THE COHVALLIS GAZETTE, FRIDAY. A PHIL. S. ISO'S Higfiest of ali in Leavening Power. ,1 ABSOLUTE! PURE POINTS ABOUT TIME. Variations and the causes which produce them. Ill Earth' Revolutions on It Axis, To gether with Its Journey Around the Sun. Are the Disturbing Factors No Watch Is Perfectly Reliable. If there is one single scientific problem fepon which more than another people appear to get mixed that problem is time. Standard time, local time, sun time are exceedingly difficult problems for the public to puzzle over, and when sidereal time enters the calculation the case is hopeless indeed. 1 have fre quently of late seen so many letters ad dressed this and other journals, all -touching upon one or the other of these chronological questions, that 1 have con cluded a short note explaining the main points of difference would be, at any rate, timely. If it only suggests to the young men in the business offices the idea of going to work at 9 a. in., local mean time, and leaving off promptly at 4 p. in.. Pacific standard time, the ques tion will have been shown to possess a practical side. The application of it, however, is purely a matter of taste.- Well, to come to time, the great chro nometer and regulator in chief to the business, social and scientific world is the earth itself. Turning u pon its axis in the period which we divide into twenty-four hours, the sun appears to cross the me ridian of each place on the globe once in that interval The moment at which it crosses the meridian of any place (Green wich), for example, is termed "local ap parent noon" at that place. This would be all very well if the earth and sun re mained fixed in their relative positions; or if the earth, completing, as it does, an annual revolution about the sun, did so uniformly in a perfect circle and that circle were in the same plane with the motion of daily rotation. Then the suc- : i 1 4--u :,i:. ceoxuve unci vain ucttvecu uw uiciiuidu passages of the sun at Greenwich would all be equal, and a perfect chronometer Bet at 12 hrs., 0 min., Osec., when the Bun transited today would indicate pre cisely the same instant for "apparent noon" at every date. MOTIONS OF TUB EARTH. But the earth's path around the sun is not a perfect circle; it is an ellipse, and the motion in one portion of the ellipse is tnore rapid than in another, and this causes a slight variation in the intervals between the solar passages. Again, the plane of the earth's path around the sun, or the elliptic, is inclined 23 degs. to the plane of the equator in which the daily rotation takes place, and conse quently twice a year the intervals of "apparent noon" are each about twenty seconds greater and twice a year about twenty seconds less than twenty-four hours. To explain just why this results would require more of an investigation into astronomical principles than is here contemplated; but it is so, nevertheless, and any text book will elucidate the rea sons. A combination of the two effects causes the sun to bo apparently slow fourteen minutes in February and fast sixteen minutes in November. But in the course of a year the average comes out all right, and therefore a "mean solar day" of exactly twenty-four hours is adopted in the almanacs and used for all purposes. This" accounts for the dif ference between mean time and sun time. A regulator keeps the former; a sun dial indicates the latter. A few years ago (or prior to 1884) every large city in the United States had its own local time, and this was for each place the true mean solar time, obtained as above indicated. REGULATING TIME. , Consequently, a man traveling west ward from ' Washington would find bis watch fast, as follows: At Chicago, 42 minutes ; at Omaha, 1 hour 16 minutes; at Denver, 1 hour 52 minutes; at Salt Lake City, 2 hours 20 minutes, and final ly, at San Francisco, 8 hours 2 minutes. It will readily be recalled how much annoyance was occasioned by all these various corrections, both to trainmen and travelers. About the year men tioned a great reform was inaugurated. ' j 4 i ; ,1 