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About The Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Or.) 1862-1899 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 27, 1893)
1) THE CORVALLIS GAZETTE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1803. JAPANESE CURB A new and Complete Trea': consisting of Sap. toosttories. Ointment in Caps ales, also in Box and rllli ; a positive cure for External, Internal, Blind or Biaadlaff.Iichinit, Chronic, Recent or Hereditary Pile u&joaur other diseases and female weaknesses; it U Jwaya freat beneBt to the general health. The Tint dnooaery of a anedical cure rendering an operation with the knife unnecessary hereafter. Thia Kcmedy has never been known to fail. $1 per box, 6 for 5 ; sent by mail. -Why sutler from this terrible disease whsa a written guarantee is given with 0 boxes to re fund the money if not cored. Send stamp for free aanrple. Onarantee issued by Woodakd, Claku Oa., Wholesale and Reteil Drogidrts, Bale Agents, FarUand.trepHi. For sale by Allen fc Woodward ad by U rah am Ji Wortham, Corrallis, Oregon. p?a? "A. HODE& TttOPKIETOB OF THK IfiqBVfiLus Oakery And Dealer in Choice) and Fancy Groceries, Staple PURE WINES AND LIQUORS r Freeh Bread. Cakes. Vit. Cracker. Eta., ' - Itoajt constantly on hand. "t3orvlliHv - -.Oregon. ii !arTFHM0tQ.rMU3KN0rOTrWTy?tf i in- ilMffiDVU THE HOUSEHOLD FOOD ' t ai jlMPROYU BOTH BODY AND THE MifCb . ' VTWiT 15 WEltT UNDERSTOOD: ; c thw wire gauze oven pooRSlffiSia , B5T OP COOKS PREFER TKEB-JlJ " IP YOU WANT THE BEST - Bny the CHASTER OAK, With tlie Wire Gauzo Oven Doors. Jot Sale by Fisli & Murphy Benton. Ooinity HULLS NING ASD SlSllfltiD )00af flCTORY. W. P. MARTYN, Proprietor. Door and Sash kept in stock or made to order. Mouldings of all kinds in pine or cedar. All orders will receive prompt at tention, f guarantee all my work to be) rat-clasaV " West of 8. P. depot, Corral lit, Orego. 8 8-tf. THE PORTLAND SAVINGSBAMR ' Y Ok lOBTLAilD, OHEGOX. ;Pald ap capital . . . . rfhvpltts and profits esco.ooo . 60,000 Interest allowed on savings deposit as follows: " Oa ordinary savings book, Va term savings bonks.... On certiauite of deposit: ..4 per cent per annnra . . per oent per annua for three months .4 per cent per annnta for six months 6 per cent per annum Vwt twelve months per cent per annua (BANK DKKL'M, President. D.rr. -HOMI-SON, Vice President " H. C STilATrON. Carliier. R. L. Taylor, PROPRIETOR OF THE liltle Band Box Barber Shoo, i i-. rvallis, Oregon.- . (JTSliaving, t air cutting, dressing, dying, and shampooing. NURSERIES ALBERT BROWNEtL (Successor to Hyman k. BnjwaeD) Proprietor. enxt uro pcm3 bbotods, , . .- sg&a loatlnrest of ti Gtj. ' ' I would ealljthe attention of my friends to the fact that lam better prepared than ever before to furnish ; j sasrytkim la the snaps of FRUIT, SHADE AND PENA1IENTAL TREES, Small Fruit Vines, etc., At either wholesale or retail. Vy stock ii flnt-claxn, pruarsnteed tree to name and YKEK FEOM INSECT PEST8 and my pnjes low. (Cemend see me or write for free price list to . ALBERT BBOWNELL, HOME INDUSTRY! Tine Buggies and Carriages. - will amply pay anyoM for their time to fo to THE CORVALLIS CARRIAGE & WAGON CO.'S FACTORY And see their larjre and extensive factory at Cor . Tallit, Oretron. where you can boy BUGGIES, CAR RIAGES AND SPRING WAGONS which, with proper ears, vill last a life-time. They are made of the finest second-growth timber and the best ot ether material by that factory, where each piece of material la taken from the rough and shaped in this factory by machin err destned for the purpose. Each vehicle is finely painted in the dost eletrant style. IU Jons aaa Mui in Put Togkth i Day 8p n Waanna when the timber is tlwrrauirhly dry, which is not done with Easterc Jobs, as most Eastern Tift