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About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 20, 1893)
5 " I . .. - h:f: . ' THE COitVALIJS GAZETJ :T vri-:--r V." c CI 1 xMi , IHJUr.D KVKKY FRiniir UOKSIXa ET : iu83Cr71PTION RAT&3 r w ;rw, . ; . . . .. . . .i S Sinn. V .- T.iree Al..;la.. r ;'..... L'n?ie Cup:. . " i If oar (wa nai paid in M7ansoi.. .. $2-00 .. . L? .. ' .. ' .. : S Carlisle for trcasiuyj- . " Whitney for the slate, ' : Lunonb far 'the nuy, : ; Boies for agriculture, -- x. '-"'-'Are pretty con Men lly put down for Mr. ClevelaAiTs cabinet, service. - - The "legislator who ' proposed " a measure prohibiting. the appoint; j menl of i'ehiaie clerks daring the . session, evidently eii her " never "heard or !iad 'forgotten the famii : " iar couplet1: r y-' ". "Heaven hctu no hate '.ike love to hatred turned; . . . . ... ' Hell hath no fury like a worrfhn scorned. . KEPEESEXTATIve HERMAN Wants to take - Senator Dolph's 'place in Jhe upper house in case tlie 4aLter appointed to : the supreme nch. As a matter ot . silver- iated honors the scheme would but for good Substantial, telling ork in OregouV behalf our dele- iration stands unftPDroachauis as it is. " - : fe. Pfif-Tr.AND is mlesled with loot- !pads. Every day or so some man for woman rrprc up ' on tne very bold streets m a manner W V fSealtle was 'in. the same fix at one " limo. Seattle's remedy came I about through a method that was I short, sharp and decisive. The vigillantes did in a few days what "legal power" proved itself incap able of doing at all. - Investigation in " the llome- i stead poisoning cases tend to con: iirm the statements made by cooks Jin the Carneige works some time since that they had poisoned the food of non -union men at the intti gaVion .of certain nnion strikers and . caused the death of several laborers. -Postmortem examina tions revealed poison in the stom achs of the victims. It must be fiendish hatred that would prompt such deeds.' . . ' ' " Tub year 1893 is one-of great expeetions for the American peo ple, The one topic under 'consid eration 'which'- overshadows all others at present is the world's, fair. We no longer ask, will it bo a m""r"'-ilii'r -i'hcr ciuct 1o measure the success which is "assured bv ail the coudjtions at present surrounding the groat un dertaking by the side ;of -..which anything of.-a similiar ":character ever projected in this or: any other country pales into significance' Fear is occasionaHy expressed that cholera in Luropo may. pre vent the desired attendance from Joreign- - countries. It does- not. seem probable that even though the dread disease should jirevail on the contineiH, ; the : necessary restriction will very materially reduce the number of world's fair visitors. . In comparison1 with American attendance the-. number ot foreign visitors will be small Hie loroign exnious win oe Jarsre and vervjnterestlng, mori so per haps than our own, but after all the attendance must come very largely 'from tl:e-Uiiite.d States, so that even though: tha-v cholera does again visit thecoiinfries of Europe ihe world's fair is sufe of success. The great democratic scramble is developiug some ;funny -little things. V Down in. Missouri the olher day theytook time by the fore-lock througb -legislative -pro cedure when the .august bcdy"fof t hat "st ate in d no; digui f y Slid u n . trammeled authority 4 ."indorsed Ex-Governor Francis for "a cabinet office by a vote of 124 to 14." Of course, that will have as much weight witlt the i Inflated Prophet , as' the heels f-of a" . tumble-bug would have toward turning the earth backward. But the "Pike county" incident lias - a parallel which, goes itne better in New , York. There the democratic presidential- electors, in addition . to their .regular functions of voting for the men they were ypted for to vote for, went further "and dipped their national" fingers'; into the state senatorial -fight