Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1904)
CLASSIFIED ADVtfNISLMENTS Five Hied, or leas, 25 cents for three Insertions, or 50 rents per month. RELIGIOUS TRUTHS. that you may pmy. Jona WANTED AT ONCE AN EXPERIENCED WOM an cook to no to Eastern Oregon. Good wages. Enquire at this office. OAK LOGS AND CEDAR POLES. BY the Corvnllis Sawmill Company. North Main street. HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOR all kinds of Poultry also dressed Pork. Smith & Boulden. Corvallis, Oregon, next to Gazette office. - -A POSITION AS HOUSEKEEPER BY an experienced lady with two children. A farm preferred. Good reference?. Inquire at this offire FOR SALE ONE SPAN OF DRAFT HORSES FOR sale. Enquire at this office, or of M Robinson, first house East of College barn, College Hill. FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE. SMALL tract of eood land, well improved. adjoining Corvallis. Enquire at this office. A 32x52 ADVANCE SEPARATOR with wind stacker. Stacker been ran one season. Good as new. Also 10 . Horse Case traction engine. Both a bargain. Call or write, L. B. Luper. Tangent, Ur. REGISTFRED POLAND CHINA PIGS for sale. Grade Poland China Pigs let out on the shares or for sale. M. S. Woodcock, or enquire f T. J. Thorp on the farm, (Jorvalus, Oregon. GOOD JERSEY COW FOR SALE five years old, Dr. Altman. INVALID'S CHAIR. LIGHT BUILT and Light Running. Child can handle it. A bargain at $7 50 Call and see it at the Gazette omce. STAGE LINE. ALSEA STAGE. MY STAGE MAKES connection with all trains on the C. & E. R. R. at Philomath. All persons wishing to go or return from Alsea and points west can be accomodated at any time. Fare to Alsea $1,5 J Round trip same day $ 2.00 M. 8. Rickabd. . Pmy WL who must love our neighbor as ourselves, mutt also pray for them as tor ourselves. Jeremy Taylor. TWino- foririTen. to iorenrt so God make the godUkeoess- which He gives visible throng action lor tn neip oc other men. L 0- B. TVxiitne and noUnee are near eldn. It i bT mr of nenitenee. self-ren.nn- eiatton, lowliness of cpirtt. the men draw nigh to God. K.J. (Janvpoell. In. all Tour works, either at home or a. th nluv of onr service, do not for get that all yonr strength, your ligM J snd yoar success e-re in Christ and His 1 erosef therefore do not Tail to calf upon the Lord before befrinninjr any work, saying: "Jena.nlpin: Jesus, enlighten mel"- Thw your heart will be supported and wanned by lively faith and hope. John Sergieff . W do not know, in onr ordinary riv ing.- the fnll privilege of prayer; and therefore m lose tor wa, sometime, ita riohneavand its bleaakig. But when, w let It ranse tiM-ouarbout the whole cirela of life, it makes God a- personal present friend to us one to whom we ean torn at any moment, and on through whom we can rise above the perplexities, and lose the anxious area tlasspr upon.ua. Timothy Iwight. BatasT . Things never can satisfy Any heart of manor child. They please for time, but we grow tired of them. We aee their limitations, and we "want the earth." But even that would bring ua no satisfaction. It is not in things, but in persona that we find the moat lasting delight. The child's happine sa in it mother's love outlasts all the pleasures its toy and playthings ever ean give. Yet even to our joys in the person we know the closest and dear est there are limit. Each is a seg ment of the great circle of life. It sug gest the rounded and completed cir cle, but it always stopa short of that. So the human leads on to the Divine, the complete, perfect, inexhaustible personality of God, disclosed to us in Hi Son, In Him is the joy and con tent of men, or in Him we see the per fection we have vainly sought in oth er. And in the perfect personality alone can we find perfect satisfaction. S. Time. LIVESTOCK A. KLINE, LIVE STOCK AUC TIONEER, Corvallis. Oregon, Office at Huston's hardware store. P. O. ad dress Box 11. Pays highest prices for all kinds of livestock. Twenty year's experience. Satisfaction guaranteed PHYSICIANS L. G. ALTMAN, M. D.. HOMEOPA thiet. Office corner of Third and Mon roe streets. Residence Corner Third and Harrison, streets. Hours 10 to 12 a. m. 