Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 15, 1882)
V Woodcock & Baldwin, Dealers in Shelf and Heavy DWAR1E Stoves and Tinware, Zinc Stove Pipe, Granite ware Etc., Etc., Etc. STOVES. Latest Improved. STOVES. Best in the Market. A URGE, NEW AND SPLENDID ASSORTMENT JUST RECEIVED ! Prices as iow as any house in the State. .All Goods "Warranted just as Represented. We Employ none but Skilled Workmen, And guarantee satisfaction in all Job Work. If you want something in our line don't fail to come and examine our goods and prices. WOODCOCK & BALDWIN. FALL A EE TRADE ! Ladies Dolmans Cloaks, Ulsters, 1 FANCY I CptOO-DS! TRIMMINGS, GLOVS, CORSETS, KNIT HOODS ANDSACQUES. READY MADE CLOTHING, OVERCOATS Furnishing Goods. These Goods are offered to the public at prices lower than can possibly be found in the city. Nearly opp. Vincent House, CORVALLIS, OR. 0. H Whitney & Co. lf:14vl E. R. MERRIMAN, AGENT ro .l TH S WOR .I-L'NOWNHD DECKER BROTHERS PIANOS. Acknowledged now to be tlie best by all musicians, anil used by the celebrated of en ol players Julie Jlive-Klngr '.B preference til others.- .& O. :. FISCHER'S PIANO, The leading and best second-class Piano on the market'. ALSO THE Old and Established Standard Mason & Hamlin Organ. 9tU In VTalllM auil vicf tit y froui-Lluie to tl9M to sell t lie so Irariinp instruments jUHEfe-aj-U? cf irfr and uufrfflc pled opposition fo the contrary notarI'.!ist3xidInp. dforuallis dtofe. FRIDAY MORNING, 1E. 15, iSsiT THE HOUSEHOLD. Spiced Plums Seven pounds of plums, four pounds of Bugar, one i tablespoonful of cinnamon cloves, one quart of vinegar. Boil tbirty minutes. A tablespoonful of strong coffee put in the ravy of melted butter, pepper and salt to be poured over beefsteak, imparts a delicious flavor to gravy and meat. It makes the gravy a rich brown. Directions for picklinO-Pick-led Appj.es." To ten pounds of fruit take seven pounds of sugar, three and one half quarts of vinegar, three ounces of cinnamon, two ounces of cloves, whole; pare and core the ap ples, then boil in syrup till soft. Rice and Apple Puddjng. Boil a cupful of well washed rice fifteen minutes in water, adding a -pinch of salt. Drain on & sievo until quite dry. Put part of the rice on the bot tom and along the side of the pud ding mold or tin pail, peel and quar ter six aiplt's and place in the center of rice with a half cup of sugar and a little chopped lemon peel Cover the fruit with the rice, tie down and steam one hour. Serve with sweet ened cream, lemon sauce of sweeten ed melted butter, j Minced Veal and Eggs. Take some remnants of roast or braised veal, trim off all Drowned parts, and mince it very fine, fry a chalot or onion chopped small, in plenty of butter; when it is a slight straw col or, add a larg3 pinch of flour and a little stock, then the minced meat with chopped pareely, pepper, salt and nutmeg to taste; mix well, add more stock if necessary and let the mince gradually get hot by the side of the fire; lastly add a few drops of lemon juice; serve with sippets of bread fried in butter round the poached eggs on the top. Joint your game neatly; cut the ham and onions into small pieccp, and fry all in butter to alight brown. Put into a soup-pot with the beef, cut into strips, and a little pepper. Pour on the water; heat slowly, and stew gently two hours. Take out the pieces of bird, and cover in a bowl; cook the soup an hour longer; strain; cool; drop in the celery, and simmer ten minutes. Pour upon fried bread in the tureen. Fricassee of Grouse. Make a cup of drawn buttef by heating a cup of strained broth from your boiling soup in a-sauce-pan; stii ring into it two tablespoon fuls of butler cut up in a teaspoonful of flour; season weH, and put in the pieces of grouse, or rabbit. Simmer until very hot; take out the meat and arrange upon but tered toast in a dish. Add to the gravy a couple ot beaten yolks; heat one minute, and pour over the biraV. Potatoes Wr-Trf Vermicelli. Mash and whip the potatoes light with butter and milk. Season with salt, and mound smoothly within a stone-china dish, or a bake-dish that has a silver stand for the table. Wash over with white of egg, and stew with vermicelli Shat has beerr broken small, boiled a few minutes in hot water, then spread out to drain up on sieve. Brown in a quick oven. Buttered Parsnips. Boil tender, and scrape. Slice a quarter of an inch thick, lengthwise. Put into a sauce pan with a great spoonful of melted butter, pepper, and salt, and a little chopped parsly. Shake over the fire until it boils. Lay the parsnips upon a dish, and pour the sauce over them. W. C. T. U. COLUMN. How Haggle Fell. 