xvuwauavs a traveler guiug wcsiivtaiu finds his watch fast from time to time, but only the hour hand is in error. All the clocks in the country indicate the - minute and second ot Greenwich mean time, bnt the hour is changed for each 15 degs. of longitude. Washington time is 5 hours slow of Greenwich; Chicago, 6 hours; Denver, 7 hours. In San Fran cisco we are 8 hours slow of the prime meridian. All the intermediate cities - and towns are run on one system or an other, according to their location in longitude, the standards being eastern, central, mountain and Pacific time. All the time pieces on the coast are set by Pacific standard time, which is 8 hours slow of Greenwich mean time. " There fore, a watch which is set at San Fran cisco solar time by means of a corrected sun dial is still 9 minutes 42 seconds slow of a Pacific standard time clock, because we are that much in longitude X 4.1 . 1 1 west ui we iium luenuau, wuiuu lunua the eastern boundary of northern Cali fornia and on which only is the "Pacific time" coincident with "local mean time." A Lord In a Ditch. Lord Mulgrave was distinguished, by ' a singularity of physical conformation, having two distinct voices, the - one strong and hoarse, the other weak and - querulous, of both of which he occa sionally availed himself. So extraordi nary a circumstance probably gave ' rise to a story of his having fallen into a ditch on a dark night and calling for aid in bis shrill voice. A countryman com ing up was about to help him, bnt Lord Mulgrave, addressing him in a hoarse tone, the peasant immediately exclaimed, "Oh, if there are two of you in the ditch yon may help each other out of it." London Tit-Bits. . The most useful domestic pet of the natives of Greenland and other: Arctic climes is a peculiar looking animal, to which the name of Eskimg dog has feeengiTeo. J, , . i U. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1839. A LITTLE FAMILY DIFFERENCE. Two Old Ladles Differed Over a Small Matter, but the Elder AVon. Up on the Delaware and Hudson rail road the other day two nervous old ladies climbed on board the south bound train at Crown Point. They were of the same height, looked much alike and both of them wore gossamer rubber cloaks possibly under the vague impression that cinders melt. They fluttered into a seat near the door, evidently prepared for a long journey. When the bird cage, two satchels and three shoe boxes of luncheon had been properly stowed away, the two ladies sat down in unison, much as if pulled on one string. Beyond a vigorous attack on the luncheon an hour later, they quietly de voted their attention to the scenery un til Albany was reached in the late after noon. That being the terminus of the road, the passengers started for the car door as the train stopped, but there seemed to be a blockade of some sort on the platform. It wasn't just exactly a blockade; it was the tnjp old ladies from Crown Point. Equipped with satchels, the bird cage and the luncheon (now reduced to one shoe box), they had led the procession to the door, but had succeeded in getting no farther, as the train had run into the station on a middle track, and they could not agree on which side of the car to get off. "I tell you, Janet," said the old lady with the bird cage, with much dignity, "that this is the proper side. It is nearer the depot, and no doubt our train is close by. Come, don't be obstinate, sister," she added persuasively. "I will not leave the car on that side," declared the other, holding up the shoe box and both satchels as if for a barri cade, which the impatient crowd within the car thought quite superfluous. "If you tliink I am going to career across three tracks," she continued emphatical ly, "in front of moving locomotives, and risk ourselves and that precious bird, then I say, Hannah, you have lost your senses; that's all." "You seem to forget that I am older than you. Janet," rejoined the other with offended dignity. "That may all be, hut little good it's done. You would have scandalized the whole family at Cousin