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. Sundays 9 to 10 a. m. Phone residence 315. B. A. OAT HEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon. Rooms 14, Bank Build ing. Office Hours : 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to 4 p.m. Residence: cor. 5th and Ad ams Sts. Telephone at office and res idence. Corvallis. Oregon C. H. NEWTH, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, Office and Residence, on Main street, Philomath, Oregon. DRS. W. H. & MAUD B. HOLT, Osteopathic Physicians. Residence 2nd door north of electric light plant. Phone 653. ATTORNEYS E. R. BRYSON ATTORNEY AT LAW Office in Post Office Building, Coival- Iis, Uregon. JOSEPH H. WILSON, ATTORNEY-at-Law. Notary, Titles, Conveyanc ing. Practice in all State and Federal Courts. Office in Burnett Building. LODGE DIRECTORY MASONIC CORVALLIS LODGE, No. 14. A. F. & A. M. Stated communication first and third Wednesdays of each month., at Masonic nail, second st. Jas. A. Harper, W. M. W. P. Lafferty, Secretary. FERGUSON CHAPTER, No. 5, R. A. M. Regular convocation 2nd Wednes day of each month at Masonic Hail, Jesse Irvine, H. P. J. B. Horner, Secretary. OREGON COUNCIL. No. 2. R. A S. M. Stated assembly fourth Wednesday of eacn montn, as .masonic uaii. 8. Chipman, T. L M. E. B. Horning, Recorder. BT. MARY'S CHAPTER, No, 9. O. E. S meets Tuesday preceding the fall moon, at Masonic Hall. Lillie Groves, W. M. Bertha Davis. Secretary. MARYS PEAK CAMP. No. 126. W. 0. W., meets second and Fourth Fridays, in Woodmen Hall. G.W. Fuller, C.C. J. L. Underwood, Clerk. VEO IS ht Bgiossca tr Be As ttveat, Bmt tr Car IkMll Be- tUm Om We Cm !. Whan, a. man's interest and affeo- tions are scattered over the whole wide SJd at hmmnitv. h do not oftA oownt tor mack in practical social serv ice. Dunoon count against einueafcj. It i eaa-y t& be In theory a kver of hu manity, after the order of the ieck- tnUfs of the earth, and to be w.i.in ad unloving- toward onr immediate neighbor, .therefore, ..according to the, Goagrega tioojtlist, the law ot God doe no M, Tnou sbalt be a lover oc mankind, but rather. Thou shall love thy neighbor a thyself. It grip is spe-: gializiag. The one man who is wiwun rejaeh looms up out of the fog of a gen- aralUad; humanity with hi uidivio.ua! eLas to Qniiertion. -: - Neighborly wilUngnea is one thing, Beighoorly activity another. The one await it opportunity, th other grasps and use sit. In Christ's tliougut it is opportunity which makes neigh borhood.. Th man who fe4l among thieves wa th neighbor of the priest ' aad Levit th moment hia need came vithin their reach. The people of Ineia war not within our active range of aeighoorbood until the way was open to serve tfcecn with the Gospel. When the fsmin earn the opportunity of neighborhood increased. If a man is. wt f reach we are not to was te ouc nrgi in worry over hi trials and ieprivatioo. But if Ood in any wise bring ham mmA a together thoagkke M ' m the nd of th earth, hia need ad , opportunity make him our seighbos'. "f.V Christ-present the prooiem in'iU simplest element, making it a primer joa of th true spirit of neignborli-, a. Practically, under our modern londMson of world communication we save a more eompUoated problem to. olve. Suppose th Good Samaritan arHli th wounded man upon hia breast ad come upon another victim of the rlolenoe of thieves. Suppose, he had sotn upon a battlefield where the wounded lay in heaps. Suppose all t he saoaey in hi purse would only have tufBced to bring him home