so far a3 to say there does not seem to be any candidate 1 in opposition .5;to Mr. Murphy, and public sentiment as manifested everywhere - through out the slate seems to be substan-" tially unanimour in his favor."' Iu 1 lie face of Mr. . Cleveland Vnotori ous opposition JoTammany's man Murphy, this . brief, declaration is tnrgid with rebuke to the Inflated , Prophet ; aforesaid, Hill,' Tam many & Co., are on top, and "npon ioo sowl Murphy ! he's" 'looking quite. weiL"'r The -mogwampar ar3 spiking Miad about t her turn of the "affair ; but it :is a bed they helped to make and at does respectable i people goou to near mem oewau their disgust whilo they wallow in The 'final estimates of the de pailmenti of agriculture" for the year 1 S92 throw a great deal of light upon causes of "the 'present low price of. wheat. The total yield of tin's cereal in the crop vear w placed at. 516,949,000 bush els. Tin's Ls; 95,000,000 less than the yield tor, Joy J, out everyone knows that thelaltef was phenom enal and . nnpiecedehled. 'Willi t i l a t exc e p! i o n , t h el y. S 9 2 prod n c -f ion is -1 lie largest in the history of the country; in fact, it has hap pened only four limes (counting in tins both. 1891 Jind 18921 that the caiop reached Hi much as 500y 000.000 bushels, from . which one gets an idea of ., the magnitude of li:c late year-s yield. ' In estimating the effect of this extraordinary : yield upon prices, it. must be borno in mind, says the Oregojiian, that a u n usually , largo surplus was carriedver from, the great' crop- of. tlie previous year. There are no" absolute -statistics for this surplus, but its relative q ua n lit y may be estimated fro m the visible 'supply, of' which the Kew York produce- exchange ' re ported the-total early in January to be 81,294,000 bushels, against 45,C6S,Q75 bushels the previous year Aiid f bat 25,8i7,07r;bnshels two years ago. In view )of the surplus . from the 1891 crop, it is ddsirable to combine the two' years' crops and compare the aggregates for 1 hat period with . the aggre gates of previonr twoyear - pe riods. This comparison shows totals for 1887 and 1SSS of 872,- 197.000 bushels; for ISS9 and 1890 of - 889,822,000 bushels; -and for 189l and 1892 ot 1,127,729,000 bushels. That is to say, the ex cess for the last two years over the two years before is 237,907,000 bushels, while the excess of those two years over the two bslore them'is only 17,025,000. Hero" is over 200,000,900 in . excess of the natural increase for two years. The extraordinary foreign de mand of 1S91 may easily have absorbed much ot this unnatural excess, but it cannot , account jor all of it. There js undoubtedly a larger amount of wheat in the United States unsold,, arid for winch there is no urgent consump tive demand, at this time, than at any similar period in - the history of the country. This is the sim ple explanation of the lowprice now ruling. ...The agricultural de partment makes the. average farm price ot wheat for 1892 only,- 62.4 cents per bushel, or the lowest ever reported. In. 1891 the aver age was S3.9 cents, under the m '"TiTi r'F-fm",gf' oL thfs. extraor uinary foreign demand ' then pre vailing. .' ' -"' lne conclusion irom Uus is as simple and obvious as the explan ation. of the occurence "of low prices. The farmers of this coun try have been growing too much wheat. They have .