 13:4Jyi On the Corner West of the Engine House CORVALLIS, - - OREGON. TT A V I N G COMPLETED MY new and commodious BARN, 1 am better than ever prepared to keep the BEST OF TEAMS, B-J33IES. CARRIAGES AKD SADDLE HORSES TO HIRE. At Reasonable Rates. tW Particular attention given to Boarding Horses Horses Bought ana sola or Exchanged. PLEASE GIVE ME A CALL, Having secured the contract for carrying the United States Mall and Express FROM Corvallis to Albany For the ensuing four years will leave Corvallis each morning at 8 o'clock, arriving in Albany about 10 o'clock, and will start from Albany at 1 o'clock in the afternoon, returning to Corvallis about 3 o'clock. This line will 1 e prepared with good teams and care- cui anvers ana nice coraiortaDie ana EASY RIDING VEHICLES For the accommodation of the TRAVELLING PUBLIC. 19-27yl the Prospect of Tbi Tear. PHYSICIANS. F, A. JOHNSON, IPnysician, Surgeon, And Electrician. Chronic Diseases n ade a specialty. Catarrh suc- e i-itany treatea. Also oculist ana Aurist. Office in Fisher's Block, one door West of Dr. F. A. Vincent's dental office. Office hours rom 8 to 12 nd from 1 too o'clock. 19:27yl T.V.B. EMBREE.M.D., Ph.ysici.-m & Sureeon, Office 2 doors south of H . E. Harris' Store, -OoRVALLif, - - Oregon. Residence on the southwest corner of block, north vnd west ot the Mctnoaist cnurcn. 19:2l-yrl. G. R. FARRA, M. D, n?hysician fe Surgeon. 0FFICB OVER GRAHAM, HAMILTON k CO'S Drug Store. Corvallis, Oregon. 19:2.'.yl DENTISTS. E. H. TAYL0R, 3D EITTIST The oldest established Dentist and the best outfit in Corvallis. All work keot in rapiir frj of c'larar? and satisfac o-i g wvatxtX Testh extracted without pain by ho use of Nitrous Oxide Gas. jW too-ns up-stairs over Jacobs & Neugass' new Brick Store, Corvallis, Oregon. 19:27yi MISCELLANEOUS. J. II. NORRIS, WAGON MAKER, Philomath, Oregon. Blacksmithing and Wagonmaking a specialty. By constantly keeping on hand the bast materials and doing superior work, I expact to merit a share of public patronage 32ui3 J. H. Noiibis. F. J. Hendrichson, Boot and Shoe Maker, Philomath, Oregon I always keeD on hand sunerior ma terial and warrant my work. I ask an examination of my goods before purchasing elsewhere 19-32-lyr F. J. Hendrichson. F. J. ROWLAND, Blacksmith & Wagonmaker, Philomath, Oregon. Mr. Rowland is prepared to do all kinds of wagon making, repairing and blacksmithing to order. He uses the best of material every time and warrants his work. l!)-32-lyr MOORE & SPENCER: ucccsjor to T. J Buford.) Stag, Shampooing, Hair Cutting, Hot and Cold Baths. Buford'a 01.1 Stand. 18:3C:ly THE YAQUINA HOUSE! Is now prepared to accommodate travelers IN FIRST-CLASS STYLE, FOR NEW W GOODS ! 0. H. WHITNEY & GO. Having recently located in Corvallis, we take pleasure in announcing to the trading public that we have just opened our Spring stock of Dry Goods, Furnishing- Goods, Boots and Shoes, Hats and Caps. ALSO A FULL LINE OF Fancy Dress Goods, Silks, Satins, Fringes, Laces, Buttons, Corsets. Our stock has been selected with the greatest care, and for quality and cheapness is second to none. Having a resident buyer in the leading markets we are enabled to purchase latest style goods at lowest prices. Call and ex amine our stock before purchasing, and save from lO to SO ON PURCHASES BY DEALING AT OUR ONE PRICE STORE We are satisfi ad that the United States has never hadjietter. material prospects than it lias this year, says t';e S;in Francisco Journal of Com merce. Every dispatch that comes from the East speaks in better terms of both wheat and corn crops. The former will, it is now thought, reach 500,000,000 bushels, which is 20,000, 000 bushels more than was produced in 1880; while the corn crop iias been so benefitted by the recent rains, that one thousand, three hundred million bushels is given as the prob able outcome. This-, though not so much as the great year of 1880, is about 200,000,000 bushels, or twenty per cent, more than last year. Other crops, contrary to expectation, are t luning out finely too, and it j,seems as if nature was resolved to be more than usually favorable to the people of tne Union this year. We will have cheap bread, cheap meat, and though some people do not appreci ate, cheaper whisky than it seemed that we would have, for corn in abundance means cheap pork and cheap spirits. The great strike about closing, in itself was an indication of prosperity in industrial pursuits, for people do not strike when work is scarce, labor abundant and demand light. The great crops are calling foH more and more transportation facili ties, and new lines of railroad are be ing built with unprecedented rapid ity. It is thought that fully ten thousand miles will have been con structed by Jan. 1, 1883. Such a number ot miles of road were never built in any year, or in any country before. Immigration'seems turning to our shores still with ceaseless stream, and doubtless, a million woikers of the btst blood ot Europe will have been added to our working forces ere another fiscal year has passed by. The