) EVERYONE SAYS SO. The GAZETTE is the most popular paper pub lisJwdjjj, Benton county. BEST CIRCULATION. The GAZETTE has the largest bona fide circula tion of any county payer. VOL. XXV. COHVALLIS, OREGON. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1888. NO. 42 Yaquimh Route, Oregon Pacific Railroad and Oregon Devepment Co.'s STE 235 Mi than by through iJ t aud from LINE. eb Les time 'First class ht line from i limeite valley L The steam t. Win. M. Hoa?, will leave Portland for A! bany on Fr after whiclrjlaie very low amette IB II U I o m t. A. G. F. and P. A. July 24th, '88. - Hivjsjs cconiit in the boats further HOGUE, TIME 3CHEDU J7 m Arrival itnf-r ays. ) 6:4". a. m. ll):3S " r 11:10 a. m. cnnhect at Albany and ns connect at Yiquna with teuuiahips ba- ailinars of for Nov- m San Fran- Lea.,, Albany 1:00 Arrlre Yaquina 5:3) OreronA Califor Rjnralli.. The abiv fchf Oregon Development Co. tiron Yaqiiina and San r'rani Steamshi Notice The pe the S. S. Wiilamet ember, :ire as follows: cisco, Nov. Is;, 8 a. m.; Nov. 12th, 4 p m.; Nov. 24th, 10 h m. From Ym quini, Njv. 6th. Nov. 12th, Nov. 30th. Tabj Company reserve, tbe right to chang sailing 4ats without notico. N, B. P icju;er3 from Purtlintl aud all Willamette valley points cm make close oanection wfth the trains of the Yaqnina route at Albany or Curvallis, ami if destined to Sau Francisco should arrange to arrive at Yaquiaa the evening before date nf sailing. Passenger and freight rates always the luwsst For information apply to 1) Cummins, freight and ticket agent, Oorval lis, or to C. C. HOGUE, Acting Gen. F. and P. Agent, Oregon Pa cilic Kiilroad Co., Corvallis, Or. C. H. HA3WELL, Jr.. (Jan. F. and P. Ageut. Oregon Dprelnp- t w aiousgoraery. at., c:af. 0 EiLAND TO CALIFORNIA VIA Southern Pacific Company's LINES. Time Between ALBANY AND SAN FRAN CISCO 30 HOURS. blffnaii Xxpren Truss Sua Dsflj ALBANY and SAN FRANCISCO LKATS. ARK1VX Pertlard 4:00 p. m. ', San Francisco 7:30 a m Ssa Francisco... 6:30 p. m. Portland 10:40 a m Ltnl Pusaager Baily Sxsevt Sinlay, LKATE. ARRIY'K. Partlaad 8:0 a. m. I Eurane 2:40 p. n. 0 00 a. m. I Portland 3:45 p m Pullman Buffett Sleepers. TOURIST SLEEPING CARS For accommodation of second class passengers, attached to express trains. The O. 4c C- R. R. Ferry makes connection witball the regular trains on the East Side Dirisien from f of F .treat. West 3iW rrttea. BETWEEN PORTLAND AND CORVALLIS. Hall Trala. Daily Zzcept Emily. LK1TR. I ARBIVR. Portland ..7:30a.m. i Corvallis 14:25 p. ai CerralUs 1:30 p. m. I Portland.. .. 6:15 p. m Al Albany and Corvallis connect with train of tbe Oregon Pacific Itailmad. Ziprets Trais. EallySxosptSacliy. LEAVE. I ARRIVE. Partl.nd 4:50 p. m. McMlnnville. . . 8:00 p. m Haitian ville . . .5:45a. m. I Portland 9:00a m For fall Information re'.rardinjr rates, maps, etc., all on :-jui:ny agent. K. P k ).;::liS. Asst. O. F. A P. Agent. R. KOKHLEK Manaver OREGON RAILWAY&NAVIGATtON CO.- "Columbia River Route." Trains for tbe East leave Portland at 10:40 a. m. and 2 p.m. d lily. fTRTTT" Jjl'n J to and from princi XiV.'JtV.Cj L pal points iu the United States, Canada, and Europe. ELEGANT PULLMAN PALACE CARS Emigrant sleeping cars run through on Ex ress trains to OMAHA, COUNCIL BLUFFS, and ST. PAUL, Free of Charge and without Change. Close connections at Portland for San Francisco sad Puget Soutid points. For further pa-ticulars inqnire of any Agant of the Company or A. L. Maxwell, G. P. and T. A, Portland, Oregon. A. L MAXWELL, G. P. and T. A " ' W- 'It ' HOLCOMjJ, GlUT'l MiAGER. MISCELLANEOUS IN SCHOoL-DAYS. for Infants and Children. "C astorias is so well adapted to children that I Castoria cures Colic. Constipation, 1 recommend it as superior to any prescription inumn .a .. XT A A -i - : t- T T 1U So. Oxtord St., Brooklyn, N. T. Without injurious medlcstlon. The Centaur Cokpant, I Sour f.toinacn. Diarrhcea. Enictition. I Kills Worms, cives sleep, and promoter df- Murray Street, IT. T. A. HEMPHILL. Manufactu er and Dealer in.., s. SADDLES, HAENESS. COLLARS, WHIPS, ROBES, CURRYCOMBS, BRUSHES, fat A and Everything connect ed with a first-class harness shop. Still sits the school honsy the road A ragged leggar sunsiuy; Around it still the sumacil grow. And blackberry vines are mnniug. Within the master's desk s seen, Deep sctrred by rsus i-S-.