shipped to this country are built in winter and - cmiy rnrirar when tin weather is damp. The beauty of all these Jobs is that they are all FULLY WAR KANTaD and sold at such REASONABLE PRICES . , - . atstnere is no excuse ror wajwm w s a home-made na - , Seed Potatoes Seed Oate FertilLsere Planet jr. eeq ? urine Bee Supplies Portland, Oregon. Send for Catalogue (English or German). Special prices to first buyers in new localities.. A CLOCK ON A STRIKE. IT WAS WORSE THAN AN INFERNAL i MACHINE IN EFFECT. A Deroted Brother Baa an Interesting . and Exasperating Experience with a Queer Going Timepiece Wliat Was th : WaAtor vvlUi be Clock. i I ?blala torr bMet 9 01001: irblsb yaadea great deal of trouble for two people and gave the same two people (very poor opinions of each other. The brother Bays that no woman in the world ave his sister could have had each amazing ignorance about clocks in gen eral, and this one in particular, while his sister declares that only her brother, of all men on earth, would have allowed a little bit of a clock to make a fool of him before a carload of strangers. The trouble with the clock was that it wouldn't keep time. There was no reason in the world why it wouldn't; in just wouldn't, and that was all there was to it. This was painful to the young woman for several reasons. It is Only necessary to mention ones the timeniece bad been given to her by her betrothed. He thought it was a little gem of a clock, and that it would please her. She agreed with him as to tho beauty of the delicate little affair, and was pleased for a time. Then she began to get worried; then she got nervous, and lastly alarmed. This was all of course because the thing would not go, and, because she feared he might think she bad broken it, or, worse still, as she herself confessed between time, that she hadn't sense enough to make a clock go, while her irreverent and impertinent brother suggested sweetly that he was more likely to think that it was her f aoe which had stopped a clock." The family were in the country when the clock was received, and when the time drew near for the arrival of the betrothed clock giver affairs began to be desperate. The young woman declared that that clock had to go. The clock simply wouldn't. She would wind it up it would always wind without the slightest resistance but it would not go. She shook it, she turned it upside down, she coaxed it, she laid it on its face and then on its back, and the hands were still froze to tho face of the clock. . "Albert," she said to her brother, "yon must take this clock over to town and get it repaired. It must be repaired; it must go." Now town was ten miles away, and Albert did not see why any one should make so much fu6s over a clock, and such a little clock, too, as that was. But when arguments and pleadings could not move him he yielded to tears, and, chucking the timepiece under his arm, be boarded" the train and started for town. In the car be placed the clock on the seat beside him and rested his hand on it. Then more trouble began. That clock began to strike. It went into the striking business in a calm, determined way. It struck right along, up grade and down grade, around curves and on straight-tracks. The brother felt at fainting around his heart. The people In the car who had first been amused began to be annoyed. The young man's face got red; it got warm; his hair be came bathed with dampness, but be clung to the clock like a Trojan. He had an idea that be might be able to bide it or smother it or close it, he didn't know winch, and so he kept his hand tightly pressed on it. And all the time that infernal ma chine just "sawed wood." It had struck a gait which it liked, and it kept it up without a break. It showed no signs of getting tired or of running down. It was