'You ought to have seen me!' said the vivacious young lady, who re sides up town, to the minister. 'I'd just got my skates on and made a start, when I came down on my f 'Maggie!, said her mother. 'What? Oh, it was so funny! One skate went one way and the tother'n t'the.' way, and down I came right on my ' 'Margaret!' reprovingly spoke ber father. Well what? They just scooted out from under me, and down I came plurtip on my ' Maggie!' yelled both her parents. Yes in a minute! But as I was say ing. Pd no rtrore got on tho ioe when my feet flew up and I struck right square on my ' 'Margaret!' screamed her mother. 'On my little brother, who had me by the hand and liked to have mash ed him. Now what's the matter? The girls mother emerged from behind the coffee-pot, a sigh of relief escaped from the minister as he wip ed the presperation from his brow, and the old gentleman very adroitly tnrned the conversation in political matters. Juvenile Temperance Work. (Continued from last week.) 'We want men and women every where, intelligent, brave; and earnest, to work wisely in all sorts of ways for Temperance. And how can we have them unless we educate them ? When we see how weak and faithless and indifferent arc many of the men and women to whom we appeal for help, and from whom we expected better things, our very hearts should be strrred within us to go to work, and out of the material that God has put into our -hands, make men and women capable of better things! Whoiil shall we teach? Everybody, but especially the very best and the most earnest minds you can get. Do not be discouraged if you can not hold the multitude, if the bright and the trifling, the stupid and the lazy fall away. Your thor ough teaching may be a sifting pro cess. If so, take good care of the wheat that remains. Remember, ycur great aim is to educate workers, and if you educate but few, see that you do it thoroughly. Rest assured that the kind Of education wfi ch we propose in these pages will make the best sort of workers earnest, com petent, effective, and likely to stick to it as long as soul and body hold together. Even if they should be mostly girls, still elucate them thor oughly. Girls and women make good workers. There are those who shrink from the hard work which all this implies. They say, let it be done in the Sunday-schools. We are glad to have the Sunday-schools lend it their sanction, but they can not do much real Temperance teaching, unless the teachers, as individuals, are Tem perance workers and intelligent on Temperance topics. They can not well teach that which they do not know, and to which they have paid little or no attention. Besides this, they have not sufficient tirtie' for it. The same remarks will apply to the day-school teachers.- Some of these may teach Temperance science pas sably well, though they will not be likely to do that unless they are definitely Temperance workers, and then in many cas-js they -will meet with difficulties almost impossible to overcome. In neither case will thev. have the opportunity nor the free dom to unite the grand requisites of Temperance teaching as- they would have in a distinctively Temperance school. Here we can unite intelli gence and religion too long sepa rated. Here we can set up the stan dard, and show hat true Temper ance teaching means, and what kind of men and women it will' turn out; and this is much better than asking others to Set! the standard for us. The standard we aim at is an intelli gent acquaintance with the nature and effects of alcoholic drinks, so that the pupil may be able' to meet effectively the arguments of their apologists; and then such religious temperance training, that where the right and wrong are known, he will stand by his" convictions every time. Dear sisters and friend., shall we try for this high standard? (To be Continue. ribs crushed in, aud her precious life oozing slowly away. A quart of whiskey, which was drank fifty miles away by one of the railroad employeSj was the cause of the catastrophe. Who dares Bay of this tremendious rquestion, "It is not my business." Game Soup. Two grouse or pat ridges, or, it you have neither, use a pair of rabbits; i lb. of lean ham; 2 medium-sized onions, 1 lb of lean beef; fried bread; butter for trying; pepper, salt, and 2 stalks of white celery cut into inch lengths; 3 quarts of water. 