prairie is being changed to cultivated fields every year by this vast army of industry; the growth of cities and towns iromoted, whil.i the great heart of the nation beas with stronger throbs and its pulses play more vigorously day by day. The horn of plenty has been poured out over the land; industry is active; food will be cheap, and wages good, while commerce will flourish more than ever. procured trom the woods; but it twines its woody stems so closely around the trunks of trees, it is not easily separated from them. It glossy leaves, sometimes variegated with cream color, are very handsome, and although its flowers are very inconspicuous, its brilliant berries are ornamental in the autumn and winter, and they are much sought for Christmas decorations. The vine will bear any situation, and grow iu grace and beauty. The Chinese wistaria is doubtless well known to all our readers, and there is a native wistaria now found in West Virginia and farther south, wh en climbs high upon the trees and forms a beautiful vine, as its foliage is very handsome, its leaves being pinnate in shape, with nine to fifteen small leaflets: The flowers appear in May and June, and are of a delicate snaue oi mac ana parole, with a slight fragrance. Another variety has pure while flowers in long ra cemes like those of the Chinese wistaria. For a rapid growing, deciduous vine, the Virginia creeper or wood bine is the most desirable, as it re quires no railing or tying, and it will cover the side of a house in a few years. It fastens itself to the wall by means ot tendrils, and when grow ing upon a smooth surface the tip of the tendril will expand into a tiny sucker and adhere closely to'the wall. In the autumn its dark green, five lobed leaves turn into bright shades of crimson and scarlet, making it very ornamental. C H. WHITNEY & 00 19:14yl E. 1. MEEEIMAN, AGENT FOR THE WORLD-LENOWNED MEALS AT ALL ML. If S5 HOURS CENTS. HORSE FEED Constantly on hand, at the LOWEST LIVING RATES. Situaued on the Yaquina Road, half way rom Corvallis to Newport. I9:12m3. P. BRYANT. HUTTON & HILLIARD, BLACKSMITHING AND Carriage and Buggy Ironing, Done Neatly. HORSE-SHOEING A SPECIALTY. CorralltB, Oregon. DECKER BROTHERS PIANOS, Acknowledged now to te the best by all musicians, and used by the celebrated queen of players Julie Hive-King in preference to all others. J. & C. FISCHEKrS PIANO, The leading and best second-class Piano on the market. ALSO THE Old and Established Standard Mason & Hamlin OrgaiL 'Will be in Corvallis and vicinity from time to time to sell these leading instruments of the world, unfair and unprincipled opposition-to the contrary notwithstanding. ? " 10-27m8 Climbing Vines. It is often a matter of surprise when traveling through the country, the utter indifference shown by the majority of farmers to the matter of beautifying their homes and sur roundings, when by a small outlay of lime and money, ihe unsightly out-buildins, weather-worn and discolored, might be made, if not things of beauty and joys forever, at least temporarily to fulfil that mis sion. We print this week from the Springfield Republican a description of a lew climbers, which cannot fail to interest and instruct any who may need it: The clematis, or ."traveler's joy," is a very pretty vine for cultivation where one wishes to shade porches or piazzas, or to cover a trellis work. It is not particular as to its food, and though it delights in a rich, moi st soil, and will flourish luxuriantly when planted at the outlet of a sink spout or drain, yet it will climb fif teen or twenty feet in it sunny, ex posed situation. I have one grow ing over my porch which dies nearly to i he ground every winter, but spnnga up in good season to make excellent growth every summer, and in August it is completely covered with clusters of creamy white, fra grant flowers which contrast with its rich, dark foliage. Cultivation, how ever, seems to rob the clematis of the tufts of feathery seeds with w,hieli the vines are covered in the wild state. The clematis grows plenti fully along the tenses and roadsides of New England, and the vines transplant easily when they are a foot or two in height, if they are planted at nightfall. The bittersweet is a shrubby vine that covers small trees in the forests. As it grows readily from seeds, it can be raised from the orange-crimson berries of last season, or roots' can be Agricultural Lands in Arizona. The Tombstone Republican claims that most erroneous and damaging impressions exist abroad in relation to tne agricultural ana grazing ca pacity of the southern and eastern portions of Arizona. Men who have read of the Gila and Mohave deserts naturally conclude that those arid plains constitute a large portion of the whole Territory. Nothing, says the Republican, could be wider ol the mark than such a conclusion Willie there are tracks ot large ex tent covered with oacti and prickly brush and insufficiently watered there are other tracks infinitely lar ger that are free from all such ob structions, and covered with