THE COIWALLIS GAZETTE, FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1892.
GRASS SEEDING.
Some of tbe Methods Practiced by New
England Farmers.
A. "W. Cheever, tbe agricultural editor
of The New England Farmer, says that
he knows of but one best way of seeding
land, and that is to sow. the seed the last
of July, or 1st of August, just when
feature sows it, and give the grass the
whole of the room. The largest and
best crops he ever grew were grown in
this way. Early potatoes are off in sea
son for such sowing, and potato land, if
kept clean from weeds, makes an excel
lent seedbed for grass in August. At
.this time clover may be sown with as
much confidence as in the spring, but
every day's delay after the first week in
August endangers the success of clorcr.
It must get well established and have
an abundant growth of other grass with
it to insure its safety through the first
winter. Occasionally the month of Au
gust may be so dry that seed cannot
germinate as near the surface as gra&3
must be sown. He adds: I have known
one or two years when the small grains
could not be started for late soiling crops.
So it may be advisable sometimes to
sow grass seed at other seasons and take
the risks. With a favorable winter,
grass sown alone in September or Octo
ber may do well, but if the winter is
open, with much alternate freezing and
thawing, the grass will probably be
thrown out and destroyed. Winter rye,
with its long roots and thicker foliage,
may save grass sown late by shading the
ground and thus holding the top soil
With its grass and grain roots in place.
Grass sown in autumn with grain is
much more likely to do well if the grain
is cut early for fodder than if left to
ripen its seed. Seed production not
only exhausts the soil, but the harvest
comes later during the heat of summer
and when the removal is a greater shock
to the tender grass. My temperament
is such that 1 have little patience with
trying to patch up a piece of work that
was badly done at the start. I always
feel like rubbing it all out and then be
ginning anew.
In Mr. Cheever's vicinity east Mas
sachusetts grain crops have come to
take a secondary place with grass, which
latter when sown alone, according to
Mr. Cheever, is almost invariably worth
more the first year than the grain and
straw together would be if grain were
sown with the grass and the former
made the leading crop. This is espe
cially true where the land is particular
ly adapted to the production of hay
When seeded with grass alone, gener
ally tw crops are cut the first year,
the first crop being cut early, even if
not fully grown.
Smut in Wheat.
The following remedy has been found
superior to others tried at the experi
mental farms in Manitoba and the ter
ritories, as well as by many of the farm
ers in the Canadian and American north
west: Take one pound of bluestone or
sulphate of copper, dissolve in eight or
ten quarts of water for eight bushels of
wheat. Spread the wheat on the floor
or in a wagon box; with a whisk or
bro5m sprinkle well; then turn with the
scoop and sprinkle again until every por
tion has' been thoroughly moistened,
which will use the amount of water
specified. Now dry lime may be sifted
on the seed to facilitate drying. .The
lime judiciously used will not be lost,
as it will go to the soil, where it is valu
able plant food. Some farmers use a
large vat where much seed is to be pre
pared, placing the seed in a coarse sack
that will admit water readily, and im
mersing it in the solution for a few min
utes. This is undoubtedly the better
method where circumstances will admit
of its adoption. Where lime 13 used to
absorb the moisture the seed must be
thoroughly dried before using or diffi
culty will be had by the feeding apparatus
of the drill becoming choked with it.
. Peafowls.
The cock does not attain the full
-splendor of his plumage until he is 3
years old, and the hen does not lay until
the same age. She lays from five to
seven eggs, and sits twenty-nine days.
If the first batch of eggs be taken away
she will lay a second, so that by having
a hen turkey foster nurse you may man
' Age to have two broods in one summer.
The peahen generally chooses a very re
tired spot out of the way of the peacock,
who is often a cruel, unnatural father.
The young must be hatched like guinea
fowls and young turkeys. Unless they
are fed amply and regularly they are
apt to wander. When fat and hung
long enough they make a delicious and
splendid roast. They should be larded
with slices of fat bacon, the head and
neck, with fea'hers on, carefully wrap
ped in paper and tucked under the wing
away from the fire, and when ready set
tip in purple glory to match the tail,
adorned with feathers neatly stuck in at
the" last moment. If you wish peafowls
to agree with other poultry they must
be reared with them, otherwise they are
not unfrequently murderous assassins of
chicks. Richardson.
The .Latest Abont Silos.