Maria Soper's funeral up at the Corners if I had not insisted" "Hey!" "What's the 'matter?" "Shake it up!" "Get off!" came in a chorus from the impatient throng inside. "Sakes alive!" ejaculated the beliger- ent Janet, for the first time observing ! the ctowd in waiting. "Come this way. Do come," pleaded the other. "1 won't" "You must; I insist,." cried the elder sister, stepping hastily down to decide ; the matter. There was no further 1 chanco for argument. Already the other ! passengers were pushing out. So, with an expression of annoyance and fright, tho second old lady tourist joined the other and tho two rubber gossamers be- ' gan their devious flight across the tracks . and before waiting locomotives toward : the station. They reached there at length, but it was apparent that some thing had happened. "I told you so! I told you so!" almost screamed the younger sister as soon a" she could catch her breath. "You say you dropped it?" asked the other in troubled tones. "Yes; that horrid engine let off steam and 1 jumped. I suppose I dropped it then. Why can't engines hold their steam till they get out in tho country, I'd like to know?" "Well, never mind, Janet, wo can get along," said the other soothingly. "But I do mind. I suppose, Hannah, I ought to be thankful that you and the bird are safe; but just to think," she added, with almost a sob, "the whole of Aunt Lucinda's sponge cake gone, and we've only got to Albany." And sure enough, some distance up the second track, reposing peacefully on the off rail, lay the familiar green out line of the last shoe box. New York Tribune. - Two Bold Compliments. A bold stroke to obtain liberty by means of a compliment was that made by M. de Maupertius, who when a pris oner in Austria was presented to the empress, who said to him, "You know the queen of Sweden, sister to the king of Prussia?" "Yes, madame." "I am told that she is the most beautiful princess in the world." "Madame," replied the cun ning prisoner, "I always thought so un til now." This was as diplomatic as the words and notion of the Marquis Medina, a Spanish nobleman. Queen Elizabeth, who had been admir ing his elegance, and cojnplimenting him on it, at the same time begged to know who possessed the heart of so ac complished a cavalier. "Madame," said he, "a lover risks too much on such an occasion; bnt your majesty's will is law. Excuse mo, however, if I fear to name her, but request your majesty's accept ance of her portrait." He sent her a looking glas3. London Standard. The Craze for Souvenirs. The popular craze for souvenirs which now prevails among persons who have money to spend is spreading in various directions. Formerly the silver spoon held undisputed sway, but now there are souvenir bracelets, souvenir napkin rings, souvenir buttons and souvenir fans. The silversmiths are kept busy getting up new and novel designs, and each jewelry store of any importance has its souvenir department. Spoons of course are still in the greatest demand. One young married woman in this town, who is an ardent collector of souvenirs, is the proud possessor of nearly 100 artrmna PAr.Vi rpnrfmpnHno' a rnfv ni j t r. o j - , lage that she has visited. New York Times. ' - " - A Fine Word. Tho following extraordinary word is given in Miss M. A. . Courtney's "West Cornwall Dialect:" "Pednbokshrlost withel, spoken by fishermen in describ ing the peculiar model of a boat; is said to mean cod's head and conger's tail," Jtotes and Queries. ' 4 LEARNING THE DAIRY. EUSINESS. From an Old Fashioned Dasher Churn to Silos and a Creamery. Mr. W. H. Gilbert is a promiuent New York dairyman, whose place is at Rich land, eight miles south of Lake Ontario. His farm is a sandy loam underlaid by gravel, and on this unpromising soil Mr. Gilbert has gradually built a famous dairy farm and creamery. Ho began in 1876 by losing money. He only kept the farm because he could not sell it. Mean time he studied books and dairy papers. His first progress was when he changed old fashioned native cows for Jersey stock. His next was