- overstocked the world's market and the "glut presses down prices. Supply has outrun demand, with the natural and necessary result. " The reroe dy is for the farmer to grow less wheat jaext year and more of some otner crop, lor wnicn there is a readier present market. . THE NA TIOX'S FIGUTISO FORCE. The result of the census of the military and voting forces of the country just published in a census bulletin give an instructive view of the growth of the United States By law every male citizen be tween the ages of 18 and 4-1 is li able for military -service, and can be called out in caseof hostilities in tins recKonisn me national mi litia of the country is 18,230,183 This enormous force, however, 13 subject to many deductions. ,- The proportion unfit for military duty 'the invalids, the weaklings and those "not coming up to the mill tary standard, to say nothing of the lame, the halt and the blind has to be deducted from" these numbers" to find the " actual mill tary force on -'which'-.' this country cau depend. -.Probably little more than halt of this paper force could be brought into the ranks in case of need. On the eve of the civil war the census of 1860 gave a to tal population almost exactly half that, ol the census of 1S90. In the war the North enlisted 2,018,200 men, allowing for those who were enlisted two or three times. The recruiting records of the South were not kept, but the enlistments altogether were not over 1,000,000. Ihe." South lock every available man, but the North still found re emits coining in at a fair rate when the war closed.: It is proba ble : that the actual 'fighting force of .the i republic at that time was thus bout3,500,00p. : An esti mate of ,7,000,000 possible soldiers our.of the 13,2301 OS i3 as near to the actual fighting strength ol ihe country' 33 we ; can ' get. 1 This force is not ah army; it is only the raw J materiaL Yet it Is - not4 a force that any nation would care to havOjraised againsS it- '; : . A cremation horror is . report ed front a city in China, where near ly 2,000 people wero roa3tejd to death in a burning theatre. i THE MASK THROWN ASIDE. V1 A very large number of good people voted - for' Mr. Cleveland at the last election because they believed ;in what he said about tua .- necessity of "tarilf reform." Others, again, : like Mr. William Steinwa3r, believed in protection, but did not go so ar fas the McKin ley bill, and so they too, voted for Cleveland. Others ' wanted free raw material, but protection " for our manufacturers, and they voted for Cleveland. " ; : . - v Previous to election we sfe-adly coutended that whatever all tliese, hb doubt sincere, people desired, it" the democratic people got info power it meant "free trade" - and nothing else, ; becauce the. demo cratic party . was ' ruledf by the son t liern or radical wi o g,' and that was for "free trade" pure and sim ple. ' - ' At the dinner given to President-elect. Cleveland by the He- form " cl nb in New York, aud - at which all the democratic leaders, including Henry George (but ex cepting Mayor-elect Gilroy and ex-Mayor Grace), were present, Mr. Tom Johnson, of Ohio, arose and said: ' . " ' " V ': 'There has been enough of the parrot cry, 'tariff reform, but no free, trade.' -It fv is now. lime to think of conciliating free traders; The radical wing is on lop.. It will bo swelled by the " free traders of the . populib't party; by free traders "whom the 'prestige and ; memories of the republi can party hitherto . held to' it ; by men who till - now have'iiis tnisted the democratic party ..be cause of that element of protec tion that has so often hampered its organization and paralyzed its councils.- A great idea is again beginuing to move in American politics. - We need hot fear the free-trader : or t ho singletaxer The man whom the democratic partv has to fear in its councils ia the sugarcoafed proteclTonist. Duty .'and policy require .us "to strike quickly. and liard." . Mr. Johnson : with injudicious honesty "lias let tho.cat out of the bag. So that .what republicans claimed all along is " true..5 "Tariff reform" was only "a "parrot ciy." And as ''the radical wingis on top ( it is "lree trade openly and den autly. -The mask is thrown asidel TIMBER RESERVE. ".