A Rhode Island correspondent of The
New England Homestead tells how G.
F. Jencks, of Lime Rock, last year built
three large silos and simply covered the
tops with finely cut hay. In using the
silage he took it from the top, and by so
doing prevented the mold that results
from exposure. He kept the cut hay
constantly on the top and supplied more
as needed. His cows and horses ate the
silage with avidity, and he could not
keep the stock he now keeps without it.
He furthermore says: "It has been satis
factorily settled in this vicinity that
silos are a valuable adjunct to a milk
produeer near the large cities and whole
sale markets. It has been shown that
silage can be kept without the great ex
pense of weighting and time at the busy
season of filling the silo."
Only One Clean Thing.
When Jones was at Oxford he was a
most excellent fellow, and only had one
enemy soap. He was called Dirty
Jones. One day the wag Brown went
into his rooms, and remonstrating with
him on the untidy, slovenly and dirty
state of everything, said:
"Upon my word," Dirty, it's too bad;
the only clean thing in your room is the
toweir London Tit-Bits.
Suspicions.
Doctor I believe you have some sort
of poison in your system.
Patient Shouldn't wonder. What was
that last staff you gave roe? Exchange.
- During a masked ball at Covent Gar
den theater thieves made off with valu
able diamonds and jewelry which they
are said to have cot from the ladies
iresseifc
UNKNOWN TO HISTORY.
The JStory of a Secluded Grave Where
the Daisies Grow in Profusion.
They were boy and girl together. Like
flowers that grow side by side without
asking why or wherefore, these two had
always been together, laughed and wept
together all through the dream lapse of
their childhood. One day they dallied
in a field where daisies grew.
"Which is your favorite flower, Mar
gie?" asked the boy.
"Why, Harry, don't yon know? The
daisy;" and she picked one as she an
swered. "And why?' he queried further.
"Because they have hearts of gold,"
she said, "which means that they are
true and faithful." And then they talked
of other things, while overhead the new
moon silvered in the sky and colored
evening came. Soon after from the lit
tle cottage on the hill Margaret heard
the calling of her name, and then the
children said good night and went to
dreams which only children know.
The years rolled on and brought their
changes. The boy and girl were man
and woman. The country was at war.
The air reverberated with the echoes of
cannonade on Sumter, in which ominous
peal of iron thunder every man whose
blood ran young and strong had heard
n;., p l.:.. , TT 1 J
heard his and answered "Here!" and
Margaret approved. They were engaged,
and yet she bade him go. The wedding
day was fixed, and yet she bade him go.
Oh, woman! how sublime thou art in
moments such as these! Which blood,
I wonder, will be thought most sacred
on the reckoning day the red blood of
men shed amid the glory and the din of
battle or woman's tears those colorless
blood drops of the heart shed unseen
amid tbe common places of existence?
Which, 1 wonder, will be deemed the
hero, he who gives his life and dies or
she who gives her life and lives?
The night before he went Harry came
to say goodby. It was soft and balmy
and the moon was f ulL Margaret met
him at the cottage door, and they strolled
' together in the meadow where the daisies
grew. She picked and gave him one.
"Take this," she said, "and wear it,
I Harry. Let it be the Mizpah of our
separation this little flower which we
I have loved together since our childhood.
Lien it do our em Diem in tne tace oi
death if death needs be true to the
last, golden hearted to our country and
j to one another. May God be merciful,"
she prayed and rested her head on
Harry's shoulder.
He took the flower, but could not
speak. What else they said, what else
they did, is secret of the vagrant clouds
and bended treetops. All that we know
is that they parted on that stilly night.
Yet no one saw the moon grow paler,
nor heard the woodlands shudder, nor
the night wind moan; not even sobs
were heard so noiseless is the breaking
of a human heart, as noiseless and un
heeded as the falling leaf in autumn.
The days those days which seem as
years crept on and brought their
changes. Harry was dead and Margaret
slowly dying. At first he wrote each
day, and then less often, and then for
weeks there came no word at all. At
last a letter came, and as she opened it
a withered daisy fell upon her lap. She
read as follows:
"It is the eve of battle; tomorrow we
fight our first great fight. I shall place
the daisy which you gave me in this let
ter when completed, and wear the letter
next my heart. If 1 be of those who
stay upon the field some . friendly hand.