1883. Harper's Weekly. iLJ.TJSTRATEt). &arpers Weekly stands at the head of American iiiustraieu weerti.v journals. jy us unparusan iwsi tion in politics, its admirable illustrations, its care ful chosen serials, short stories, sketches ana poems contributed by the foremost artists and authors of the day, its carries instruction and entertainment to thousands of American homes. It will always be the aim of the publishers to make HarjKirs weekly the most popular and attractive ia:mi iivnpu)-cr in utuwunu. HARPER'S PERIODICALS. Per Year. HARPER'S WEEKLY S4 00 HARPER'S MAGAZINE. . .' 4 00 HARPER'S BAZAR. 4 00 The THREE above publications 10 00 Any TWO above named 7 00 HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE 1 50 HARPER'S MAGAZINE l HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE HARPER'S FRANKLIN SQUARE LI BRARY, One Year (52 Numbers) 10 00 Postage free to all subscribers in the United States and Canada. Not my Business. A wealthy man in St. Louis was asked to aid in a series of tem perance meeting, but he scornfully refused. After being further pressed he tfatid "It is not my business." A few days after, his wife and two daughters were coming home on the lightning express. In his grand car riage, with his (Ewo liveried attend ance, he rode to the depot, thinking of his splendid business, and planing for the morrow. Harkf- Did some one say "Accident?" There atfe many railroads centering in St. Louis, if there has been an accident it is not likely it b'appned on the and Mississippi railroad. Yet it troubles him. "It is his business" now. The horses are stopped on the instant, and upon inquiry he finds it has oc curred on' the and Mississippi. He telegraphs to the superintendent: "I will give you live huudred dollars for an extra engine." The answer flashed back ""No" "I will giv3 you one thousand dollars for an engine." "A train with nurses and surgeons has already gone forward arid we have no other." With white face ami anxions brow the man paced the station to and fro. It is his business now. In half an hour,, prehapsj.which seemed- to him a half century, the train- arrived-. He hurried toward' it, and ih Hie ten der found the mingled tfnd lifeless- remains of his wife and one of his daughters. In the car following lay bis other daughter, with her dainty The volumes of the weekly begins with the first number of January of each vear. When no time is mentioned, it will be understood that the subscriber wishes to commence with the number next after the receipt of order. The last four annual volumes of Harper's Weekly in neat cloth binding, will be sent by mail, postage paid, or by express, free of expense (provided the freight does not exceed one dollar per volume), for i .uu per vonune. Cloth cases for each volume, suitable for binding, will be sent by mail, postpaid, on receipt of SI each. Remittances should be made by Post-office money order, or draft, to avoid chance of loss. Newspapers are not to copy this advertisement without the express orders of Harper & Brothers. Address, HARDER & BROTHERS, New York CONSUMPTION GURED An old physician, retired from active practice, having had placed in his hands by an East India Missionary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent cure ot Consumption, Bronchitis Catarrh, Asthma, and all Throat and Lnn; affections, also a positive and radical cure for general Debility and all nervous com plaints, after having thoroughly tested its wonderful curative powers in thousands of cases, reels it his duty to make it known to his suffering fellows. Thj recipe with full particulars, directions for preparation and use, and all necessary advice and instruc tions for successful treatment at vonr own home, will be receiveil by you by return mail,' free of charge by addressing with stamp or stamped self-addressed envelope to LR. M. K. IiL,L,, 161 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. 19:2yl a V ST v H Good Bock kept constantly on hand at Mrs. L. A. Dennick's Brick Yard, near the flouring mill, on the new ferry road South of Corvallis. l-33m3 It is not wealth, or fame, or state, But "git up and git" that makes me great. I HAVE JUST BEEN TO S. A. HEMPHILL'S TO get one of those new all hand-made harness, where all work ia warranted. 