stoking along at a 3:20 , gait when the train reached the' town. ' It con- tinned to strike when the brother made his escape from the car. It went on striking up the street until the brother vU4 to throw it over a feaovaad then commit suicide. No burglar alarm was ever more persevering than that clock. No changing fire engine ever made more noise and caused mtre ex citement. The clock was striking away industriously and cheerfully when the brother ran into a jeweler's shop and threw the thing down on a counter. '- "For heaven's sake stop it!" he cried. But it had stopped. There it lay on the counter as dumb as an oyster and as silent as a tomb. "Well, m be hanged," said the broth er breathlessly. "What's the matter with it anyway?" he asked, looking at it as if it were a dynamite cartridge. . t The jeweler picked it np. i "Look out!" cried the brother. "That thing will start np again if you touch it." . But it didn't. It never made a sound, only in a minute came a gentle and rhythmic ticking. . "There's nothing the trouble with it," said the jeweler, setting the hands and then examining the little infernal ma chine. "You see," he added with a sym pathetic smile, "this is a repeating clock. You can make it restrike the last hour by touching this spring. You have been winding up tho repeating sounder, but not the clock. And you must have held your hand on the spring when you kept it Btrikinjr. It s au xignt now. au.tob Swaat to do is to wind the clock more and the repeater less." ' i "Ohr said the brother with a gasp and that was all. Now the brother says that any woman who doesn t know enough to wind clock doesn't know enough to live. And the sister says well, every brother knows what Bisters can say. New York -Tribune. - . . ' -A New Rope. ' 1 The outside bearing surface of ordi nary steel wire rope is often connnad to ia single wire in each strand, causing ex icessive-wear of the exposed wires. Jl Birmingham firm has produced an im proved form of rope in which the strands are fattened. This .shape considerably increases the wearing surface, making At possible to use much smaller wire, and p jiving greater flexibility to the rope with jmrminnqjririieneBg oi me wires ' THE MYSTERY UNRAVELED. A Clever Jfewspaper Man Divines the Season of a Tremendous UloclUMle. "What is itf" "Who is hurt?" Anybody been run over?" "Is it a man in a fit?' High above the eeaseless rumble and roar of traffic rose human voices in anx toua taquiryi and the desise throng at the ptt40&m sVtafefnd ilediaoa strafc pw dethMr stO, it WM jrjst before unset, and the mlgh,ty heart of Chi cago's business center throbbed with the f everish energy that marked the closing hours of another day of toil, and the hurrying homeward of restless, eager thousands. The swiftly moving streams of humanity that are wont to meet in eddying whirls in this dizzy vortex and then diverge and move onward again, each in its destined course, had sudden ly become blocked and chaos reigned. Pushed toward the common center by the ever hurrying throngs afoot, in car, riages and in street cars, and unable to extricate themselves, men, women and children gasped for breath, and the crowd in the streets and on the side walks overflowed into alleys and surged hither and yon like the resistless ebb and flow of a mighty sea. A policeman oh the outskirts of the dense throng climbed a lamppost, and from his elevated position surveyed the scene. "Give him air," he shouted sternly waving his club. "Give him air!" "What's the matter?' inquired a hun dred voices as he climbed down. . "I don't know," he answered, and with gloomy, lowering brow he strutted up the street, disappeared down a short flight of stairs, from which a few mo ments later he emerged, wiping his mouth, and in the eame stern, uncom promising' way he walked