improved methods of churning. Things most worth know ing came to him through losses for want pf acquaintance with the better way, and these things he never forgot. He wanted granulated butter, and learned that by adding water to the cream he could get it. Next he found that it was better to wasu uttermi3k out of butter than to work it out. He made no money to speak of for sev eral yeara. But there was this differ ence between Mr. Gilbert and many who make no money when first going into the dairy or butter business. They give up. He kept on. In a comparatively short time he triumphed. The next great stride forward was when he learned the supreme advantage of silage feed. After that things came easier and faster, so that in 1S81 he built a cream ery and engaged in the butter making business on a large scale. Ho raises all his own dairy cows, though he also buys milk for the creamery. In 1884 he had on his place ninety-two cows, all . of his own rearing. In explaining his methods to the editor of The Rural New Yorker, Mr. Gilbert said: ) I use a Cooley creamer, revolving box churn and Cunningham butter worker with corru gated rollers. When the milk is brought into the creamery in winter I at once add tq it about 12 per cent, of water sufficiently warm to raise the temperature of the mass from 05 to 98 degs. It is at ouce put In the Cooley creamer and us rapidly as possible cooled with ice down to 40 or 45 degs. It is skimmed after about eleven hours' setting. We milk at 0 a. m. and 6 p. m. the year round. ' I use the Boyd starter to ripen tho cream. This is, as you know, made from sweet skimmilk. The process of ripening requires twenty-four hours. "When the cream is put into the vat and the starter added I warm it up to 70 degs. in winter and 65 degs. in summer. I use for this purpose a cylindrical pail of tin about four inches in diameter and two feet long. I fill this wn!i hot water and then stir the milk with it, keep ing a thermometer, in the other hand. When the required temperature is reached It is cov ered air tight and not allowed to go lower than 62 degs. In winter I churn at a temperature of 63 dogs, and in summer at 60 degs. I use the same cylinder for warming the cream for churning. When the glass clears or tho but ter separates, I stop tho churn, open it and rinse it down with cold brine, pouring it through a hair sieve, so as to mako it like a spray. 1 then carefully draw oil the butter milk, when cold water enough to cool it below 55 degs. is added before tho churn Is again agitated. If disturbed before that tempera ture is reached it will gather in masses and you cannot wash it clean. "It is desirable to get all the milky matter, casein, etc., out before tho butter is massed. I use repeated washings until tho water comes away clear. To work It properly the butter must be raised to about 60 degs. If worked be low 55 degs. it will be crumbly, not compact. To get it to the proper temperaturo in cold weather I use for the last washing water warm enough to bring up the butter. It is then salted. I use from throe-quarters of an ounce to an ounce of salt to tho pound of butter. I work it but onc3, when it is put in prints or packed in tubs right from tho butter worker. No mature cow that produces less than 250 pounds of butter annually should be kept in the dairy. I would not discard a young cow that made 200 pounds in her first year; she may do better each succeeding year and at maturity be a valuable dairy animal. My best record was in one year, when I milked eighty cows which averaged 271 pounds of butter each." "What do you do with your skimmilk and buttermilk?" "Feed them to calves and pigs. I prefer grade Berkshires for swine. They seem to thrive admirably with mc." "What prices have you realized for your butter?" "I figured up before going to a dairy meeting In the spring of 1800, and found that for the seven or eight preceding years I had received an average of forty cents. It has been a little lower since." The editor The Rural New Yorker says: Mr. Gilbert's barn is a long, low build