- One of the most ; important as well as extensive reservations of public lands yet made,f it is sald, ii . i i -t win soon oe ; accompusnea ny a proclamation from rresideni; Har bison. Ine proclainatjon. is made under act of March , 3, 1891, as to timber reserves, Tipon the recom mendation of one of the special agents of the interior department in Oregon, and -it creates a great reservation of the- public . lands in the state of Oregon, "commencing at- the . Columbia driver on the north and running nearly through the entire length of v the elate. Behind this is a petition from va rious persons," and also -from'the state officials, who "represent that this reservation should be iade because of the v.. valuable timber within it, and of its being the watershed of the' rivers -flowing through western Oregon to the sea." :. :'" ':-.''j;:v" '.' The lengf h of t he 'reserve is 234 miles. The area is7020 square miles and thele are 44,492,800 acres within the exterior bounda ries". It embraces the crest of the. Cascade range" of mountains-' and includes the east and west slopes. It is "found that'iri this proposed withdrawal there are 125,000acres of school landswhich, being ifn-j surveyed, can be." withdi-awn and the state thus,, become entitled to indemnity. The rule of the de partment, recognizes this right-to indemnity where . the ' exterior boundariesof a reserves are suffi ciently defined to inclose the . re-, serve. Any entries, filings, loca tions and claims-of, bona fide set tlers are expressly excepted from reservation by the': terms of the proclamation.- " ' CHICAGO'S GREAT GOUGE." r .- 7 Chicago papers tire busily en gaged " in diffusing information that hotel and lodging rates at the world's fair "will be very reason able and even cheap; and, in proof, submit the following as the aver-, age to be charged, ascertained by a systematic canvass -of the' city:. Single rooms, single bed, one; per son, $1.36,' double room", double bed,-one persozi,$2.12; doubfe room, double . bed two ' persons,. ' $2.70; double room, two 'double beds, two perons, $3.60; ; double " room two double beds, three, - persons $4.15; double room, - two; double beds, four persons, $5.50.4Tiie Chicago press.has unwittingly, shown that the -"gouge" is to' b& universally practiced " by hotel and .': lodging house keepers,; and private " land ladies anxious to turn a more or less honest .penny- by renting rooms. The prices are -outrageous. A respectable and comfortable room, for which iu Chicago the charge - will - be $2.12 per night, can be -obtained in Oorvallis for fifty Cetns. . - - lLEG)si& TORS The"- following is i the populist congressmen . fwho will sit in; the filly-third congress : " Jerry. Simrj sou, John ;Davis,: Win.- Baker, J. Hudson W. Hv IJarris, Kansas; O. M. Kenv W? A, .McKeoghan, Nebraska; J. C. Bell, W; C. Pierce, Oolorodo; FrahciaL. U. Newlands, Nevada; ' Marion Cannon,- Cab-' forma; Joseph C. Sibley; - Pennsyl vania; 'J. W. Johnson, Minnesota; Geo. M. Ilichardso'ii, Michigan, j The senators are W. A. Pellef,- of 7Kansis and S. Hr" Rye, bt South Dakota. : :. '' . '.., ;. OREGON RAILROAD Is. ;."'' Following,. is the railway mile age in Oregon,. as 'given by the commissioners: Uregon cruainor uia,. oG7,50; Oregon Railway & Navigation, 547.53; Norlliem Pa cific, 3S.S2;- Willamette Valley Coast, 141.81; Oregon & Washing ton Territory, 44.68; Independence & Monmouth, ; 2.50; Rogue River, Valley, 5.50; Astoria & Southern Coast, 15.60; Coos Bay, Roseburg and Eastern, 10; Sumpter Valley, 28; Oregohiah, :58; total 1483.94 miles. . - " " '; - ';' ' OREGON'S ANNUAL RAINFALL. Ihe averace Drecipitalion is inches. The counties having th liighest annual average amount are Curry, rwi.th 82 inches aud Clat sop," pith 75 inches. The counties having the least annual average a.mbunt are' narney, with 9 inches, and Gilliam, wil h V 10 ; inches Those counties having less than 15 and more than 10 inches annu ally are ; Baker, CrOok, Mid heur, Morrow, and" Sherman. Those xounties having more than '45 annually are Benton, Ciatsop, Co lumbia, Coos, Curry and 1 ilia moolr, while in Multnomau it is 43.58 inches. - On " an - avera there . are 235 clear