-ial: iThe warping flfor, the bartered seats The jackknife-carved initial. iTbe charcoal frescies on flie wallr I Its doors wrn sil! btra, tni; ,Th" feet, that rreeuing siu to Went storming out to pc.yutg. Long years ngo. a winte--aun Shone over it at setting Lit up Its western window-panes And low eves icy fretttg. j It fondled tbe tanuled gnttlen furls Ann eyes with imef o'ertlowinsj, j Of one who in her steps lsyed, I When al the rest were? going. For neir her stood Ihe little boy ner cmirtifn tavor sinij'-n; His cap pnl'ed low nponjiis face. Where pride and shame were mingled. Pushing with restless feet the snw To riht sad left he lisuered, As restlessly her tiny hands The blue-checked apr;,. fingered. He saw ber lift her eyes? he felt The soft hands Hibt iressii a- A;id heard he tremble .if her voice, As if a fault confessing. I'm sorry that I sjw It trje Word; I hate to go sltove yoii. Becsese the brown ev(llfwer fell Because you see I lovj you. Sti'l memory to a grrsifSrr"mn That sweet cbild-frc is showiiiL'; Cr eirl. the grasses nn her gr:ve H.'VC forty years been growing. He lives to learn in Hf-Js-lwtr - li ml How few who pass s(yW 1 in Laments their triumph jit d hi' ;.-.. Like her becanse tbejj l-v I.im V OLD-F ASHIC XJ M USTEB. chief musician in my day, and would not have exchanged his office with the king of England. He always played "Brooks' March" for the militia to locomote by. They never marched or kept 6tep by the music, but they got along somehow by walking and trStting and jmcing and fox trotting by turns. Old Father Brooks played his part well in the drama, or farce. or whatever it was. He magnifi ed his office. He loved music He said his fife was his life and his fiddle was his riddle. On his last bed he sent for my father to come and see him.' Old and wrin kled and cadaverous, he motioned to be propped up in his bed. and then, with an inverted chair be hind his pillow, he pointed to his fiddle that lay upon the shelf near by, and it was handed to him. Hugging it to his old bosom he smiled amid his tears and whisper ed: UI wish that I could play you one more tune." That night the old man died, with his lelt hand closed hard and rigid around the neck of his violin. After the muster was over then came the horse rucing on quarter nags and horse 'wapping, and of coure some pugiiislic exercises in front of the groceries. don't quit her gigglin', I will pint her out to the congregation." We have more manners now, though our morals msly be at a discount. Bill Arp, in Atlanta Constitution. Bill Arp thus discusses old times in Georgia and old-fsfshioned training day scenus: A . 1 i n 1 1 An oia-iasiuonea muster was Trimming and repairing a specialty Prices at bottom figures. MAIN STREET, CORVALLIS, OREGON. STOVES and RANGES, Mardi Gras." the commander- could not be fie militia were Every county p with the rank Superior to all others. - -For Sale by- Woodcock & Simpson, Wholesale and retail dea'ers in Heavy and Sheif Hardware, Tinware. Copper ware, and Granitewyre, Iron pipe and ptwasbera goods. The celebrated Steel-Gear buggies and Carnages. Bain Vaj"ii, agricultural implement, et.e. Plumbing and tinwork a specialty by one of the best workman m the slate. Every indue, ni. nt offered m the way of close prices f.ir cash in hand. Thirty to ninety days ti-ne will ba j;iven to panics who pay bills ' :' : " uhi, due time irtvmn tlie eiisinmer the adrmta?e of reliable uoods fw the mod erate prices of a prompt payin' cash system. S:10-!f. FOUND That the liest and cheapest plea, e n ' vallis to buy all kinds of ffOC MM OOT.B WATCH v JJ I FREE Cutlery, Tools. Iron, Nailf Pumps, B nbher hose. Iron and Lead Pipe, Hope, Birb Wire, STOVES RANGES. Granite ware, Stamped ware, Tin ware, Japanned ware and House Furnishing goods: or toet 'ill kinds "f job wrk ;n the Bat of sheet metals or plumbing done is at tin Hardware anil Stove store of SIGN CF THE PADLOCK J. D. CLARK. CORVALLIS COLLECT Will open SEPTEMBER 12, 1888. Correspondence with persons having daughters to educate is solicited. For par ticulars address . REV. P. &. ATK15S. Jsoid for SlUOTjn.t Uu utir. Bart SNr.l 1 wsvtcn la tbe world. rr-l f ci time-1 k keeper. Wrrtnt.J. iJeavvy ItNiihi Ooli Huntlnc Cum. l Kieffftiit "mi mascnincent. 