a block far ther and sent in a fire alarm. Meanwhile the surging multitude at State and Madison grew every moment more appalling and inextricable. Something must be done. Fiercely elbowing his way through the crowd, a newspaper reporter at last was seen bearing down toward the cen ter of the compact mass. Hi3 hat was off, his hair flying in the wind, and his face was deathly pale, but with set teeth and dilated nostrils he tore his way along, thrusting to the right and left every one who opposed his progress. - Beaching the center of the throng he seized two individuals by their arms, and in the same resolute, f oarless way opened a passage for them to the outside, and, as if by magic, the vast concourse dis solved; the converging streams of hu manity whirled and eddied as before, and the business heart of the great city throbbed again. The reporter had conjectured rightly. The blockade was caused by two women who had met in the exact center of the street and stopped to tell each ether the troubles they were having with their hired girls. -Chicago Tribune. "Very" with a Verb. "Pleased," in the expression "very pleased," is nothing more than the past participle passive of "please" used as an adjective. "Very," so far as I am aware, is never used with any other part of a verb, aad then only when that part has become adjective by usage. The following quotation from Popes "Dun dad" shows Its use as an adjective: Thou trlompfa'st, Victor of the high wrought day. And the pleas'd dame, soft smiling, 168451 away. A similar use of the word is when we say a person's face ' has "a pleased ex pression." This being the case it is as correct to say "very pleased" as to say "very much pleased." Annandale's "Im perial Dictionary," subject "Very," hast "Among old writers very was fre quently used alone to modify a past participle, and it is still to some extent 0 used; thus. Sir W. Jones has 'very concerned;' Gibbon, very unqualified Sydney Smith, very altered etc" Am there is no verb unqualify, un qualified can be nothing else but an ad jective, and concerned and altered come under the same part of speech. When we say, "I am very pleased," there is no action implied, but there is simply a description of the state or condition in which one is at the time or speaking. F. C. Birkbeck Terry in Notes and Queries. Her Rale of Ufe. Mrs. Little was a woman greatly re spected in the little neighborhood where she lived. ' Her friends and neighbors often spoke of her knowledge of Bible teachings, and few were tho occasions when she did not remind them of her attainments by some apt quotation. "How is it, Mrs. Little, asked a neigh bor one day, "that you can always re member - some suitable - quotation for everything that happens?" ."."Oh," I don't know, responded the good woman with a pleased smile, "un less 'tis because I always act on what I say. Now, wnenever 1 see ioiKsprovoffea I jest associate it with '.Let not the sun go down upon your wrath. "I've always acted on that myself. I made it a rule when I was young never to let the sun go down when I was mad. And so it is with other things, and I s'poBe that's one reason t remember." Youth's Companion. The Pottery Tree) of Brazil. The pottery tree, found in Brazil, is curious and useful. One would scarcely expect to find pots and jars and pitchers growing in if not on a tree, but the ma terial for them certainly grows in this tree. It is found in the form of. silica, chiefly in the bark; although the very hard wood of the tree also yields it. To make this curious pottery the bark is burned, and what remains is ground to powder and mixed with clay. Har per's Young People. - - r -f Hollle rsaelier'i Blag. Mollie Fancher wears, a pretty birth day ring. The setting is modern, but the gem itself is said to have, been found