a thick growth of rich, nutritious, perennial grasses, with either flowing water, springs or subterranean water .at from 6 to 50 ft. from the surface. Even much of the brush land is well grassed, with water easily accessible to stock. No'anly is such the case for nearly the whole length of the San Pedro river. There are in Coc hise county three large valleys, which cover an area of several millions ot acres of as fine grazing and agricul tural land hs can be found in almost any country. These are the San Pedro Sulphur Springs and San Simon valleys. Independent of these valleys, there are immense tracts of level or gently undulating mesa that skirts the base of the various ranges of mountains in this country, that constitute vast natural pastures and meadows, and which, by the intro duction of water fof irrigation, are susceptible of the highest state of, cultivation and productiveness. That broad belt along the eastern slope of the Huachucas, which ex tends in unbroken continuity for the whole length of the range, a distance of 25 or 30 miles, is an example of this sort ot land. Mowers were run over hundreds of acres of it last year and hundreds of tons ot hay put up for winter use. STOCK DEPARTMENT, Oats to Feed Pigs. The value of oats as food for young pigs from the time they first begin to eit un til winter, and even after, is not duly appreciated by many western far mers ho adhere strictly to a corn diet, upon the presumption that iu ordinary limes corn is the cheaper feed. The truth is, for the best de velopment of the pig in all its ap pointments, corn is the most unsuit able feed that can be given it. While it is the best known for fat tening, after the animal is sufficient ly developed in frame for this pro cess to be carried on, it is the one grain that is the most deficient in natural elements for building up that frame ready to receive the flesh that is grown, while ot all the grains which flourish in our usual hot and arid summers, oats are best adapted to the wants of the incipient porker. Charcoal for Pi gs. Give char coal to pigs occasionally; they eat it greedily, and it would be well to sift wood ashes to get charcoal for that purpose. Ashes on so many farms are leached for lye, and then spread upon land from which pigs are ex cluded, that swine seldom get char coal. Both charcoal and ashes are antidotes for fermentation in the sto mach, and are specially beneficial and important while pigs are grow ing or being fattened. For Cows on Clover. Give- them good, dry feed before turning then on the clover; then the clover will not hurt them; or should they swell give each cow one thimbleful of gunpowder mixed in half a tea spoonful of melted lard. If necessary repeat the same. Cincinnati Ga zette. Cotton-seed Meai. for Cattle The American Dairy Association reports that one bushel of cotton seed meal will produce as much milk as two bushels of any other lood yet tried. The department of Agricul ture at Washington City, bears tes timony that it is one of the most val uable of all kinds of food for cattle and that the meal in consequence of having been separated from the hulls, cooked, and the oil pressed from it is more than twice the value of t!:e whole raw seed as a stock food. Breeding ine "stock. A man who onue gets thoroughly into the work of breeding fine slock is sel dom willing lo abandon it for some other pursuit, no matter how lucra tive the new venture may be. The field it offers for the study of scien tific physiology, the possibilities of combination and development, and the broad opportunities for experi ment, are afforded iw no other busi ness. There is a fascination in the production of fine stock which no other industry can claim. Cayenne Pepper as a Preven tative. A correspondent of the Country Gentleman, has found cay enne pepper an effectual preventative against cows sucking themselves. After milking (both morning and uight, if necessary), make a paste of the pepper with a little milk, and put it on (over the whole teat,- at Wist), and it will remain until the next milking. Iess and less will answer, after a few days, and the cow will discontinue the habit per haps only temporarily at first, but if she relapses the application can be renewed until a complete cure is affec ted. HP: - Slaking Vinegar. In a large orchard, the best use to make of wind-falls, is to convert them into vinegar. We know an orchardist in a Western State, who makes a large share of his crop into vinegar; he finds it to his profit to look after the wind-falls. He keeps a portable or hand-mill for the pur pose, and by collecting, grinding, and pressing the fallen fruit, adds materially to his vinegar crop in the course of the season. He does not mention tbefact to those who bay his Vinegar, but,- tells its that this practice goes far to keep (be Cod ling moth subjection. Ex- Cattle" For Beef or Dairy. For milk for making butter there.are individual Shorthorn cows which produce it as rich in quality as jBt Jersey or Guernsey; fof quantity of milk, there are families whichjlqual