THJ2 COKVuLLtSETTf:, THIDAV, FEBRUARY ?, 1890. THE OBJECTOR'S ADVICE. Hepresentative Holman's Say to a flew "M. C." Very sensible suggestions. Light Shed on the Way some Ob jectionable Bills are Passed and many More are Introduced. It is related that a young mem ber about to enter upon his first term in congress once applied to that veteran "objector," Judge Ilolman, for advice touching the performance of his duties, and re ceived the following suggestions from him: - uAlwa3rs bear in mind," said the Judge, "that you do not represent the men who are seated about you and whom you meet in the lobbies and hotels. You will find them very congenial and polite gentle men, and they will take great pleasure in making your stay here very pleasant for you. By voting for the private measures of your fellow-members as they come up, you will not only do the thing most convenient for yourself, But you will receive such flattering ttpprob-tion as will add much fo your own self appreciation. If you test the merit of their Schemes, having in view the environments of sood fellowship and the recip rocity of such services which main- J r tains Ihem, you can easily per suade yourself of their popularity. The persons you, oblige by such votes will pat you on the back and say all manner of nice things about you. "But you .should bear con tinually in mind that the men who sent vou here are in the cornfields and workshops out west, working away in their shiit-sleeves, and' are very apt to look at things from a very different-standpoint, from that of these very agreeable gentle men whom it would delight you to accommodate by voting accord ing to their wishes. These men here can't vote for you, and at the next election it will matter little to you in your canvass whether you have pleased them or not. Consider every propositipn with flu rtupclinn in miiifl ' Wlisit. rpn. sonable and truthful explanation can I make to my pt ople at home to justify me to them for having voted for this measure?' The measure that you cannot truthfully justify voting for to the average larmier in the harvest-field, or to the average blacksmith at Lis forge, you had better vote against. otherwise you may find yourself less popular at home on election day than you could be here by obliging your friends in and out of the house by voting for their little bills." . : The average congressman is chock full of good intentions, and loves the dear ' constituents with an abiding affection. There is no limit to his endeavors in their be half.- No one of them can suggest to him a service to be performed but that it is undertaken with. zeal and industry. There is nothing xtoo good or too big in the treasury here for the citizens of Mudsock. Their member, will go for it; on their behalf. Constitutional limit ations, State rights, antiquated no tions of jeconomy, are all relegated to the rear when Mudsock comes to the front; in the very nature of things her rights are paramount, and not affected by the ordinary principles of governmental policy. Fortunately for Mudsock, there . are Buzzardr Glory and Tailhold, Jack's Defeat and Beech Creek, likewise efficiently represented here by zealous members, and they, too, want some of the sur plus, and are equally entitled to it. A combination of interests Is easily effected a hundred "future greats" are readily, recruited, and thus our members' measure is no longer a mere local affair, interest ing only to dwellers in the village on the Raccoon, but it is a pait of a great "national system" ' to be wrought out in sections as rapidly as the "objections" of a few "old cheese-paring fossils,' or Shake rags in their respective districts, will permit. True, the item of cost has multiplied even more rapidly than the number of Mud socks in the field, for some of them have registered their demands over -in the millions column, and many ef them in that next to it. Now right here is where the member from Musock needs a sug gestion from the member from Aurora, Ind. The judge would mince his tobacco half a minute, at the rat&-of forty-six bites a sec ond, would give his hand, palm upward, a series of those rotary nervous motions which he acquir ed as a boy feeding his fowls, and with, a little more pronounced nasal intonation, added for the sake of