1 Both latdlea'and ituU'iiM F wiln vorka and cisri of equal Tt.itM.oKsS raasoa la cacb locality csm loenn on Fin E. UowlatltUponlbteff We amwer w want one pr ann In each losalltr. In kp 1m tbflT hoTnes,aiid oUow to thnae who call, a eonpltl line ofow v . .i.w e: 1 very naeiOJ nuuric.siui.s' a-,ss. Tbest: amp!esraa well aatba waicb.we nd free.and aflr jo havfl kept tliAtn In jour home for s montba and shown than to thoit who mar have called, they become your own property ; It is posstble to make tnia rreat offer, endlns; the SOLID GOLD watch and COSTY aamplee trr, as thaahowlngof the sample. In any locality, always result m a large trade tor na; after oar samples have been In a locsllt j for a month or two we usually get from ftOUO to SOOO In trade Trom the surroundrnff country. This, the moat wonderful offer artr known, Is made In order that our samples may be placed at one where they can be sen, all over America. Write at once, and make sure of tbe chance. Reader it will be hardlyany trouble for yon to enow t be samples to theee who mar call at roar bote nd you. reward will be most satisfactory. A postal card on which to write us mats but 1 cent and after yon know all,lf yon do not cart, to to further, why no harm is done. But ir yonde send your address st ones, you can secure FBEE one of the best solid gold watches (n the world and our Isms line of C3S JLY SAHPLKM. We pay all ssurese. frelfttt, etc Address ufiU. biUioU M Wt 9QM IU. rVWIUAMD, sUUTa, OCCIDENTAL HOTEL Con. aliis M- A-OANAN Oreeon. Pi'ooi'ietoi- THE OCCIDENTAL is a new building newly furnished, and is first class in all its ippointments. . RATES LIBERAL. Laree Sample Room on First Floor for Commercial Beo. 19-35 1) TT'O T?T? If SILK AND SATIN NECKTIES. I LV P 1 i Aeenu' Snap box and OutHt. 12 eta. THE NECKTIE CO., Augusta, Ma. Please state Trnat pericdiaii jwq sw our sqysrtlisgisnt ni. equal to a moiler The governor w in-chief, but personally p; reviewed by prox had an aide d ?-c of colonel. He held his rank and title as long as (he governoi held his office, and he was expected to holler for him and boom him, and, if necessary, he must fight for him on a suitable occasion. If the governor failed of re-election, these colonels had to retire too. and a new 6et were appointed, but the old set never lost their title. and so the state in course of time got pretty full of colonels. On muster day the colonel wore a cockade hat and red plume and epaulets and a long brass sword and big brass spurs, and horse pis tols in the holsters of his saddle. and he and his personal staff rode up and down the lines reviewing the militia, who were drawn up in a double crooked straight line in a great big field that was fall of gul lies and broom sage. Some won? coats and some didn't; some wore shoes and some didn't; but none wore beards, for in those days none wore beards but gamblers. Some were armed with shotguns and some with rifles or muskets, but most of them carried sticks and cornstalks and umbrellas, and they siood up or. squatted down at pleasure, sud about half the time were hollering for water. The colonel and his staff rode up and down the lines on fine horses that danced and pranced like there were tacks under the saddles. The roll of each com pany was called ami every man answered to his name whether he was there or not. Then the col onel took a central position and faced the long audience and wav ed his glittering sword and ox claimed: "Attention, battallion! Shoulder arms, right face, march!' Then tho kettle drum rattled and the fife squeaked and some guns w-nt off half cocked, and militia gave three cheers for the colonel aud were disbanded until the next muster. Old man Brooks was the A TRYING PROFESSION. "Ours is a profession