ing, with only an attic for a mow. He reasoned that with ensilage much less mow room would be needed, and he has found what he has amply large. The drop is covered with a grate, through which the droppings pass into a water tight trench, into which eome absorb ents are put. At intervals tho wagon is driven right around the stalls, and the manure is handled but once from the drop to the wagon, and thence to the fields. Sawdust is used for bedding, and plaster is sprinkled through every day, thus absorbing all the odors and adding to the value of the fertilizer. A swinging -stanchion is used in the stables. The lean-to is used for box stalls, for cows about to drop calves and for young stock. Water is carried to each cow in a trough, and she helps herself when it is wanted. The bottoms of the silos are on a level with tho stable floor, and the ensilage is loaded into a car which takes it to the cows. Mr. Gilbert has several improvements in the stables under way. His success is a capital illustration of what perseverance, coupled with intelli gent and studious methods, may accom plish. He has proved that the soil of that section is fertile, and that dairying may be made a profitable industry not by controlling the price of the finished 'products, bnt by reducing the cost of production. . A Neat Way of Putting It. - A neat compliment was uttered once by General Romaine. Meeting Lady de Bnentz, whom he had known and Ad mired in the loveliness of her youth, he commenced complimenting her. "You forget that 1 am an old woman," she said at length. "Madame," returned the gallant soldier, "when our eyes are dazzled by ' a diamond it never oc curs to us to ask a mineralogist for its history." London Standard. Hill of Calvary. The hill near Jerusalem, where the crucifixion of Jesus occurred, is formed of limestone. The shores of the Dead sea are lined with pumice stone, show ered out of some volcano that destroyed Sodom and Gomorrah, which cities finally sank beneath the waters of the Dead sea. Meehans' Monthly. Naught Never Comes to GrietV Hobson I'm tired of life, ye see, and yet if 1 blow out my brains, don't yon know? the world would condemn me as a suicide. Dobson No, 1 believe the . general verdict wonld be justifiable homicide. New York Epoch, . . - Consumption Cured. An oh! ii simian, rctneil from practice, having had placed iu his liaiiUB ly aU K:st IikIU niissiuuary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and per manent cure of consumption, bronchitis, jatarrh, asthma and all throat and luug af fections, also a positive and radical cure for lervous debility and all nervous complaints, ifter having tested its yoqderfiil curative towers in thousand of vases, lias felt it his Inty to make it known to his suffering fel lows. Actuated by tins motive and a desire tn relieve human suliuring, I will send free of charge, to all who desire it, this receipe, in German, French, or English, with full lirections for preparing and using. Sent iy mail by addressing with stamp, naming tills paper. W. A. Nuyes, 820 Powers' Block. Rochester, N. Y. WOODBURN XUKSEiiY. The Largest Stock in the Northwest. If Million of Trees! ALL THE lead' no VAiiirrir Of Fruit, SIioiIh, Ornamental, Nut and Evergreen Trees. Vines and. Shrubbery1. Send for Catalogue and Price List to J. H. SETTLE3SdT2E, WOOD BURN, OR. frlHS. GRAHAM'S -Cucumber and Eider Flower Cream. Is not a cosmetic in the sense in which that term is popularly used, but permanently beautiQes. It creates a soft, smoothe. clear, velvety skin, and bv daily use gradually makes the complexion several shades whiter. It is a constant protection from the effects of sun and wind and prevents sun bum and freckles, and black-heads will never come while you use it. It cleanses the face far better than soap and water, nourishes and builds up the skin tissues and thus prevents the formation of wrinkles. It gives the freshness, clearness and smoothness of skin that ou had when a little girl. Every lady, young or old ought to use it, as it gives a more youthful appear ance