at Pompeii It is an orange red sar donyx, with a funeral urn cut in intaglid, and is set very simply in Etruscan gold. THE PRINCE AT THE PLAY. How. Ills Royal Highness Attends tho English Theaters, Tho royal box is booked in the usual way of business anu charged to the Marlborough house account. The price is not increased from the ordinary library tariff, and the stories told about a nomi nal price or a larger one being paid by royalty only exist in the imagination of me papers wbo mrnn sncn uuraaiuatea. Sometimes it happens that a box can not be got at the partiuhlar theater de cided upon. When this is the case it is put nicely to the party who has booked the royal box if they could see their way to obliging his royal highness, and the result is of course invariably in the af firmative. The prince, however, is very reluctant to have this done, and always wishes that the party obliging shall be as little inconvenieced as possible so much so that when told that the box has been conceded he generally remarks: Why did you disturb anybody on my account? I could have come hero an other evening. Please see they are thanked in my name." In the rare case of a refusal representation is made to his royal highness, and they try for a box at another theater. When he goes to a theater it is his ex pressed desire to be treated exactly the same as one of the ordinary audience. Little displays of flowers, bouquets, satin programmes, etc., are all very nice, but the prince does not care for them, and would much rather do with out them. Another thing which annoys him is that he should be drawn atten tion to by the performance on his arrival of the national anthem or "God Bless the Prince of Wales." As he said on one occasion, "Why should the amusement of every member of this audience be disturbed for my sake?" This was at the Olympia theater during the run of "Fun on the Bristol." As soon as the royal box became occu pied everybody was astonished to see the orchestra suddenly stand up in the mid dle of the performance and begin play ing "God Bless the Prince of Wales." Of course the whole house rose en masse, every eye was directed to the royal box and the applause was deafen ing. The prince immediately left the box and demanded an explanation. ' Mr. Jarritt arrived and explained that it was only the ovorzealousness of a too patriotic band conductor. This eon eluded the incident, but it was accepted es a precedent, and the same intimated to the managers generally. This is why you often hear people say in a theater toward the close of the performance: "Why, there is the Prince of Wales over there in a box, and they never played God Save the Queen.' What a shameP Tho prince always waits until the final curtain has descended before rising to leave. This is his invariable rule. So much so that he has sat out the entire harlequinade of a Drury lane panto mime. There are three or four theaters only where he ever breaks this rule. They are those houses which have no royal entrance, and here the prince an ticipates the final curtain by two or three minutes, bo that his departure will not disturb the carriage traffic of the re mainder of the audience. Immediately the prince is announced to havo visited a theater the booking rises, baroineterliko, to a good heat. This is in reference to the booking pub lic, but beyond this when his royal highness likes a play he invariably rec ommends it to all bis friends. In many other ways the prince is always think big of tho drama. When he sees a bene fit announced for some well known artist wbo has often ministered to his amusement, or some poor player who has fallen on bad times, he immediately puts his name down for stalls or boxes to a substantial amount. London Morn ing. The Fogy Not Without Bis TJsea, Isn't it about time that some