impressiveness, one would say: . - "Yes, yes, yes, that's all right- that's all right so far as Mudsock is concerned, it's a nice town, en terprising place; need a postoffice building there, no doubt, people there will probably very gener ously endorse it. But, ah, ah, my friend, ah, have you stopped to consider what your constituents over at Jiggerhead and Hard scrabble and the hundred other postoflices in your district will think about it? You know they are very plain kind of people about most of .these country vil lages, their postoffices are kept at the grocery stores, and they really would not enjoy their mail unless it is slightly flavored with onions and mackerel. Now they might not object; that is, they might not object so much to your taxing them to build a nice office for Mudsock at a cost of $50,000; but ah, ah, it is worthy your consider ation whether, ah, ah, ah, ah, their sympathies will go with you in voting for these one hundred and fifty other buildings in order to get your Mudsock bill passed. You may be right, rhy friend, you may be right, doubtless you have considered the matter more care fully than I, but ah, ah, ah, at the same time these suggestions may be worlhy of some thought." At the first call of the states for the introduction of bills in this congress there was - an unprece dented amount of Shakerag and Buzzard Glory measures dumped into the hopper. Tb.3 strength of the combination that can be form ed by the consolidation of these local interests would be startling. The honest granger near Slabtown, who has known his member since boyhood, has . swapped tobacco with him and heard him declaim against the extravagance of .the other fellows, would stand aghast at the magnificence of views de veloped and ripened under the congenial atmosphere of congress ional associations. The average member, like a cer tain class of witnesses out of court, is "not on oath" except when the roll is called. Here is the opportunity for the combina tion. The .members who intro duce bills for public improvements in the way of buildings, etc., stand together in the support of each of them. A faltering by any one at any point insures the defeat of his own measures. This fact alone is sufficient to keep up perfect disci pline. Four days given to - the com mittee on public buildings and grounds without any one to apply the network of obstructive tactics would provide for the erection of over 150 postoffice buildings, half of them in places where the whole net- revenue of the offices would not pay the interest on the outlay and the expense of caring for and preserving X the " buildings after erection. , V It is safe to say thaji were all the bills already introduced in the house to become lawk the com bined revenues of all the govern- Children Cry fot? : -? jnents of both Americas would not suffice for; oiir expenditures. If. the conservative element, rep resenting about 33 per cent of the membership of the house, were to absent . theniselves in a body for two wegks ata time, the annual drain on the treasuary would be increased $200,000,000. Wash ington Post. ' 4,1'ECULIAR HOTEL. A new hotel .was opened this season in Washington which is run in the most peculiar way ever heard of. It is kept by a woman. She is noted here as a worker in the christian temperance union and other societies. The rules of her house prevent any one from having wine, beer or whistcy under that roof. It goes without saying that none ot the "ardent" is sold there. She will not even permijt the use of tobacco on the prem ises. If a man should stray into the office with a cigar in his mouth he is instantly commanded to take it out, and told that the "vile habit" of smoking. is not .tolerated there. A few days ago the pro prietor discovered . that a married couple who had.rooms in the hotel were in possession of a bottle of beer. She demanded : that they should vacate the rooms at once, ane they had to go. Several young women and widows who hold places in the'government ser vice occupy rooms at the peculiar tavern. They cannot remain out at night after a certain hour unless the proprietor knows just where they are going; and in order to get back Into , the place they are furnished with permits. If they want to go to the theatre objection is raiseel, so