to any lady, and that permanently. It contains no acid, powder or alkali, and is as harmless as dew and is as nourishing to the skin as dew is to the flower. Price $1. at all drug-gists and hair dressers. or at Mrs. Gervaise Graham's establishment, 103 Post street, San Francisco, where she treats ladies for all blemishes of the face and figure. Laaies at a dis tance treated by letter. Sond stamp for her little book "How to be Beautiful." lTmTln RrtTTIA n"ledfree to any lady on i''-' receipt oi ten cents in stamps to pay for postage and -lacking-. Lady agei ts wanted. RS. GRAHAM'S Face Bleach. Cures tho worst cases of Freckles, Sunburn. Sal- lowness. Moth-patches, Pimples and all skin blemish es. Price $1 50. Harmless and effective. No sample can be sent. Lady agents wanted. T'lm llfMinrrric-T in this town who first orders 1 II U U I U ii SI 1 0 1 a bill of ni v preparations will have his name added to this advertisement. - Mv nrenarations are for sale by wholesale drug gists in Chicago and e very city west of it. THE PORTLAND SAVINGSBANK OF PORTLAND, OliEGOII. Paid up capital Surplus and profits S2CO.000 . 60,000 Interest allowed ou sayings deposit as follows: - On ordinary savings books On term savings books. . . . On certiiitaf-es of depojit: For three months For six months .. .4 per cent per annum. . . .0 per cent per annum . . 4 per cent per annum ... 5 per cent per annum . . .0 per cent per annum For twelve month? hismi iji.iiwi, i-rcsicient. V. r. HOMPSOX, Vies President II. C. STlUrroN, Cashier. . L. Taylor, PROPRIETOR OF THE - ' Band Box Barber -Corvallis, Oregon. fJgpShaving, hair cutting, dressing, dying, and shampooing. REgi Rejidins) Room ) Main St., Op. Cameron's Store.. A qniet room. Good Books. Current Pa pers and Periodicals. The public invited. Strangers especially welcome. Per Order of W. C. T. U. 3TFurni8hed rooms (up stairs) to rent. FREE to EXMJI..L To fatrodaoe our roods is mrr mBtnt Ber m Loader our w Oosoio aojU lilmiae. duat moot sad dimn mm hMeh; 8 ob., open tftm, fawly fintobod, to taroiio, and mi hot . Wbj? lleeanaa It fs haxwct,ttnnscv aad "rP""" mrmr, JUa Btfig ?. pwwo. aaee, attaint l:o caoapement, giit lufex to ok. aprcq vtuiator, moaed lallet k7 wiouinc tjawaVqutaktoU; nd fci'j rnaxcBtead fbr two jrv Wlta written guaisotae. foia watch vUl not be orat tat S3.50. vale tb ptnon erdrrieg will facaaatly endvt to Baka sales Cxan oar lug f!!astntea catalog whkb wo a3d vitb n. - (tar Ar ihnttcd totfas atari: wa bvn oo troiHf, nfl wo Cannot rrptesa tttem at mW a rSrr tknm' to WOO. Cat or t tlil t shiiiiMtBtiBn and it co v ana wa win aend Vwad oxactlT ma kmumUJ. row nap ozpnaa agent SC&O and enaana. If Dot rcu do not mv a. oect. fco aleiv yon nay notUng alaa QB WLXEXA3IS CO. 125 S. Halsted St. Chicago jAJL6i4 Scientific American KlL Agency for CAVEATS, DESIGN PATENT! COPVRIOHT8, tO. Vn infnmtflMl nnA frM TTAndhoOfc Write to) MUNX A CO- 361 BROADWAY, KfW YORK. Oldest tmrean for securing patent to America. Every patent taken out by us Is brought before the pobuo by a notice given free of charge In the gf mntxixt mtxitm Lamst circulation of any scientific paper In tbs world. Splendidly il Inst rated. No inteUurent man should be without it. Weekly, Hil.Ofl m year; SL50 six months. Address MUSH fc CO F0BLJauKUii, 361 Broadway, New York. yi iinfv "in t" fr "mrJizr Shop Ifff J I w A, I U. I anvnnwnnmwannnnnBBnnnnBB, Who Shall be President? Is it Harrison? Is it Blaine? OR IS THERE ANY OTHER nAN YOU WANT FOR PRESIDENT OP THE UNITED STATES? NAME YOUR CHOICE! FARM Blaine, McKinley, Gorman, Boies, Rusk, and Crisp, also Postmaster-General W anamaker. These portraits are in themselvesbeautiful works of art, really splendid pictures,- This space is occupied with engraved portraits of either HARRISON, CLEVELAND. BLAINE, HILL, CRISP, W ANAMAKER, McKINLEY. GORMAN. RUSK. BOIES. Whichever you may select. JOURNAL JANUARY as fine as any steel engraving, and in no way an adver tisement. They will be an ornament to S M T W T F S 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 lOll i2 13141516 