and put bread in th mouth of hischildren till be could earn something more. We bav our responsibilities which we ca n oot wholly set aside for the most ur gent outaid oaik. We have to use our strength ejfed mean with care, and to make them go a far a possible. The needs of H the world are callir to us. We sometime fear to stop snd think, so bitter i the cry of suffer ing.' But God is in charge. We mrst do our part and leave the res to Him. Yet just because -the atory is so tunple, it seta the few essential ele avent of the neighborly spirit clearly before n. Th priest and Levit could not be good neighbors, for they wer selfishly. unloving. The Good Samari tan found a neighbor where he found a seed. If we seek an answer to th lawyer's question, we must find ii along tbeline. If we haTe the true love of , our brother; we shall find nc lack of opportanrtie-foT-puttingr it ir praetic. We shall-be tempted neither to dissipate our neighborly activities ir rentimental talk and feeling, nor tc think, with morbid self-reproach. that Ood ha put upon us the whole charge of Hi workt. The man. whom we can help will be our neighbor, given of God, and we shall do for him up to the meas ure and in th due proportion of our ability with a sawing and a quiet mind. Sanitary feod for Cows, ... If the cow bas a tendency to be con- stipated, increase the proportion of oil meal in her ration. If her bowels be- come tod loose, decrease the oil meal and j increase the bran. If the cows have a tendency to put on too much flesh, de- i crease the cornmeal or discard it alto gether. If she gets too thin, give her more cornmeal and less of the other foods. If straw and corn fodder are high,-limit the feed to eight or - ten pounds a day. If these rough -foods, are cheap, give 20 to 25 pounds a day to each cow and use what is uneaten" for bedding-. Poor Calves Are Expensive. If the calf is not a good one it would be better to knock it in the head and feed to the chickens, rather than raise it for the dairy. It does not cost five cents more to raise a good calf than it does a poor one, and the cow that will make 300 pounds of butter a yeas' has eaten no more up to the time she drops her calf than the one that will make only 150. There is not a fortune in the dairy business in any event, but if we raise calves from poor cows from which to make np our future herd, there is a loss. Rural. World. . ' The milk cow is very responsive to kind treatment. - - GET1ERAL DLACKGr.ltTHG, ' VAGOU and HACttTJAKEnS. Ona door Month Farmers Ho to jr. e. ETJENKX.EL, MILIJNKRY, MERcHAXDISE, DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, . PRODUCE BOUGBTaxd SOU). Or. aw iCMTDOsU SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY CORVALLIS, OREGON JUJIY 2, 3 & 4 SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY Shooting Tournament Baseball Horse Racing Foot Racing Dancing Band Music Sacred Concert And many other attractions. P. A. Kline, Grand Marshal E. R. Bryson, Geo. Brown Aides. J. B. Irvine, President of the Day. Hon. L T. Harris, of Eugene, Orator. Geo. L Paul, . Reader. sisPRO GRAM. SATURDAY, JCXY 2 9 a. m. Shooting tournament on Av eay's flat. Open to all. There will be some good purses offered and some of the crack shooters ef the Northwest will be there. 1 p. m.-'-Championship baseball game, free for all, between two professional teams for a parse of $15. 