I know, will speed this letter on its way.
but if
She read no more. Her hands dropped
listlessly at her sides: the letter dropped.
Motionless she gazed, like one en
tranced, through the open window
where she sat; she saw the field where
they had picked the daisies in their
childhood the field where they had said
goodby the field where they should
never meet again; then suddenly a dark
ness, as of moonless night, fell on her
vision and she swooned away. Then
came the sickbed, then the days of hope,
of despair, and then sweet death.
Her grave is in the little churchyard
of the village and bears these words:
: . DIED TOK HER COUNTRY. I
i MARGARET MAYFIELD, j
: AGED 231863. :
Should you chance that way and want
to see the spot, ask some one for the
frave where daisies grow! New York
imes.
Perfectly Clear.
In Doctor Pierson's description of life
in the southwest as he saw it many years
ago "before the war" he speaks often
of the peculiar turns of speech there
prevalent. He was once present at an
ecclesiastical meeting, where motions
were piled upon each other until mat
ters were in a frightful muddle. Final
ly the moderator was appealed to for a
decision.
He rose from his seat, as became a pre
siding officer thus appealed to, and lift
ing his lank form till his head was
among the rafters of the low school
house he hesitated a moment and then
said:
"Brethren, my decision is that you are
all ahead of the hounds."
Doctor Pierson confesses that he did
not fully comprehend the meaning of
the words, but he could not help seeing
that the decision was perfectly clear and
satisfactory to the assembly.
An Imprisoned Genius.
Alberto Lopaz, who was taken to
Yuma recently to serve a two years'
term for burglary gave his personal ef
fects to his friends about the jail.
Deputy Barry was presented with a fac
simile of the episcopal church made
out of pasteboard. Lopaz could see the
church from one of the jail windows,
and he reproduced it almost perfectly.
He borrowed a knife from Deputy Sheri
dan with which he cut up the paste
board, and then made paste from' flour
with which to stick the pieces together.
It is a piece of workmanship to be proud
of. The greatest production of Lopaz
while confined in jail here is a reproduc
tion of the magnificent Merchants' ex
change building in Guadalajara. The
entire affair is constructed of paper.
On the inside of the building are ihe
stairways, etc., each perfect in -its con
struction. The prisoner must be pos
sessed of a memory much stronger than
most men are, to remember every detail
of that large structure for a number of
years. However much genius the man
possessed, he has made bad use of it.
Phoenix Herald.
A WARNING-DONT USE BIG WORDS.
In promulgating esoteric cogitations or
articulating superlieial sentimentalities and
philosophical or psychological observations,
beware of platitudinous ponderosity. Let
ycur statements possess a clarified concise
ness, compacted comprehensibleness, coale
scent consistency and a concentrated cog.
ency. Eschew all conglomerations of flatulent
garrulity, jejune babblement and asinine af
fectations. In trying tc impress upon otbers
the superiority of the Wisconsin Central
Lines, and why you and so many others nse
this thoroughfare from St. Paul and Min
neapolis and Duluth and Ashland to Mil
waukee, Chicago and points east and south,
it is not necessary to use jawbreakers. Let
your extemporaneous descantfngs and un
premeditated expatiations have intelligibil
ity and veracious vivacity, without rhodo
montade or thrasonical bombast. Sedulously
avoid all polysyllabic profundity, psittace
ous vacuity, ventriloqual verbosity-and van
diloquent vapidity, shun double entendres,
prurient jocosity and pestiferous profauity,
obscurent or apparent. In other words,
talk plainly, naturally, sensibly, and truth
fully say the Wisconsin Central Lines is
tub route, and that ends it.
lh is onice Mas been tavoreu witn a com
plete catalogue and price list of the Ever
green Nurseries, of jtverareen, Wis. This
irsery is well known throughout the west,
viiii! been many years established. The
- .i.ri.'t. r, Mr. Geo. Pinney, has probably
distributed more evergreens and forest trees
througn this state than any other man in
the country. Although he raises and sella
millions of forest tree.-, annual!?, his spe
ci;ilty is evergreens. lie plauts hundreds of
pounds of the seeds every year, and now
has nearly three hundred varieties on his
lists, fully equalling the largest nurseries
in hurone, which supply the nurseries and
mirks of royal tj. Of course, having such a
large trade and growing them in such large
'uautities, he 13 able to give better prices
for the same quality of trees than any other
nurseryman in tlm country. It is well
worth the while of any person to send for
Ins lists.