1718 192021 22 28 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 50 CENTS any parlor, or office, wall, or desk, and This is a miniature of the Calendar. The size is s)4 by 9H inches. If vou are a Cleveland man you will Calendar; if a Blaine man order a Calendar; if a McKinley man order a a LET'S HAVE A VOTE! The Farm Journal is well known everywhere in the United States as one of the very best Farm papers a perfect gem of a Family paper. It is cream, not skim-milk; it is the boiled-down paper; chuck-full of common-sense; bits the nail on the head every time. Every one who has a horse, or cow, or pig, or chicken, or has a farm big or little, LET'S HAVE A VOTE! THE GAZETTE AND THE FARM JOURNAL Both sent one year for two dollars, the price of one. An un paralleled offer. To all our subscribers who may be in arrears, we make the fallowing liberal offer : To those who pay up all arrearage and $2.00 for one year iu advance we will send BOTH THE GAZETTE AND THE FARM JOU11NAL one year really two papers for the price of one; or, for $2.10 we will send the Gazette and U13 Farm Journal one year and also the beautiful calendar described above. Consequently You Can GET THE BEST STOVE AND SAVE MONEY BY BUYING "SUPERIORS" OF And if that is not Satisfactory, We can Furnish the Wire to Fence It. GIVE US A CALL AND BE CONVINCED R. V. WADE & CO. The( Finest Summer Rssort ON THE PACIFIC COAST. "Forfar" is situated half way between Newport and Seal Rocks and is . well protected from the coast wind. From any point ou this property one can obtain A VIEW OF THE OCEAN AND BEACH For miles in either direction, including Seal Rocks to the ' : south and the entrance to Yaquina Harbor, " ' ' Newport and Cape Foulweather 's? - to the north. Just Hi. Hies for fa Business Mas to Spend tie far Vacation with Ms My, Fine Drives; a Beautiful Park. Teams always in readi- ness for the accomodation of guests. Lots 50x135 ieet, for building choice property, from $100 to $200 .. For Further Information Address. . WILLIAM GRANT, Is it Cleveland? Is it Hill? The Farm Journal has, at large expense, designed and printed a beautiful Counting House Calendar for 1892, containing portraits of the leading. Presidential possibilities : Cleveland, Harrison, Hill, PORTRAIT after the Calendar is done are suitable for framing. They are sold, with or without the Cal- CALENDAR endar, for 25 cents each, to non-subscribers to Farm Journal. 25 CENTS want a Qeveland Blaine Calendar; if a Hill man order a Hill McKinley Calendar, and so on. . or a garden paten, ougtit to take the f ARM JOURNAL. The fact that it has a round million readers bespeaks its wonderful popularity. It is the one paper that guarantees its advertisers to be honest, and protects its readers against fraud. I SELL EXCLUSIVELY, And have the Largest Stock in the city. WE GIVE To Our Patrons THE IN STOVES AND RANGES, purposes, $25. Lots' 135x135 feet Newport, Oregon Stoves! 1 EARTH PITDrC Coughs, CeWs, BftijBTr RrtrtteM", If UnCu Hoarseness, V.hocpir.g 6sunh.$rup, Sore Throat, Asthma, and ery a3.&on tti i throat, Lnngt and Chest, mcludms Consnn:-.- . Speedy and permanent., Cftmserr- y : . - ' : 11 ' OFFICIAL GEPg TllE- . NOW READY. . Nearly 400 pages, size 9x15 inches. Elcsnnt'y printrd. Handsomely bound in silk cloth, emUowcd in pwld, Superbly illustrated with munificent resrescntulioiii of all the mammoth World's Fair Buildings. Earn buildiuir a full pasre colored plate, executed in cifc-hf oil colors at a cost of nearly FORTY THOUSAND , DOLLARS Many photographic Tiews of Chicago, inclndjng a t. pdrb bird's-eye view the entire city, size 15x25 inches. The crowning feature is a grand c e!orni picture. Bird's eye View of the Exposition Uronndsj and Buildings, iu eighth oil colors, jiize 0x18 inches, positively dazzling in magnificence, revealing wha will cost over 20,000,000. . - The book is for the millions who contemplate vtrft insr Chicaco in 1893. It will be purchased bv the millions wiio cannot go, but who will desire to know, just what their friends are seeing. The Chance of a Life-Time. AGENTS WAUTED. 