or partly cloudy days in the .state each year, 130 are cloudy, nnd on 105 daj's .01 of an inch or more of precipita tion occurs. - . " : ---- '. v The Sunday wood train on the Portland & Willamette Valley railroad, narrow gauge, met witn a seriou accident near Oswego. While going around a curve it ran into a tree which had blown acYoss the- track in the night:,; The en gine broke ?' the? tree, said to bo 3 feet in -diameter, in two, and left the track, plunging into-a trestle. The caboose left the track,' mjaking a complete somersault and landing right side up, but completely de molished. There were 17 men on the train, all more or less bruised and injured' l'wa"proh'a3bly fatally", bTlt'noritr-ivilfed outright. -'.. - : " Later. Tvvo have since died and several others ire in ajcrilical condition. : The wreck was one of the worst in the history of rail roading in Oregon. - "7 ' . i A PAPEIt WORTH 1IAVING. , :- The old saying thnt "nothing succeeds like success," iav.-t-ll illustrated by the ca reor o tho Rural. Northwest.' -which was founded in Portland, Oregon a little over a ysAr ago,:and has ah-eadjr established itself as the leading agricultural paper of tho Pu ciiio northwest. It is hardly . necessary; to say that tho succcsjfthi8 paper is simply the result of merit, -"t is no cheap concern made op of stereotype plates and stale clip pings, but ist bright, crisp and clear, filled with original rntter which hits, the .jcoridi- tions that exist in the r Pacific northwest. Among fruit flower is an especial favor ite as it jpak es horticaYtnre a lotuling fea tare. and given the bsst and.: fullest reports published of fce' meetiitKS of tho state 'borti cultural Societies of Oregon and Washing tbn, and includes among its regular contrib utors in this department such men ssPrnf. Lake, of -the Washington .Cairicnlttiral col--legej Prof. Washburn, of the Oregon agri cult ral college. A, T. JIawley and others of einiuent ability. Th. ,dairy department is maintained with no less vigor,'' ns indl. cated by the fact that its editors U.. M. Wl liamson,. holds. the position of secretary of the o the Orogou "State-' Dairy Association. Live stock and poultry are nof - neglecte;!, Tid progressive . agriculture- is.' the.' spirit which animates the general, management of the paper."1?. '-" :"'f''ii Y :"'"-r K ?Among ; special i features are its . depart ments devoted to' "the -' "if ome Circle" and "Among the Farrflersi'" The latter depart ment is very popular and a special feature with this paper. " , ' : . - ' ,' One ot the peculiar merits- of the -Rural Northwest is that everything is treated from the practical standpoint of the produ cer;' "This handsome ' 16-page "paper, pub lished twice a month'isa paper well worth its subscription, price ," of one dollar per year, and one that every fanner, . fruit grower and dairyman should have and keep. " It gives us pleasure to announce, that we have made arragementffby ."which we are able to client as a premium to alt new sub scribers paying us for one year "in advance. We culd'secure some of the- Eastern farm papsrrf a "nuch less cot csrselves,-but realizo tr.tr tact . that for-this section the cheap class of Eastern agricultural papers me scarcely worth having, and hot to lie cowpaixd ii value with "the Rural North west. - Not From a Finakcial . Stakdpoist. . "X dolpot reccommend Chamberlain's. Cough Remedy from a finanoial. stand-point, for we have others in stock on which we make ,a larger profit;" says Al, MagginL. a proin- iaent druggist of liraddock, Pena.'bnt be cause nrnny of our customers have spoken of it in the'iighest praise. : We sell more of it than any Bimiliar preparation we have in the store." 