it is said, the over pious woman who keeps the hotel being of the Opinion that theatres are devices of the devil. As a consequence of such "blue laws" it is said that this hotel has within its walls more "cranks." male and female, than were ever collected together .before in one place in Washington. New York Tribune. IT LOOKED THAT WAY. . Wallis Did Black win the law suit he had over that large sum of money. Wallace I suppose he did. He told me he lacked only $450 of having, enough to pay the lawyer after it was over. Time. Alexander T. Stewart left an es tate estimated all the way from $20,000,000 to $40,000,000. At the end ot a dozen years his widow, to whom,, he left nearly all of it, was in debt to, the executor in the sum of $000,000, and the estate has shrunk to $12,000,000. Jim Fisk left to his widow $3,500,000. The estate was eaten up by sharks of various - kinds, and Mrs. Fisk, who is now a miserably poor wo man, 'is living on a small farm in New England. A writer in an Eastern journal, talk ing about church choirs, says they have become the training school for the comic opera stage. 'The good deacons may not believe it possible, but a glance at the history of the most popular soubrettes aud prima donnas shows that they graduated from church choirs." ' .Ralston Cox will open an office in Port land next- wetk, he has also established agencies in Seattle and ' Spokane, all property plated with him will be listed in all the above offices. , If yon have property of any kind he can sell it for yon. ' ''"' ' -Or !' . rr-t ar.l I-.kj. ,, I n'.x" ii , nr. r -. y .-T M i i;;,.. in iih 9 ! ''i.''r I J'Wtn.tvit. . I" 1 '1.1" ( VkI !"m -:. for HIi. -:t !.r. H-lor r. -. :....-...;.. tr;!- ; ?j:fV A I it., ) ni.i:.Biy, 3. i l.riiailRsj, . : r:'j: kvwfi. lch j-v".ia.on;ninr. color "v ;iHvr..iii ::::-. ... eui'Ui t:i:i! ,-.i , lt-:i1t-,s- :t ii:.tt;:rv i r.;-ilii.vt. n.i-n i riyruvii !:! !:i : fl-i:y an-; : H.vti-i.,. fir t' i- uf t i-i.-t. a i i.rvv :-t.v-: j. t'i' I i in i.-iims. - .. o;.-!, .M j . fi.--. tr rsil!f:Mk.. Col' TRADE- i,?ARS5. ' In (tv rnut :u;.tS rim rr:-for--fl'Iir rv ;!, "t'.i pitcher's Castorla. S-fJ'? JUTCt'W! rrrwtt. :&-y .-mi i- "i- Gorvallis Grange, Jlo. 242, CORVALUS, OREGON, 1890. t 1:30 I- M. .. . -n ts-Qj"ca : - FEBRUARY 1. OPENING EXEKCISES. BUSINESS SESSION. MUSIC. SOME OF THE BENEFITS DERIVED FROM THE CRANQE." LKTcan (DlMtuwd by Members Present. " SELECT BEADING, - - - MUSIC. - - FEBRUARY 15. MTTSIC.- -" ' BUSINESS SESSION. MUSia - . "READING MATTER FOR THE HOME." ESSAY, "HOME AND ITS AFFAIRS," - - ' SELECT READING, - - - ' MARCH 1. BUSINESS SESBION. INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC. - - - PAPER, "HOW SHALL OUR ROADS BE WPROVEDf DISCUSSION, LED BY A. G. MULKY AND E. ELLIOT. DECLAMATION. . MUSIC. ' MARCH IO. OPENING EXERCISES. BUSINESS SESSION. INITIATION. MUSIC. "PRUNING FRUIT TREES," -DISCUSSION, LED BY OEO. TAYLOR. -SELECT READING, - - - MUSIC. MARCH 29. MUSIC. BUSINESS SESSION INITIATION. MUSIC. - BANQUET AND SOCIAL MEETING. APRIL 6. m MUSIC. BUSINESS SESSION. MUSIC "BENEFICIAL BIRDS AND INSECT8," select reading, "declamation. APRIL 19- BUSINESS SESSION. MUSIC. - "FARM CROPS FOR WILLAMETTE VALLEY." ESSAY. , - - - -READING. MUSIC. trk papers and essays M. E. Grimm. L. H. T. French. A. S. L. Y. Wilson. T. W. Crkes. O.E. Elliot. F. Mrs. J. D. Johnson. L. A. S.-1-MR8. FIHE PRIIlTltJB! KSrAll . kinds of extra fine job printing, snch as Wedding Invitations and Cards, Ball Programmes and Tick ets, Calling Cards, etc., done in excel lent style at The Gazette office. Call and inspect samples of stock. . CBAiG & CONOVER, Corvallis, Mas. L. Wilsox Paor. W. W. Baisrov Mas. BL T. Faixca Maa S. L. Suaoa Paor. Bkkcbtolb t. D. JoHNioa Paor. E. R. Lais Mas. Geo. TATLoa Paor. F. L. Winm DlKusted by Members Present. Mas. J. D. Jemsoa . ' - WORIHT MASTSa Discussed by 8. L. Shedd and others Miss Amci Hoasuca are open for discussion, OFFICERS: O. J. D. Johnson. S. S. L. Shkdd. Chap. W. W. Bristow. Sec A G. Mulrky. P. Mrs. L. Wilson. C Miss Alice Hobniro. H. T. French. Oregon. 0EKLAITD TO GALIFORNrA VIA Southern Pacifid Company's LINE THE MT. SHASTA ROUTE. Time Between ALBANY and SAN FRANCISCO 35 HOUHS. Ci!ff:nis Ezjreu Tnini Bon Eiily POUTLAND and' SAN FKANC1SCO. SOUTH. Lr Portlai'd ...4:00p.m. NORTH Lv Ban Frisfco.... 