3 m"l want an agent in every town to circulate this onoir. Exclusive territory given. 11' SKLLS AT - BIGHT. Agents are meeting with unparalleled success. Ona agent cleared $4S0 in 0 days; another 'reports 34U orders tne nrst weeK. Books on SO -days' credit. Liberal terms. Write for full particulars, or to secure the agency instantly. send only 72 cents ior su elegant and complete can vassing outfit. Address the sole general agents for this State- Pacific Publishing Co., 1336 Market St., San Francisco, Cal. EAST AND SOUTH SOUTHESfJpf PACIFIC ROUTS Shasta Line. - . . t i :: . i Express Trains Leave Portland Daily. south. Lv Portland . . . 7:00 p. m. Lv Albany 10:23 p. in, Ar San Frisco 8:15a.m. KOKTII ' Lv San Frisco. ...7:00 pm Lv Albany....... 4:23 am Ar Portland 7:8ft ni Above trains stop only at following stations north of Koseburg, Kast TPortland, Oregon City; : Wood burn, Salem, Albany, Tangent, Shedds, Ualsey, Hr risburg, Junction City, Irving, Lufene. , -, Ito8eI)nrg Mail Daily, Lv Portland. ...8:30 a. m. J LVUoseburjr..,.7.00 a m Lv Albany. ...12:45 p. in. "I Lv Albany.... .12:30 p in Ar Koseburg. .. .6:50 p m Ar Portland ,:..4aupm Albany Local Doily Except Sunday. lkave: 4KIUVE: Portland 5:00 p. mi Albany, .9:00 p. in Albany 6:30 a. m. j Portland 10:30 a. n) Lebanon Branch.'' '- 2:36 p in. ..Lv. . . Albany Ar. ..9:25 p rn 3:25 p m. .Ar... Lebanon... Lv... 8:40 p in, 7:30 a in.. Lv... Albany.. ..Ar... 4.28 p n 8:22 a m. . Ar. . .Lebanon . ..Lv . ..3:40 p in, Pullman Buffet Sleepers: -- ' .. SECOND-CLASS SLEEPING CAES, For the accommodation Jof passengers hold ing second-clasa tickets, attached to expreia. trains. ' ;' VTvA &i jJiTirioi. BETWEEN PORTLAND AND CORVALLIS. Kail Trill. Bally Zxctpt Ecndiy. ' ' LEATR. - AKMVK. Portland 7:30 a.m. i Corvallis 12:10 p. ZQ Corvallis 12:56 p. m. Portland....;. 6:30 p. rn At Albany and Corvallis .connect with trains of tbf " Oregon Fatlnc Railroad. ' . Xxpraii Train. Sally Bicept Bundsy. LBAVR. arrive. McMinnvllle... 7:26 p. m Portland. .......8:20. rn Portland. .....4:40 p. m. MsMinnville. . . . 6:45 a. m. THROUGH TICKETS to all points South and East, For tickets and full information recardina rates, maps etc, call on company's agent af E. P ROGEHS, Asst. G.Y. kV. Agent. K. KOF.ULEK Uanarer. Portland, Oregon. THK Yaquina RoutI Oregon Pacific Railroad T. E. Hogg, Receiver, and. Oregon Development Co. 'a STEAMSHIP LINE, 235 Miles Shorter; 20 Hoars Less tifnf than by any other ronte. First elasf throngh pasMiigrr and freight line from Portland all points in the Willamette valley to and from San Francisco, CaL . . , TIME 3CHEDULE (except Snndays.) Leave Albany lUKt p. pa Leave Coival Ha IsiS' y t. Arrive Yaania pi m Leave Yaqina6:45 a. a Leave oraUis 19M " Arrive Albany 11:19 a. ta. Oregon California trains connect at AMttn and C jrvalns. The above trains eenaeef at Taqaina wkk the Oregon Development Ce-ZaBne oi steamship Mr tween Yaquina and San Franeiseev ... Frm ITaexafnt Steamship "Willamette Valley," Mar, 10th, 19tk,25th. From San Franefscwh. Steamship' "Willamette TaDey," Mar. 5th, I5tb, 24th. - : , This Company "(serves the right t cftaaf; satEu datra urithost notico. ' N. B. Passenger from Fortlaat? aait all Willamette valley points eaa make eles connection wfth the trains of the Yaqam ronte at Albany or Corvallis, and if destrd to San Francisco should arrange to arrive af Yaqnina the evening before date of sailing, fassenger and freight rates always th lowest. For information apply te 1). V. Cummins, freight and tieket ageut, I'orvair lis, or to C C HOGUE, Gen. F. and V. Agent, Oregon Tm eirie Pailroad Co., Corvallis, Or.. W. B. WEBSTER. Gen. F. and P. Agent, Oregon Develop, meat Co., 304 Montgoaiery St., IS. F., Cat Portland, Oregon. A. F-Armstrone. Priak Broach School : Capital Bus. Oamwrn, Balem. Ongnau Same eoorsee of study, seat lates of button. Business. Shorthand, J Typewriting, Pewmamhif, and EngKsh Pefiai trntntl iarn session tbroapheut the year. Student sstaifeVr ted. at any flme. Caialogae txatu either school,