'For sale by T. Graham, Drug gist - r For Sale. A second-hand, uncov ered bucgy for Bale cheap. - Enquire at this office. THIRD PARTY & TltE ANf tTk f QUTttX ;f Of consideration 'are aostnioia of which, it-is aaserted-r-anil there-'r- many 'ench.T-triat they cute iraaieiliateljt 'bodily .aliments pt longstanditic;. " There are uouo-such that can.' CHroni?diordera. cannot be. instan taneously removed. :J. Continuity- of a geutt ine 'medicine, sueh as- Hostetter's Stomach Hitters, will eradicate chrdqicphysic;il evils. Not the least .of these last in the foroe of its oiposition to medieiue is ; coustipatioM, to the removal f. whi';h, if '-persisted in, .the Eittera is v particnlariy adaptsd.1 Constric-., Tion - oi ; iae...iK)veis ...m uticujn wxiiv ehould he dealt with early and systematically. So ore its usual attendants, li-cr eoinuluiut and tlysyepsia. For these ' .i fiir " malarui, rhenmtisnj, kidnfy tronl.do, nnd more re--cently "la grippe.'lliia highly and urofes-j sionaliy commended tneiiiyine is "an mv doubted ;'epeeiHc. Notbiag-can exeeed.it. njorcoxir, as a means vi linpiirnug to tha feeble and nervous.-- .. ' r : - ; . OFFEtiSIVEfECZEP Suflterod Terribly.. Doctors and MetU ' clscs Useless. Cured iu Four ; AVcc&s by Cuticura. J: I have a boy, fifteen years old, bora In Flfibtlll, portrait enclosed, -ho had tho eczema bq offensive that 1 could not stay In ihe room -with him. Tho 0or vvy BUiireti ikkiuij. lid foot rere terribly eore, he could not vear any shoe, and bid therefore to Etay ot heme from school. When he put on a pair of dry blockings h the morning, they would in ore hour be saturated with tnoietnre and very offensive even ia the coldee weauier. . The disease began to spread" over hi body, cspecinlly his haDda and nnpers:' Tho " .fnTmhn at) both Lis hands be tie? came stiff and ns useless es twn -withered sticks of wood. It would houseless for me to try to toil tho offering this boy endured. I took him to two different dootore, both gave Mm loUof medicine, but all to no cso. Ho grew worse. I therefore despaired of ever having biin cured. Ono day I saw thegrea benefits promised to those who would ure Ccti ctjua Kbmedies. I went right away tothe drug (.store and boo ght them. I must confess I fcaOTtrat Jittla falthln Dm. tiowevcrx una i . lnir to directions, and to-day I say trnthfally to oil the world, if you wiah to publish It, that my son is entirelv cured, thank God and thank tbodiscovewra of CirricunA Kehedies. They enred lilm la four weeks ua sound as a gold dollar. ' - ' " y OUS SAVAGE, FishklU Village, N. T. Cuticwra ResoSver.1 , Tho new Blood and Skin Pnriflcr, Internally, and CirricuitA, tho groat Skin Care, and Cuticura SoAr, an cTfiuisito fekin Beautlfier, externally, in. stautly relieve and speedily cure every disease and humor of the skin, scalp, and Mood, with less of hair, from infancy to age, from pimples to scrofula. - Bold everywhere. Price, CimctTRA, 50c; SOAP, 25c.; Resolvent, $1. Prepared by the POTTK3. Dbuo aud Cbsjucax. CouvortATioa, Boston, j"Howto Care Bkln Dieeaees," 64 pagoa, 60 Illustrations, and testimonials, mailed free. , - - - PLES, blackheads, red, ronph, chapped, and oily skin cured by Outicuba' EoaJ". ' MUSCULAR STRAINS ' 1 i V. . .nU. .-nn r L'llllWVII. S'fe' -rh(.nmat.!m. and chest nains reheved tt 1rv one mirmie by the Cuticura Vti-frCf. Antl.Fnln rinster. Tho first ttbd only buuotaneotw pain-tlJling plaster. .... " ' ..' GUARDIANS SALE OF REAL ESTATE. Notice is hereby "given that,; by virtue of an order of lha sounty court of Ijann count -, Oregon, duly made and entered of ' record onthe5fch day of December, 1892, I , C. W. Starrr guardian of the estate of Dessie Lin der, a minor, willou tho 16 th day of. Jan uary, 1893, offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder, the folio sring described real estate belonging to. said DiSsie Linder, to-wit: 'Commencing- at a point. 