7:00pm Lv Altyaiiy...ii...450i L Albany... i,.8HB p. m, Ar Ssfi Frisco. ..7:o p.m. Ar Portland... 10:45 a w Local Passenger Train, Dailyt except Sunday r Portland. ..8:00 a.m. I Eugene ..9:00 a. na Albany.... 12:40 p. m. Lv Albany 11:85 a. m 4r Eilgeue ..2:40 p m Ar Portland 8:46 p nt Lebanon Branch. 8":2D p m...Lv... Albany.. .;Ar... 6:30a lit SUW6 p in. . Ar. .. Lebanon. ..Lv. . 5:45 a M IkJ() p m. ..Lv. . ; Albany ; . i.Ar, ;.9:25 p in t6 p m. . Ar. . .Lebanon. ..Lv. . -.8:40 p nt 7:30 a m; L.. .Albany Ar.. .4:26 p nt 8:22 a m..Ar. . .Lebanon. ..Lv . ..3:40 p nt Pullman Buffett Sleepers; TOUHIST SLEEPING CARS, Por accommodation of second-class passengers, attached to Express Trains. The S. P. Co.'s Ferry makes connection with all lb regular trains ou the East Side DiTisien from (oot of F street. West Sid Sivisia. -BETWEEN PORTLAND AND fjORVALLISi Hall Tnii. Sally Except Stasday. bVK. I ARCIVB. Portland. iii...T:30 a. m. 1 CorvalUs:.;... IS :SS p. at Corrallis 1:30 p. m. Portland 6:10 p. ni At Albany and Corvallis connect with trains of th Oregon Pacific Railroad; Ezprea Train. Saily Except Sunday. LIAVB. Portland 4:50 p. m. HcMlnnvills . ... 6:45 a. m. AKK1VK. McMinnviile... 8:00 p. nt Portland; ... 9:00 a. Hi THROUGH TICKETS to all points South and East via California fior full information regarding rates, maps ate., call ou company's agent at Corrallis of Albany. K. P ROGERS, Asst. G. F. &P. Agont. R.JCOEHLEKUanairor. the; Vaquina CUTE Oregon Pacific Ftallroad and Oregon Development Co. 'a STEAMSHIP LIJSE. 233 Miles Shorter; 20 Hours Less tims than by any other routa. First class through passenger and freight line front Portland all points in the Willarneite valley to aud from San Francisco C'al. The Oregon Pacific stentntmats oil the Willamette river division will leave Portland, soutli-bpulidj Mondayj Wednesday and Friday at 6 a.m. Arfive at Corvallis on Tuesday Thursday and Saturday at 3:30p. m Leave Corvallis, north-bound Monday Wednesday and Friday at 8 a. hi Arrrve at " Portland Tuesday Thui s day and Saturday at 3:30 p. ttu , On Monday, Wednesday abd Fri day, both north and south-bound boats lie over at night at Salem, leaving there at 6 a. la TIME SCHEDULE (except Sundays.) leaves Albany 1:00 p. m I Leaves VaqHhia6:4Sa. ni: Leave Coi vail i 1:4(1 p m. la.v Or all is 10:86 " Arrive Yaquina 6:30 p. m Arrive Albany 11:10 a. mi Oregon ft California trains connect at Albany and Ojrvallls. The above trains connect at Yaquina wita toe Oregon Development Co. '8 line ot steamships tween Vaquina and San Francisco. This Company reserves the right to.ehanf sailia dits without notico ' ... N. B. Passengers from Portland and all Willamette valley pSints can make close connection wfth the trains of the Yaquina route at Albany or Corvallis, and if destined to San Francisco should arrange to arrive a Yaquina the evening before date of aailingi Passenger and freight rates always the lowest. For information apply to D. Wi Cummins, freight aud ticket agent, Corral lis, or to C. C. HOGUB. " Acting Gen. F. and P. Agent, Oregftn Pa citiu Railroad Co., Corvallis, Or. y C. tt. HAS WELL, Jr.. . Gen. F. aud P. Agentt Oregon Develop uient Co., 304 Montgomery St., S. F.f Cal. GREAT OVEKUSD EOUTEI NORTHERN PACIFIC Railroad. ' tfwo fast trains daily! No change of cars I Shortest line to Chicago and ail point east, via ST. PAUL and MINNEAPOLIS. Jt - The Northern Pacific railroad it the only" una running jt assvnur brttins, Bntuiiuiaow sleepers free of ' charge), luxurious day coaches, Pullman palace sleeping cars, pal' ace dining cars meals 75 cents. See that yonr tickets read via the North em Paciiio railrdad- auel avoid change- of cars.' . . Leave Portland at 10:40 a. m., and 2 . m., daflvj arrive ot Minneapolis or St. Paul at 5:05 p. m. third day. - PACIFI C DIVISION Trains leay Front aud G street daily at 11:05 a, ro. and 2 a. tn.; arrive at New Tacouia at 6:15 p; a. and 8:30 a. w. connecting with eompa ny5s boats for altpoihts on Paget Sound , CHAS. S. FEB, Genl Pass. Agent, St. PauL ' ' A. D. CHABLTON, Asst. Geui Pass. Agent, No. 121 First st, cor. Washington St., Portland, Oregon. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE COR vallis GazEttE, the oldest pa per in Benton co. One year. $3