one at tempted a defense of the "old fogy 5" In these there is no one more decried. He is popularly supposed to block the wheels of enterprise, to stand in the way of progress, and nearly every association has two or three of these people whom the members would gladly throw over board if they could, The odd thing about all this is the fact that the "old fogy" has usually been one of the creators of the very body which seeks to be rid of him. In the beginning he was indefati gable; he labored long and earnestly to procure funds, and was at considerable personal sacrifice to put this or that in stitution on its feet. Now that things are finally settled and paid for and everything is in good running order he is disposed to let well enough alone for a little time. But this will not do at all for the young blood which is constantly pouring in. The new element is full of progressive ideas and suggestions of innovations, and when it meets resistance on the part of the "old fogy" there is a clashing of opinions. Buffalo Courier. Bow to light a Solid Body. Cadogan Morgan was the first elec trician to experiment with electric light in solid bodies. This was in 1785. He first inserted two wires into a stick of wood and caused the spark to pass be tween them. This had the effect of iL laminating the stick a beautiful-blood red. An ivory ball, an orange or an apple may be lighted in the same man ner. Some experimenters prefer the lemon fortius purpose, it being very sus ceptible to the electric discharge, flash ing forth at every spark as a spheroid of brilliant golden light, ine wires used for this purpose should be brought with in about half an inch of each other in-' Bide the lemon. St. Louis Republic. Thomas Hardy's Methods. ' Thomas Hardy, the novelist, has been telling something about .his home and method of work.. If ho turns out 3,000 words in a day ho thinks he has done well. He usually begins work between 10 and 11, and .writes until luncheon. He has never tried the typewriter, but he writes with copying ink, duplicating his MS. by the copying press, bo oa al Jr? E E, -v : A..- ' GOVERNMENT . LHNDS Fine as the choicest in California, are. waiting to-be taken up in the beautiful -St' oney u f n it .4 Lassen County, Cal, Under the ftxlenelve Honey Laio Valloy - sm . - if n $ JHE BEAUTIFUL HONEY Vw' arff. arM of fin 1 I I ' rounded ami J i . ui Hue. level, luam - r i 1 . i the bun IXX L ..j .himuia.,, anu lias a line, nutl Climate . 1 year around, iionev I.ake m a of rr..h .. . r v.L" idred aquaie miles. The N. C. O. the Valky, and tlK Greai Silt I.k cioss tt. I lie land l eas.Iy cultivated and produces txtta large crop X wh.at, oau, barley, hops, era, alfalfa, vegetables. Iruit and Mock. W tod and water arc pleuiifuj aud lumber cheap. The laud can be taken up with- i out residence un-ier the Desert Act, or woman, tnartied or tingle. , We builJinX a large Watef We want to get customers lot tbe you to get a piece of it. The land r -3 , o i 00 in J4. n.b! aod gxi supply), will ot $6 jfaud $5 c 0.1 delwerv to the land fur W i attended to for customers by u. without mtra charce, ai.d the filinus - if. undetliie Desert Act as recently i men Jed by Congress, must show a water M supply before thev will be accepted. . - X ? u "ON,tv i-Ak Ci 1 Y lhe town we establishing, oflers good 3 - chances for tbe establishment of new businesses, and is well wirth in- X X- vestigattug. J THCSC LANDS CAN BC t STAKEN UP WITHOUT RESIDBNC&i Under the Desert Act, affording a chance for the speculator rft as weii as tne EMPLOYIV.Sr.T AT GOOD WAGES For Men and Teams on the construction, work, if you desire to make home iuh uick asiiu3 Mic icvci, au reauy tor trie plow, with T rich soil, on lailrcad now built, and on line of another, building. Fuel is 3 free, lumber cheap, and water plentiful. Good local R3 well as outside it 4-n Tt. : r .i.