THE PORTLAND SAVINGSBANK
OF PORTLAND, OREGON.
Paid up capital $2GO,OO0
Surplus and profits 60,000
Interest allowed on savings deposit at
follows:
On ordinary savings books. . . .4 per cent per annnra
On term saving books 6 per cent per annum
tin certificates of deposit:
For three niomhs 4 per cent per annum
For six months 6 per cent per annum
Furtwelvo month1! 6 per cent per annum
I'BAMK DliKCM. President.
D. f. HOMPSON, Vica President
II. C. STHATIW, Cashier.
. L, Taylor,
PROPRIETOR OF THE
Little Band Box Barber Shoo,
Corvailis, Oregon.
FsTSliaving, li air cutting, dressing,
dying, and shampooing.
P. M. JOHNSON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
CORVALL1S, OE. .
gSToes a general jrractice in all the courts. Also
arent lor all the first-class insurance companies. 2:21
G. R. FARRA, M. D.,
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
Special attention given to Obstetrics
and diseases of Women and Children.
Office up stairs in Crawford & Farm's
brick. Office hours, 8 to 9 a. m. and
and from 2 to 7 p. m.
TAKE YOUR
WATOHE S
-TO-
TJ. 13. VOGLE,
Hext door to Rose's cigar factory.
511) Reading) flown)
Main St., Op. Cameron's Store..
A quiet room. Good Books. Current Pa.
pers and Periodicals. The public invited.
Strangers especially welcome.
Per Order of W. C. T. U.
fZTFurnished rooms (up stain) to rent.
SPFfHAL OFFER FOR 90 DAYS ONLY!
Ou. mutaI CrlauoD Silk Vl,t Plu.h Htfttloaery Box.
HU f a c, M nMrlti
mi Malop. 1 aIM Gar-
l S alr 1H MM
later collar bHM.
taUtl far fia
M UanMad aardraf
OWNltl ail Ur
la) dwiiM-xil.
iHtTrflkWUlM
I ultra Is Ilk a. Ml dluoood of (rut valctf 1 ranincat olid rolted ftlsj
acarf pin with grand! Imitation diamond Chat meiry aan ba jf It flaahca lika
ih alec trie light and shlmtMM with a golden light wHh palaat gram nekr,
nNiofuit amber, th Urine anmof tba) aky and dcllcat tuitinf aanatw
ll tr4M tinu eornhiDcd in thlabaviifalito Uiaahaaoat
5 OOj I pair wy handaoTM gold plated hoop aar-mc, that aring
worn by tbe bader of fkahion of Chicago and NowYork and mIU oraijwban)
for W. Tba box on tha ootsldo ia eorarad with genuina ertntafn ailk TOlvat
ttloifa, ench have baen lliac for a much aa tan dolhumi TolDtrodooa
out roo4.for 00 dj only, wo will send jon Oom Bovai.CsnuOir 6nx Yam
Punn tjTA-noircftT Bos ntOKLT 900. CharjrtaJ U prapaid and atiflctoal
(nranFd or mooav refunded. Thlt ofrar la mad to tboaawho will audi)
to tntrodtioa our rood a. otherwise wo obarva M-OOl Hood Mo. and tbla ad
ni l IT B WUtUAJtS, lXi Uaiate4 BWvat, vtUCatft um
Scientific America
-w5x Aaency Tor
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r TRADE MARKS.
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For Information and free Handbook write to
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xo hatrodaeo our mbm)b in ovcrr owntry wr
Offer a leader our Sow Ganoina eoUrf
rflTcriri, duat picoz and damp prod
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msoU), fell bauiat oast wrantad not
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"" agiw vai
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we pud Tri'a ft Oar 40m It
limited to Cbo stork "w bar 00
37. .-.-J.
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4 n'-if'
at f rircs W oT-r theot
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pr C. O. !., and after asassiaf,
ry pnM agent cd obarcf-
tuschowMeb. fiend atoom
WTT.i-.TAitrs jfe rrt.
133 S. lifted $t. CZUC3S9
v - Am
7 wa
L f It
una
As!i..1
BUILDINGJTONE.