19-15m3 or T O O i m ft O o u OS O 5 e s e CO o o C9 CO cs o Si I? ft op 0 o If- City Stables Daily Stage Line FROM ALBANY THOS. EGLIN", On the Corner West of the Engine House CORVALLIS, - - OREGON. HAVING COMPLETED MY new and commodious BAUN, 1 am better than ever prepared to keep tho BEST OF TEAMS, BUSIES. CARRIAGES AND SADDLE HORSES TO HIRE. At Reasonable Rates. &3T Particular attention given to Boarding Horaes Horses Bought and Sold or Exchanged. PLEASE GIVE ME A CALL. TO COR ALUS. - - Proprietor, Having secured the contra tarrying tb United States Mull Hcow V x press Corvallis to -AJbany For the ensuing four years w 1 leave Corvallis each morning at 8 o'ciock. arriviiur In Albany about 19 o'clock, and Will start from Albany at 1 o'clock .in the afternoon; returning to Corvallis about 3 clock. This line will be prepared with good, teams and care cul drivers and nice comfortable and EASY RIDING VEHICLES For the accommodation of the' TRAVELLING PVBttci 10-i7yl WILLIAM MORRIS, TAILOR, Front Street, Two doors nortli of the Vincent Hon.se, CORVALLIS, OR ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY EXECUTED. Repairing and Cleaning at moderate Prices. 19-26yl THON3AS GRAHAM, Druggist and Apothcary, -AND DEALER IN- paints, m mm, mm, cuss, putty, mm A full line ot Bcoks, Stationeiy and Wall Paper. Oct drugs are frefdi and well selected. Prescriptions compounded at all hours. . 19-27yi Wheat and other Grain Stored on the best of Terms by J". BIjAIHi -AT- CIO Iff V A JL LIN SACKS FURNISHED TO PATRONS Farmers will do well to call on me before making arrangements elsewhere l- . ' . Scientists now all admit that most diseases are caused bv disordered Kidneys or liver, and that if these great organs arc kept far a perfect condition, health will be the result. WABNKK'cT SAFE KID NEY AND LIVER CURE Is made from a Simple Tropical Leaf OF RARE VALUE, And is a POSITIVE Remedy for the fallowing Troubles : Pain in the Back; Severe .Headaches; Dizziness; Bloating; Inflamed Eyes; A Tired Feeling; Night Sweats; Pains in the lower Part of the Body; Palpitation of the Heart: Jaundice; Gravel; Painful Urination; Ma la rial Fever; Fever and Ague; And all diseases caused by the Kidneys, Liver or Urinary Organs being out of order. It is a SAFE and CERTAIN cure for all Female dif ficulties, such as Leueorrhcea; Inflamatlon cf the Womb; Falling of the Womb; Ulceration of the Womb. It will control-and regulate Menstruation, arid is an excellent and safe remedy for females during preg nancy. As a Blood Purifler it is unequaled, for it cures the organs that MAKE the blood. For &i Carbuncles; Scrofula; White Swel ling; Salt Eheum; Poisoning Taj Mer cury or any other' Drug, It is certain in every case. For Incontinence; Impotence; Pains in the Loins, and all Simi lar Diseases, It is a safe, sure and quick Cure. . . " It is "the only known rehiedy that has cured Brigiits Disrase. As a proof of the purity and worth of this Great Natural Renicdy, reaa the following CHEMICAL ANALYSIS: S. A. LATTIMORE, Ph. D., L. L. D., Professor of Chemistry in the University of Rochester, N. Y. , knowing the ppulaHty chd merit of Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure, after a thorough Chemical Analysis, has furnished the fo'lowing statement:' UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER, Chemical Laboratory, ROCHESTER, N. Y., Jan. 8, 1880. Mr. H H. Warner has placed in my possession the formula of the medicine manufactured and sold by him under the general designation of WARNER S SAFE KIDNEY AND LIVER CUKE. I have inves tigated his processes of manufacture, which are con ducted with extreme care and according to the best methods. I have also taken from his lahoratorv sam ples of all the materials used in the preparation of this medicine, and upon critical examinat ion I find them, as well as the medicine into which thev enter. to be entirely free from poisonous or deleterians sub stances. S. A LATTIMORE. This Remedy which has done siich wonders, is put- up in the LARGEST SIZED BOTTLE of any medi cine upon the Market, and is sold by Druggists and all dealers at 1.25 per bottle. For Diabetes enquire for WARNER'S SAFE DIABETES CURE. It is a POSITIVE Remedy. H. H. WARNER & CO. 19:6yl Rochester N. Y. O Buy at dealers' prices". We will sell you any article for family or personal use, in any quantity, at wholesale" price. No matter what you want, send for our Gatalogue.m' con tains over 1,900 illustrations. We carry in stock the largest variety of goods in the U. S. MONTGOMERY WARD & CO 227 & 229 Wabash Ave., CHICAGO, ILL. TO HIE MD MUffll! AUD ESPECIALLY - Those Suffering from Debility Nervous Prostration, Loss of Vitality, Sexual Infirmities, Etc., Etc- o THE CP.EAT NEED THOSE HAVE WHO ARE suffering from SEXUAL AND NERVOUS COM PLAINTS is a physician who can comprehend their ailments and successfully treat them. , . The general practitioner is not sufficiently sklllc in these classes of troubles to do so and it must b left to the SPECIALIST, who by education. Ion; practice, thorough knowledge and comprehcuniV mind, is prepared to cure them. DR. J. C. YOUNG Opened his now celebrated Institute in 1850 for .the. purpose of affording the afflicted the certainty ot honorable and skillful treatment and perfect incf permanent restoration, and for over 30 years it ban sustained the first rank not only upon this Coast but throughout the civilized world. 1 am aware that bv dwelling npon so uninvitin subject as the DECAY OF SEXUAL VIGOR gnorant may asperse my motive, the desire to inform those who are suffer ing: through ignorance or who by care essness or want of knowledge that a care can be had, are not only hurrying- them selves to an untimely grave, but giving sexual weakness as an inheritance to future genera tions, is too great an incentive to permit me to be silent. svxriTJtoms. . IF YOU ARE SUFFERING FROM NIGHT LOSS ES, NERVOUSNESS, WEAKNESSES, CONFUSION XUND, SLIGHT LOSSES WHEN UNJ1ER EX CITEMENT, VARIABLE TEMPER, TREMBLING,' PALPITATION, FLUSHES, tc, OR IF.YOU HAVE PRACTICED SELF-ABUSE EVEN IN THE SLIGHT-' EST PARTICULAR you are suffering from the Dread Enemy of Human Life, And should not hesitate to seek at onco health and1 happiness in a cure. CURES GUARANTEED, FEES MODERATE CONSULTATION BY LETTER OR OTHERWISE. -FREE. Exclusively Vegetable Rmedics tied. o Ladies You are especially liable to suffering from NERV OUS PROSTRATION. All your peculiar complaints arcnervous in their origin and hence your sufferings are terribly depressing or inexpressibly keen. The Doctor in his researches and practice of NERVOUSl' TROUBLES has made your organizaticn a specia , study and is thus enabled from his experience and knowledge to aid and cure vou in any of the Troubles, Weakr cries, Distresses and Snf ferinesto whlrh you are liable. ASTYou will And in the Doctor a friend upon whom you can rely for comfort, aid and cure. Dr. Young's Female Remedies hxg attained a reputation for efficiency unequalled by any medicine or medical prescription ever offered. They can be sent by mail or express. Those desiring personal care and attention est?! have all necessary accommodations furnished. - 6 Ijetters. Those who cannot visit the city can by giving their symptoms in their own way, receive advice, and when, desired, treatment at hotne with every assurance of a cure. LETTERS RETURNED OR DESTROYED. Address, DR. J. C. YOUNG, Iledical Institute. o. 7 Stockton St. San Francisco, Feb. 21, 1882. " CO?1rOUKL C .GEN rtFATM'JHT Blr iKHATjA-' tion. .0.- OXiliMllllQtf Oil- atrt. ntu ism. Menralela, and all CbronSo 1)R8. STARKEY St PALEN, Philadelphia,? Pa. Package contains all direcliono, and is ; easily sent by exjrees, ready for USE AT: Agent, 608 Montgomery street-San JTrar-;' Cisco, Cal. aS" Send for Free Pamphlet. WILL YOU SUFFER with Dyspepsia aud Liver complaint? Shiloh's Vitalizer is nuarnteed to cure. you. For sale by T. Graham. , SLEEPLESS NIGHTS, made miserable by that terrible cough. Shiloh's cure is ready for you. Sold by T. Graham. LEGAL LANK FOR SALE AT THIS OFFICE PATENTS We continue to act as Solicitors for Patents, Caveats, Trade Marks, Copyrights, etc, for the United States, Canada, Cuba, England, France, Germany, etc.- Wo have bad thirty-live years experience. Patents obtained through us are noticed in the SCI Bntific American. This large and splendid illus trated weekIyimper,i)S.20ayear,showstbe Progress ol Science, Is very interesting, and has an enormous circulation. Address MINN tt CO., Patent 8c!tefa fnr. Piih'a. rt Rmnmn AUERiriv. ShT R'wav. New York. Hand book aboiit Patents free.