- i Li ; . . . ma REMEMBER that these Lands are ji uMum... au luij.uwu vi uicsG uiuua uiaacd uiera immensely ana lnunc- r? Send 4 cents in stamps II Honey Lake Valley X- . nPRno K Klnrki TJiTtlHirtrw jt JklXjj) W X 1UUU UliU.XUg x- s , FEED W. LAKE, Secretary H SPECIAL EXOOKSIONS $$ AT1 T?.TIT6TTr!'P.TI 1? 'Araa t ARE BEING RUN FR0F4 SAN FRANCISCO, DR. TAFTrS Ing for breath, seeming as if each gja on would be vour last, vou have sji only to take a few doses Asthraalene when easy ana you leei as u an angei or mercy naa unioosea ine iron grasp or ine lingers of death. The happiest moment of your life will be when you have used a few bottles of Dr. Taft'8 ASTHHALEn!E and it has cured you of Bps ETOj 533 rvga.and prove Asthma. We mail to any Asthma sufferer a trial bottle tea ra jm thaf it doe sold by druggisu. Dr. Taft Bros. H. Co., Rochestcr,N,Y Q i, Lfasa Eag"ura "" TAOUIM BAT NH. ill 1111 Water Front Business overlooking the grand Pacific Ocean, h Newport, oa ots To Yaquina City, or Tracts of from 1 to 5 acres on or near the Bay. Also severalsmall vege&ables grow fresh and green 12 months of the year if given half the care required in - any, other state that will ASTONISH - THE - NATIVES ! All r. rinsA wiRriino- tn liRnnsft of hands than ours. Those wishing ng on or addressing JAMES EOBEltTSN & CO, NEWPORT, Benton Countv. OREGON. Main St, Op. Cameron's Store.. ' A quiet room. Good Books. Cnrrent Pa pers sad Periodicals. The public invited, Strangers especially welcome. - Per Order of W. C ". V. ' 'fTFarnished rooms (ap stairf) to rent,; V u 4 M- ! n J3l IrrJgatJen System of u IS ti n Land tod Water Co. 2 LAKP. VALLEY CONTAIXS i . ., . . , 1 im.9, ih reauy lor rnc plow, u sur- U iMtiri. all .-. 1. .- .1 ; "lZ'Zcv7! ... Railroad ba recently been buffi i ilo 2 Vl rr.A ni :Tu l ...:n ... - in tracts of 40 tu jao acres, by a man X ' System for the Irrigation of this bud. X ater we will have to sell, so wilt helo A will cost you Si.5 an acre to the Guv- 1 our rears, j ne water (a perpetual n. 5 anacre to the Company: $t. down 3. its imtf--.ti.rn All l-.n,I 1 .;..,. ?, XH M noniesceker. tt there level, aU ready for the for full information to Land & Water Go. . $3 A AT VTt A I.TH TQ Ofl HAT i M.J UjCXJ-i X XukXi VJXOVJWi JXU, ii. . thespasmlsbroken.thcbreathlngbacornes Lots, Residence Lots ih of the qbitiqhs improved farms, where in the Union, at prices their ttrnriertv can'it T)Ut it ill belter to invest will makcu money by call- TEL. a. DAVIS, Attorney and Counselor at Law, C0UVALLI3, I : OREGOX. Legal btainess promptly attended to in any part ol .- Office in Postoffica Block,. Vallev lA X ill M ft IT5- x 'M wnMmM da H fEM v 4 Scienttiio American 1------ ' flossy. fcr' : trad:-: MAitifS DESH-.PJ FATEr.TSi For taformserra caa irno il.tfj coot vrita to MUNH CO., srj JcseoaLway. Kcw yor.se Oldest bnrenn fen naoitriiis pata&U in Aravtien Brery patent taleii out by s is brr-ojLt boiorj tb6 public by a notice giveu fret: ci cUarse in thj gtimiiiti Smmtm C ,JIII , (.7, Larfrcst cirenlntlnm of nr.y sr-lmtinc raTir In tit world. Sp!eudui!y IDustraicd. Ho inceHieeu man should l vriMj;iit it, WcsI'.'t, W.'S.t'r " jreat) (LA) six mutttis. AWra iltiUx ft CO yuElili.Hiiits S ii 1 road nay, it'V x o.i City.. EAST AM SOUTH:: VIA '. Southern pacific Route: Shasta Lin.: Express Trains L-ave Tortland Daily. 801TII. " N (lit Til r.v Portland. . . . 7:0C p. m. f.v Fhh I'ritco. . . .7:00 fnl Lv Albany 10:23 . tit. , Lv iV.nr. 4:23 am Ar San Fr:eo SJ5n.ni. I Ar VcrtlMitl 7:bf. knj Abnve trains atop only it fi!l!cwiii station liortB of Kflsebnrg;, Fa:t I'ortii-.m!, Oi(;tn f'itv, Vfncd lmrn, Salpiu, Alhcny, Taiigrnt; Hliti'..:, L'a'iscy, liar risbur;r, Junction City, lrvii.fr, l-.upcre. Koselmrg Jljiil T'aiiy. " Y Portland 8:.';0 a. m. I l.v Roh l:tc.'