To Contractors and Builders:
Having taken exclusive control of my qunr
' ries, I hereby announce that I am now
prepared to furnish
BUILDING STONE
of finest quality to all contractors and
builders on short notice at creatly re- -jduced
prices. Also cemetary bases
and ceiliDg. 1 make a specialty
of furnishing stone blocks for
'piers.
Thanking the public for their liberal pa
trouage in the past I solicit a continuance of
the same. :
A. G. MULKEY.
I employ good masons and am prepared to
contract for stone foundations and base
ments. WOODBURN NURSERY.
The Largest Stock in the
Northwest. .
If Million of Trees!
ALL THE
LEADING VARIETIES
Of Fruit, Shade, Ornamental, Nut and
iEvergreen Trees.
Vines and. Shrubbery.
Send for Catalogue and Price
List to
J. H. SETTLEMIKE,
WOOD BURN, OR.
OREGON : PACIFIC
RAILRO D OMPANY.
T. E. HOGG, RECEIVER.
RUMMER
ex : u f sions
FOR 1892.
Tickets now on sale at Corvailis and Al
bany for these excursion at the very lowj
Round Trip Rate, $3.25 & $3.50
Eespectively, good for the going tiip on5
Wednesdays and Saturdays
of each week and for return until
SEPTEMBER 30th, 1892.
C. C. HOGUE. G. P. A.
TIVF HERCraES
ENGINES
Hare fewer parts, and art
therefore less likely to not out
pf order than any other aas or gasoline engines no v
t MU Just light the burnur. turn the wlieel. and it
rossllaa;.
SIAKES NO SMELL OB DIRT.
Ko double or false explosions, so frequent with, the
unreliable spark.
For Simplicity It Beats the World. -
It Oils itself Automatically,
No Batterlos or Eleotrlo Bparfc,
tt runs with a Cheaper Grade of Gasoline than an j
other Engine.
ron sncBiPTivB cibcuiim am.T to
PAUV1ER & REY, Manufacturers.
San Francises, Cat. and PorHand. Or.
WILL & LINK,
SOLE AGENTS FOR
H. F. pssosj
-ALSO
WEBER,
Emerson,
Vose & Son
PIANOS
ESTEY,
Newman "Bros
ORGANS
"wonder" c. c. conn
Band Instruments.
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and keep tbe best family machines in
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Write for catalogue and prices for anything in our
ine. Cor. Second and Ferry Streets.
ALBANY. OREGON.
evidence rSffijfo
Jrade merif lir
in conrinuea
and increased
demand.
MASTIFF
PLU0 CUT
ha had a more)
rapid Orowth of
ale than was even
accorded a new.
brand of moK'm6
toba'cect in aimllar
CARDS
Lareest eataMrn nf mA. a
Tantega cardsjoaded dice V I W t
1 and sporting guods in (he V 8. vaga
rllEB
-r SS- - ms
5TB-T
w r i I.
Pi
u
H
Binder
HOWE
R I. VADE & CO.'S.
"PORPASl,"
The Finest Summer Resort
ON THE PACIFIC CAST.
"Forfar" is situated half way between Newport and Seal Rocks and is
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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 Hibor,
Newport and Cape Foulweather
to the north.
Just The Place for tie Business Man to Spend the Sumner Vacation with his Family.
Fine Drives; a Beautiful Park. Teams always in readi
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Lots 50x135 feet, for building
choice property, from $100 to $200
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why Every Man
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Kept in Stock by
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if
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Throat, Lungs and Chest, including Col
&DCcdv and permanent. Cenuine shrocd
A. HODeL
ritOFKIETOR OF THK
flonvALLis Rake)
- And Dealer in Choice
Staple and Fancy Grocerie
PURE WLBS1ND LIQU01
Fresh Bread, Cakes, Pies, Crackers,
kept constantly on hand. 4
Corvailis, - - Orego
CORVALLIS
ICE WORKS
Corner A and Third Sts.,
JOHN ZEIS, Proprietor.
ARTIFICIAL . ICE
ui inn Deal quality Buppueu in any quantity ai
Kanable rates to any point tu tne valley.
To any part of the city.
EAST AND SOUTH
VIA
Southern pacific Rotjt
Shasta Line
(Express Trains Lear Portland Dallyf
BOUTII. KOIITII
Lv Portland .... 7:00 p. m. I Lv San Friuro .... 7:00 pra
Lv Albany 10:23 p. ni.jl.v Albany 4:23 am
Ar San Frisco 8:lia.m. Ar Portland 7:35 a m
Abovs trains stop only at following statiuus north)
of Roseburg-, East Portland, Oregon City, Wood
burn, Salem, Albany, Tangent, ShidJn, Ilalgcy, Har.
ribburg, Junction City. Irving, Eugene.