that tries men's souls," said a train de spatches "Notwithstanding that in late years the different railways have adopted rules which thor oughly systematize the business, even with all the safeguards a lit tie bit of carelessness or derelic tion ot duty is liable to cause trouble, and not only loss of prop erty, but in many instances is at tended with loss of life. "I remember, some years ago, when I had charge of tbe'trains on a Southern road, where telegraph offices were few and far between, of giving an order to an operator at a certain station to hold the north-bound passenger train for orders, so that I might help the south-bound passenger train to make its meeting point, the latter being somewhat late. The opera tor repeated the holding order, for which I gave him -O. K.' I then gave the south-bound train an or der to use some of the north-bound train's time to make the meeting point. . Instead of holding the Jim Bowles was Ihe centre of a north bound train for orders, the crowd from his beat, and stripped operator let it go by him. The to the waist he pranced around road was crooked, and both trains and popped his fist in the palm' of were between telegraph stations,! his hand, and jumped up and started te walk, the floor and wait cracked together three times be-j until I should hear of their com fore they struck the ground, and ing together. The suspense was gave a Wild Indian whoop and ex- terrible, almost unfitting me for claimed: "I'm the best man in 'my other duties. As good luck Pinkneynlle district." Abwut would have i, Uw nortft-iound that lime big Jim Kabinson jump ed up in the centre crowd, and gritted his teeth aud shook his hair and yelled: "Gen tlemen, my Betsey Jane says I'm the best man in Rockbridge dees- trict, and I to know." It was just like gamecocks crow-!exp rfence will ever remain in my ing in the barnvard. and, like the mind. St. Louis Globe Democrat. .locks. LOST AT SEA. train, which had undisputed right of another, of the road, was delayed before reaching the meeting point. When the first train reached a telegraph station I felt relieved, but the strain had been so terrible reckon she ought for on my nerves that I was not good for much for several days, and the two of them soon got to gether and went to fighting, and everybody stood around and shout- C03T OF POLICING BRITISH CITIES. According to a recent English ..H,inlc if irontlomoiv stand iJarliamuntirv return, the total back, gentlemen. Hands off, let cost of the police in the metropo 'em tight fair and Bquare." And lw d in boroughs in Great Brit they they fought hard and fought ain wit over 100,000 inhabitants loni and stKh nnp of tbetn cot to is as tollows: Ihe cost in the me be t he bottom dog in the fight and hollered "enough," the show was over, unless the victor dared to crow again, and had to tackle another rooster. I have known Nick Rawlins lo whip three brag men in one evening, and Nick was no bad man either, Everybody liked Nick. He had fit and fought and fought until he had lost a fin ger and a snip out of his nose and a piece of his left ear, but he was never mad. Nick told me not long ago that he never did love to fight, but when he courted Betsy Jane she 'lowed that when she married a man he had to be a man all over, inside and out, and so he got to fighting on her account. But these old times are gone gone never to return. Even the preachers who used to take off i heir coats in the pulpit have con formed to more polite customs. Their sing-song sermons are heard no more nor the nasal attach ments that wero something be tween a suffle and a snort. Old Father Dan nelly and his wooden leg are dead and so is old Barm Pace, who said to the Rome girl who went out to hear him just for the thing: "If that town gal with Ihe green bonnet on her head and the devil's martingales around her neck and his stirrups in her ears. Children Cry for ditcher's Caetoria, tropolitan police district is 527, 025, City of London 109,206, Liverpool 134,076, Glasgow 100,480, Birmingham 49,387, Manchester 77,773, Leeds 37, 117, Sheffield 31,274, Edinburg 42,765, Bristol 