..7.-0 a. ml r Albany 1Z:J5 p. in. I v Alli-nj .". ,.la:Ei.iirt Ar KoacUirg 5:50 p in Ar I'oFtlai'nl . . . 4:fc0 p. in ' All nr.y Locnl Daily Kxctpt f'iulsy. IKAVS: Ann;-.:: rnrtland B:0nj). ,ni. I il 'a ......tiro p. irt AlbRiiy 6:30 a. in. rcrl'siyp !u:."0 a. m Lebanon I'ratK-h. 8:10 am. ..Lv. . . Ailiany Ar. ..3:2,ri p ra 9:f-0 a in . . Ar.". .Lf;).r.ni . ..T,v. . .2:?9 p irt l:20p in . . Lv . . . AHmny Ar. .10.21 a r.l 2:09 a m..Ar...Lebai.t.n...Lv . ..f):S0 a m Pullman Euffet Sleepei's: SECOKD CLASS SL1 -KriSo CAKS For the nceotanioilr.ticii of t ni--&-i;:crs holt1 ing aocoiid-vlnsa tickets, i-.t t;-.cl:cd to copies' trains, woctEaeWv5t:. ' IiETWEKN P0KTLAKD AKD Ct'liVALUS. lfi!Triii.' SS.y Erocjt C-diy. 1KVB. I AUKIVK Porlland 7:.'0a. r.t. i Coi vi-lii.-- J::10 p. nl Conailis 13f5 p.m. i i'oi!ia;n! 5-:'0 p. sn 1 tn.il.: l tit Orvjfon rr.rilic linib LICAVR. JM,:iK Portland, 4:40 p. m. ifcIiivi!ic... 7 TP p. m MeMinnville B:4.'.a. in. i ri-t.:ai-t' Si '.'( a. nl Through Tiokcf;- to n.'l Points Ei-t ixzu'l b'cu tlx For tickets ar. full iufi in : i"i v iirru'ircf j rates, nu ps etc., cli .n c i..j iMi "s ; -.rut 6 (Jciva.lis. e. r ronn. A::t. c. v. i-1 ,-ci.t. B, KOEBLEIt HutAcci. Toi Uu:'. ,. i cn. fell y if m kiui VX3B3ECam33a7 I n n r s' -: 3a -r : l S"l' S I' 111 HI I I h. l.-u-t t -,', . ...1 cfcrtCtr thnn any othtr p.-.rt it :'(:":' t-w-''n no iuilt. Ju8t fx. tho bii.'aor. win 'Aurvi, ux & rii oil da;. 2IAKE3 KO BISjELI, 3 KiCvr. !To double or false esplnciont;, ri fi c,ii3a0 tv1c!j iio V It Oil HseU Aato'aaSics:?, j?atit)i:;3 ci Z-le.'r7.a Rstk. , otter iiuiiiuc. rrm mtacturrrvx ciKcuiji.n.i aipt to . $23 FrasiscG, al. ad fEs?, Cr,. fyX; Oregon Pacific I? nil rond -,T. E. Hogg, liijctfivtr,";,' 'nrid Oregon Cevciopment Co.'s STEAMSHIP LINE. 235 Miles Shorter; 20 flours 1 ees firt than by any other route. First ciats through pa?8fcngr rh1 fi':ii;ht Jine frort l oitlanrt all points in l ite W nlmucite vniley to aud from Sau Francisco, Cul. , TIME SCHEDULE (except Sun.l.-vs.) Leaves Albany 1:C0 r. di I T,:avc.i YauU!i:nC:4S a. in Leave Col vallia 1:40 p n. lcavc fitrvnlHs 10:;;J " Arrive Yaunhia 5:30 1'. in I Arrive Albany 1 1 :10 o. m Oreironft CalifiTiiia trains connect r.t AII.ary.inil Corvaliis. T!:ea!ir. c traiivj gi.nntct nt Yojnira v.itd the Orepon Icvclor.nicr.t C.a line of etejnifeliij.i tween x aqulna and Sau f raucist-o. 1'rom "Vr.i; cina. Steamshio "WiJbtnetto Valley," Juno 1st 11th, 2L'd, July Jut. mm San I'rrinclaco. Steamahip "WiUanietto Volk-y," June Gtbl 17th, 27th. Tliis Comnany reserves the ri;;!it to ci ante sailin dats without noiico. N. B. Vasscuycra from r rtlr.i:u aud all Willainetto valley i:i.:i:t,.si cm msKo i:lr,K connection v-fth the trnisia of t)ie Vacnin: route at Albany or C'oi va.iiK, ri;u if ilestinc! to can rranci8co f'iouM arrapiic lo arrive a Yaqnina the evcr.mij hefore I'nfo c.f f.;i;.ii:('l raaseuser and rt-U'.ht r.-itts arenys ihl lowest. Forinfornialii.il ojiuiy to J. Wl (.utnmins. freight and ticuct r.ei't, ( orvr lis, or to .:. c I a. u wis, Cell. F. and F. Ai'tMh )re''nn I'nj cilic Uaiiioad Co.; C'orvlli.?, Cr.l W. B. WHESTEE. ' . ' Gen.' F. aud V. Igeut, Orc-gcn Peveli nt Co., 204 Moiitoriiery St., H. IT., (ill Caveats, and Trade-MarTcH olitRlnert.andr.llatl eni Dnsmegs conanctei tor Kicotr?.io i ces, ., Our Office is CnnosP.e 0. K. Pent CfSoa. and we can ternrc patent in less time than tboe remote from Washington. Send model, drawin-z or ph'jto Trith 'dscrirl tion. we advise, if patent awe or not, free ci tYirrrrr Iln, tft nnf ftur ril I liftt,,rtt a o.,r.l A r'a'mphlet. "How. to Obtain I'.-itentfi," witl names or actual clients ic your oiate, cotui:y,oi town, sent tree. Aaurc9, a L'&OO ., Pjiposita PaJsrst OP, Yaqoiba ways to have a second copy of his work.