3 p.m. Horse racing on race tack 1 mile south of Corvallis. The best pro ducts of Oregon will lie entered and there will be racing in all classes, Buch as trot ting, running and pacing. These races; are open to all. $250 in purses. - There will be good purses np for each attrac tion and the committee on arrangements have donated $100 to be used in this way. SUNDAY, JULY 3 This day will be devoted to Patriotic . Union Services held at the court house . ' yard, and to be participated in by all the -churches of the city. The music will be -a special feature of the occasion, consist ing of Union Choir of all the churches ' in Corrallis. The court house square will bo fitted op for the orrasiiHi and, there will be ample seating capacity for alL The afternoon will be given op to grand sacred concert and abort pa trio- -tic speeches by prominent people. MONDAY, JULY 4 j Salute at sunrise. Plenty of good, stirring music by two brass bands. Bushels of fire-crackers. Thousands of flags and barrels of fun. The parade will tart at 10 a. m. sharp and will be one of the most brilliant affairs ever witness- COME AND JOIN 17ITH US. ed in Corvallis, consisting of the Corval lis Fire Department and all their appa- r ratus. Liberty Car with several hundred children, the Goddess of Liberty, Peace and Plenty; original floats representing T all the fraternal orders in the city, two ' braes bands, automobiles, cycles, horse- back riding, flower floats, mayor, city council and speakers in carriages, be sides many citizens. The parade ' will move promptly at 10 a. m. over the prin ' cipal streets, thence to the court house . square, where the usual address will be delivered. There will be a gorgeous bas- ket dinner at the court house yard at ; noon hour. 1 p. m. The racing will commence on Main streeet, consisting of the following events, open to all : Bicycle Race 1st prize flOj 2nd, $5. Hurdle Race 1st, $10; 2nd, $5. 440-yd Race 1st, $10; 2ndi $5. 50-yd Race 1st, $7 ; 2nd, $3. . 100-yd. Race let, $10; 2nd, $5. : Boys Foot Race, under 15 yrs. 1st,' $5; 2nd, $2.50. Eat Men's Race, 50 yds. 1st, $10. - Potato Race 1st, $2.50. ' - Hose Race, wet test $50. ' Other events on Main street : Tug of War $5. Climbing Greased Pole $5. Best Decorated Float $10. Best Looking Turnout, two horses $5. " Band Concert in stand on Main street. ; The day to close with grand ball at Opera House by the Young People's Or . chestra. FURNITURE Musical instruments Bedroom Suites Springs Mattresses Tables Chairs Bamboo Furniture - BLACKLEDGE Sewing Machines Sideboards Go-Carts Wall Paper Rockers . Shades Poles South Main St., Corvallis MUSC STORE JJLJUJM, e. e. I hereby extend to my old friends and customers a cordial invitation to call and see me in my new stand. A new and attractive line of fine wooleriB just received. Pressing and repairing neatly done. Prices to suit. Give us a call. R C. CRAVEN OPPOSITE THE POST OFFICE. FREE BUS FREE SAMPLE ROOM OCCIDENTAL HOTEL H. M. BRUNK, Prop. Leading hotel in Corvallis. Newly furnished with modern convenien ces. Rates $f, $1.25and $2 per day. 12 D Q U Q Q ALSEA CHEESE is known everywhere for purity, flavor . and richness. A trial will convince you . J. H. DORSEY- Alsea Dairy Co, HATHAWAY BROS., . OPPOSITE R. M. WADE S. , SUU'IH MAIM ST., V.UKVAI.I4S. Carriage Building Hacks for sah Horseshoeing . General Blacksmithing Benton County Cumber Company, MANUFACTURERS OF kinds of Fir Lumber 2 Dealers in Shingles, Mouldings, Doors and Windows. Special at-, tention given bills in car-load lots. PMloaatD : t : Oregon. NORMAL SCHOOL, EUGENE, OREGON This school will open June 27 and continue for a term of sir weeks to August 5. The obbjectofthe school is to furnish teachers and those . preparing to teach an opportunity to study methods and to raise their grade of scholarship. Mr. Dixon has devoted many years to the study of the needs of the grades. He has conducted three summer schools in Wisconsin and is well prepared to help teachers in just what they need in their daily work. Mr. Haroun is president of the Eugene Bus iness College. His work there during the past year has been highly successful. Two other men have been employed to help in the work. Write to F. S. Maroun, Eugene, or W. W. Dix on, Albany, Or,, for a circular. Board and tuition reasonable.