31,738, Brad ford 21,369. Nottingham 22, 317. Sallord 30,840, Kingston-on-Hull 30,840, Newcastle-on-Tyne 26.308, Blackburn 10,322, Bol ton 16,564, Dublin metropolitan police district 150,531. HOW A JOURNALIST MET HIS END. "So you are from Arizona?" "Yes." "How is the Tombstone Hooter coming on?" "Busted." "What busted it?" "A prominent citizen shot the editor." "What for?" "You see he wrote 'Horible Blunder' as a headline to go over an account af a railroad accident, but the foreman made a mistake and put it over an account of a wedding. The facetious father of a pair of twin babies complained that al though they filled the house with music, he could not tell one heir from another JJingham ton Republican. Children Cry for; FTom the date of the disappear ance of the ill-fated President down to the sinking of the Geiser the other day, the annals of Atlan tic travel are marked thiekly wii-hi episodes of disaster, suffering anii death. Some of the finest and! staunchest steamships that have ever been built, figure on the loni; sad roll of the lost. Some of therm have been run down and sunk iu a collision, like the Arctic, the Ville du Havre and the Geiser; others have been destroyed by fire like the Amazon, the Sheridan, and the Austria; many have rush ed headlong on the rocks in a log; or a dark night, like the Schult r, the Mosel and the Atlantic; a few have flounderod at sea in a gale or a cyclone, like the City of Yeia Cruz; others have been wrecked on sunken ice, like the Canadian, while several, like the President. Pacific and the magnificent City of Boston, have mysteriously dis appeared leaving not a trace be hind to indicate the cause of their loss. It is certainly a startling fact that in the space of forty-s vein years 6ince the unfortunate PrcrU dent lelt New York, March 11, 1841, never again to appear to mortal ken, nearly a hundred fine steamers have been utterly de stroyed while on their passage across the Atlantic. Of these eight after leaving port mysteriously disappeared and have never since been heard of, ten were run down in collisions, tiro were burned, one ran on sunken ice in the Straights of Belly Isle, another went down in a tieM of ice, three nou ttdered in mi,d ocean, and the remainder of the melan choly list were wrecked either on the Irish and British coasts, those of America or on rocks off them. Fully ten of these ran in foggy weather on the shores of Nova Scotia or New Foundland on their way westward a sufficient warn ing, it might be supposed, to cap tains to give a wide berth to these latitudes. Only one, the Iowa, an American steamer, was wrecked on the French coast, near Cfaer boug. in 1864. It is generally sup posed that shipwrecks are caused by the rage of the elements, but, of all the vessels that went ashore, only three or four appear to have directly suffered in consequence of heavy weather. Miscalculation as to distances run and course steered, clouded skies, dark nigh 1st and, more than all, dense fogs, were the primary causes of the. disasters. Comparatively few ot these shipwrecks occurred without serious loss of life, at least 560O persons having perished among; the passengers and crew who were on board. When the Atlantic was wrecked on Meagher's Head, olf the fatal Novia Scotian coast, in 1873, no less than 562 persons were drowned. With the City of Glasgow 480 people disappeared; with the President, 120; with the; Pacific, 186, and with Hie City of Boston, the last of the missing: steamships, 191. When the Aus tria was b .rned in mid ocean 470 lives were lost; with the Arctic 323; with the Angle-Saxon, 372; with the Ville du Havre, 226; with, with the Borussia, 200; with the Schiller, 311. The destruction of other vessels caused the loss of fewer lives than the vessels nam ed, as happiiy fewer passengers were on board; but with severai on the list from 100 to 200 being perished. In 1873 no less than six large steamships were wreck ed, run down, or disappeared, the, most disastrous losses being those of the Atlantio and the Ville di Havre, a total loss of 788 lives.-r Harper's Weekly. Pitcher Castorta,