Koseburg Mail Daiiy.
Lv Portland. ...8:30 a.m. I LvKoscbur;.
Ar Roaeburg 6:50 p ni I Ar Portland ,
.7.06 m
.4 30 pm
Albany Local Daily Except Sunday,
lkavs: aRRivc:
Portland 5:00 p. m. I Albany 9:00 p. p)
Albany 0:30 ft. ni. Portland 10:30 a. n
Lebanon Branch.
2:36 p m . ..Lv. . . Albany Ar. ..9:25 p n
3:25 p m. . Ar. . .Lebanon. ..Lv. . .8:40 p n)
7:30 a m..Lv... Albany Ar.,.4.26 p TO
8:22 a m. . Ar. . .Lebanon. ..Lv . ..3:40 p n
Lv Albany 12:45 p. m. Lv Albany 12:30 p n)
Pullman Buffet Sleepers;
SECOND CLASS SLEEPING CAKS,
For the accommodation of passengers liol(J
ing second-class tickets, attached to express)
trains.
West Slit Sivlsloi.
BETWEEN PORTLAND AND CORVALLIS.
lU&Tnla. Bally Except Ssnday.
LKAVB. I ARRIVR
Portland 7:30a.m. Corvailis 12:10 p. sa
Corvailis 12:56 p. ni. I Portland 5:3 p. n
At Albany and Corvailis connect with trains of th
Oregon Pacific Railroad.
Sxprtn Train. Daily Zxcept Sudsy.
LEAVE.
Portland 4:40 p. m.
MeMinnville. . . .6:45 a. in.
ARRIVE.
MeMinnville... 7:25 p. B
Portland 8:M. as
Through. Tickets to a? I
PoinLatand. oh.
For tickets an i full information regarding
rates, maps etc. , call on company's agent at
Corvailis.
E. P ROGKR8, Asst. O. F. 4 P Agent
B. KOE11LER llaoarer. Portland, Oregon.
HOOFING
GUM-ELASTIC HOOFING FELT costs only
S2.0O per l'X square feet. Makes a good roof (of
years, and anyone can pat it on. Send stamp tof
sample and full particulars.
Gvh Elastic Roornto Co.
49 Js 41 West Dkoauwat, Kww Toaa.
I.oca.1 Agents Wanted.
THK
Yaquina Route,
Oregon Pacific Railroad
T. E. Hogg, Receiver, and
Oregon Development Co.'a
STEAMSHIP LINE.
235 Miles Shorter; 20 Hours Less time)
than by any other route. First class;
through passenger and freight line from
Portland all points in the Wiihinioite valley
to and from San Francisco, Cal.
TIME SCHEDULE (except Sundays.)
Leaves Albany IKK) p. m I Leaves Yaquina0:45 a. wo
Leave Corval lis 1:40 p n. I Leave C'ormllu 10:35
Arrive Yaauina 6:30 p. in Arrive Albany Il:10a v
Oregon & California trains connect at Albany ai4
Corvailis. The above trains connect at Vaoniia tt)
the Oregon Development Co.'a line of steamship hsV
tween Yaquina and San Francisco.
From Yaquina.
Steamship "Willamette Valley," June s
11th, 22d, July 1st.
Frm San Kranclxco.
Steamshin "Willamette Vallev" Jane ftth.
17th. 27lh.
Tills Company 'eaerves tbe right to thasg ssdtssi
dat without notico.
N. B. Passengers from rurtland and all
Willamette valley points can- make elosa
connection M'fth the trains of the Yaquina
route at Albany or Corvailis, and if destined
to San Francisco shonld arrange to arrive at
Yaqnina the evening before date of sailing,
Passeneer antK freight rates alvava th
lowest. For iu formation apply to. J)., V,
Cummins, freight and ticket agent, t'orvah
lis, r to C. V, HOGV&
Geo. F. and P. Agent, Oregon P
cilic llailroad Co., Corvaifo, Or,
W. B. WEBSTER.
Gen. F. and P. Agent. Qregoti Pevelof,