the boasted Holstem at 0b same time the qnaritity is not inferior to that of Ayrshire for bothcheese and butler. Then there is 1 this greater profit and advantage of the Short horn cow over olherSj that when given op for the dairy and dried off she fattens most rapidly and econom ically of any. and her beef turns Out of superior quality. Shor'.horn steers mature earlier than those of other breeds; they grow the largest size, and when elaught- ered not the most prime meat tor the, food consumed in rearing od fat tening them; and I have yet to leard what cattle may excel in the parr ticulars. United, then, to the above merits, possessing the grandest and handsomest of forms, and a mixture of the brightest and most beautiful of colors, it is not to be wondered that they have become so popular and take precedence at the highest; prices. In crossing on native cbwV no breed equals them in making so' improved a class of stock either fof beef or an increased quantity of milk; Next to Ihe Shorthorn in size, and nearly as early to mature afid profit able in rearing, and for beef of as good a quality, Come the HefefOrds: The Hereford cows are rarely great milkers; but being of a rich quality, it is usually found sufficient to raise their calves well till old enough to" be weaned, and then able to get si good living from pasture. While on grass alone, Hereford steers are said to fatten more rapidly than, diner' cattle under the same circumstances, and for this purpose, solely of feeding are, perhaps, to be preferred. The bu!l makes an excellent Cross' On na tive cows, especially those running wild on the great western5 plains. The Devon, for beef and milk, is" like the Hereford, but much finer and more blood-like in all points,' and not so large Usually by one fourth to one-fifth. This last is art advantage when placed on short pastures, or on rough and hilly ground. Here, being the most active of all cattle, he thrives mere rapidly than they are able to do. Being of a quicker pace also, they make the" best of working oxen, and for this purpose are not inferior to the horse.- Their pure, bright red color, and long lofty horns give them a fine, airy, upheaded appearance in the' yoke, and make them 'greatly ad mired. Like the thoroughbred horse, they are superior in bone, mus cle and action. No cattle are more hardy or thrifty, and the Shorthorn alone matures any earlier. The beef of the Devou is first in quality, either slaughtered as a young steer or .fat tened after working in the yoke to seven years of age or more. Some of their families are great milkers,- others very rich in quality. A. B. Allen, in Wallaces Montldy. American Pork in France. Ad American physician in Paris Writes the Chicago Times an") interesting' letter on the pork situation' there. At a scientific discussion Prof. Wurtzy an eminent chemist, and member off the Senate, presented a report rela tive to American pork and trichina. He recommended warmly the impor tation of American pork, stfbjec'iih'g' t only to certain tests of general ap- pearance,Jodor and firmness, claim ing that the French cooking and an efficient salting was as absolute a guarantee as could be. obtained for any article ot diet; that the Ameri can pork was less subject to' trichina than the indigenous variety, and that if the Government undertook the microscopical inspection of meats" for the safety of the people it wa quite as obligatory to institute also an examination of the home article; The lecturer, M. Gibier, who hr charge of the micro biological labor atory of the academy of Paris, ad "" mitted that large hams, even during prolonged boiling, do not or may not in the center acquire a temperature sufficiently high to destroy the para site, but that it has lately been dis covered that trichina are mOre easi-" ly affected by a certain degree of cold, and that when subjected to thia influence they become perfectly barmy less. One of his tests was as followsr Birds are not subject to the disease knotfn as trichiniasts, that is, birds' can eat trichiriised pork with im punity. Probably .owing to tfae fact bodyeroperathre of the" iderably higher than the" re of the animals in which' a thrives. He consequent- irds with 'unfrozen frrchi- and examines miscrosco e excrements. 1 he parasite ihrOugh the intestines of the" am liin b rk th St that the bird is c temper the trici ly feed uised pi pically passe: birds.an a living condition, not' ope-" rated upon by the gastriO juices. 'He then feeds the same birds with a part ot the same pork, which, how ever, has been frozen or subjected to' a temperature of twelve degrees cen tigrade below zero, and not a trace" of the parasite is to be found in the' excrements.- Iff other words the' whole has been digested by the gas-" trio juices. M. Gibier assured me that he had such confidence hi bi statement that the Subjection' of pork to a temperature of 12 degrees" below' zero tor several hours" was sufficient ' to destroy the parasite that he bittf self was about to feast on the affect" edybot frozen, bam.- '