120 feci north of the north corner. of a lot pf-Jand deeded by ' A.' Wilhelm and wife to the Catholic church near Monroe, .and thence north 90 foet; west 120 feet; south 90 feet; east 120 fuyfe to the place of beginning.' all iawsetiwi ?,-, Uwn.' 1-1 s.. r. 5 ...5f' AVl lametve meridian Benton county, slate, pi Oregon. , ': ... - - . The sale will take 'plce on said premises at T:30 o'clock p, m. of said day'.. '. ,Terui3 cash in hand? ' ' " . - ' '--y. o: W. STARR, -Guardian otth Estate of .Jessie Liuder, ; a minor.''; i :: ' , -'' . 3 Dated, thw 16th day. of Dec. , 1S92. . to act as our aent. We furnish an expensive, ouctit and all you ueed free. It costs nothing to try the business." We will treat you well, and help yon to earu ten times ordinary wares. Both exes of all nges cau live t home and work iu ipare time, -or all the tune. Any one any where can earn a preat deal of money. SStiny have made Two Hundred Dollars n Month. Iso class of people in the world are makinsr-so mnch monejr witlioitt ciipitnl as those at worlc lor us. Uiusincss pleasaut, strtetly honorable, and pay6 better tnun unv'-other o'Jered to agents. ' ou have a clear fieid, with no competition. We einnp you with eve.rvthinir, and supply printed directions for beginner which, if obeyed fc-'tii'ullv, will faring kioes money than will nnv Othr bim'3. Ini Irove your prospects! Wliynot? Youcandoso eiifniy anu ourejy at.worK lor ns. iveasouaote indniitry only nectssnry for ' abeolute success. 1'umnblet circular ptvuia; jeverv jiarticmar is scut fste to all. ueiHV not in sonning lor it. OliOitfiK STIIjJSON fl CO., , i. Box So. 4iS, Portland, Me. U. -'JOHNSON,' , Y AT, LAW, ' CORVALL1S, OR., f , fSTPncs a irencral r ractice in til the courts. Also rent tor all tho first-diro insurance eo-npaiues. :-l , TAKE""YOUIi "WATCHE S XT. 13. VOGliEr. Hcxt door to Rose's ciffar factory. LATEST PATESTsiiWlTH EIE5TH0-' HACHETI0 IM?30VE5ET3. 'OSt? susPENsoar. Vinenro Without Ifedleiiw aUWnhMt roraltlDff hum oTertftiailon of brain, nerv faroaxoAsaeaor IsdiscTAtiou. -ma iiiul axbtioD, drantfl, Iobm. nerrous AvOility, tfp kwne'-i, UuKTiior rhvmatimt klflac-f, Urr uid biMer -eom-pialuta, lame oek, luipbaKO, wiatioA, generat ill-hoAUb, etc. Tl-iitt electric beK, ontMns WvaerTBl ImprieaiBtfl otpt I1 others, and icivee earrent tiiat ta isat&ntlr felt by ihe -wearer ot we forfeit i,utU, and will cvre mint the ebore dlseeaes or bo ief. Thoueanilii have been eured by thie mr eeloos lnrentiott efter eU other remedies failed end ww glre hundreds of eetlmotzlaU in this aud every other stale. Oar powerful IXFUOYKD ELWTBIC SI HPESh4kT. the ffreatest boos erer offered weakaenHJSK WITH A,hh HKLTH ffealtb and fJoroas strength tiGABABTSKBiaSO toVO lay Sead for iUiutraUa Paiuphieu ca&iled, srsied, tr Address WO. 172 First St.. PORTLAND. OTtSm Dr. J. M. CampM, D- D. S, dentist: Corvallis, - Oregon. Office over First National Bank. WEWANTVOO ELEOTBiO- BELT ? ;V -i The past year lias not been Tip to our expectations, conse qnently we have on hand a much larger stock than we care to have;and which ' We Iiaye been making preparations and will be ready ': To commence tlie reatest Clearance, Rem nant, Odd and End Sale Ever in the city. Every article in the store reduced. This is a bona fide sale and we invito tho public to call and t . . . . be convinced. ,s Jn Dress G oods, Ginghams, Flannbls, Mus lins, Ribbons, etc. 1 . . . ... :;;'' ". '.. : "... " '' r In : Hosiery,: Underwear, Shoes, Corsets Handkerchiefs, etc., at What fwc have Imust be sold by Febru-: r ai V isi, aim uiose gains should 'call ly Ids 46 inches all-wool Henrietta : .80 inches all-wool ladies' cloth : Best Amoskeag Gingham : : Lonsdale Muslin : : : Hope Muslin : ': : : ; : Cabot W Muslin, 15 j'ards : Cabot A Muslin, 13 yards : : Warner's Health Corset . : : G D Corset, formerly $1.25 : : All-wool Underwear, formerly $1.50 very article in the store in same proportion. Great R Prices during tlie sale will positively not : be duplicated. CALL EARLY AND GET STOCKS COBVALLIS, OBEQON. educe. I immense bargains. aesinnij iiiiiiieii'se uaiT that time. .90 .42 .081 -.10 .09 00 Jo 1.D0. 1.00 1.15 eduction THE BEST SELECTIONS CASH STOKE. J J