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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (April 11, 1905)
V 1 V' ClASStFltD ADVERTtStMEHTS tiFive lined, or lees, 25 cento for tjiree , msen." -tt v 50 cents per month. Each addition v Hne will be charged for at the rate ' 10 . "nts per line per month. E. H. TAYLoR. DENTIST. PAIN- leaa- extraction, b Zierolf - troildinf Opp. Poat Offi . t 'nrvailie. Oregan. WANTED HI .11 ' ASH PRICE PAID FOR ail kjt i Poultry also dressed Pork. 8rai.fc 4 Boulden, Corvallis, Oregon, oe&t to zbttk office. WASTE r nOO SUBSCRIBERS TO THE -Gazette ana Weekly Oregonian at $2.55 per year. TTTT5 HOME SAVINGS BANK CAN be obtained at the First National Bank PrfiTvalliB. Its use encourages habits of mwinmv and thrift. It is an orna ment to any household. Write for minted deportation. 20tf 1 AN ENERGETIC LADY CAN SE- nn.ro, the, ncencv for this city and sur rounding conntry for a bieh-grade ' line of Flavoring extracts, Perfumes Twlof. Art.inlm. Toilet Soars, etc., by ddrPHBinc the Pearsall Mfe' Co., Dee HTninaa To Write them for sample out- At Thcnr allnw a hi? commission, also 'olvAnremtnma. 19tf PHILOMATH AND LSEA STAGE Ktao leaves Alsea 6:31) a. m. ; arrives xt Philemath at 12 m; leaves Philo math 1 p. ni.,' arrives at Alsea 6:30 p. m. All persons wishing to go or return from Alsea and points west can be accomodated at any time. Fare to Alsea $1.00 Bound trip ame day $2.00. M. 8. Rickabd. , TtL nr. STONE. "REAL ESTATE AND TntolliwneB office After 42 years in "Rnn nnd T.inn counties. I feel fasti' fled in comiog before the bomenwekers f firftpon. and feel that I am com petent to locate all such as wish to buy homes here, with judgment and competent . For 27 years I was a hridaa hni'der in Benton. Lane. Polk, Yamhill and Linn counties. I have property in the above aamed counties tn uil. and am thoroughly conversant with the same. I ask no exclusive right of sa'e and unless property is Bold by me I ask no pay. Parties wishing to employ help or if looking for a position., will find it a conven ience to phone or call at the office. Kindness and courtesy extended to all, flffinA. Snntta Main street. Corvallis, Oregon. Office phone 378, res. phone 66. FOR SALE THE "VAPOR BATH CABINET" FOR sale at Graham & Wells, with printed instmrriona for administering the bath at home, to cure numerous ailments without use of medicine internally, Annlinations can be made at home without aid of experts. Try one, the price is small. TWO GOOD HORSES. K. Taylor. SEE WALTER . '2S-31 DENTISTS' 6TAGE LINE. AUCTIONEER P A KLINE, LIVE STOCK AUCTION eer, Corvallis, Or. Ofhce at Huston's hardware store. P. O. addrpss Box 11. Pays highest prices for all kinds of live stock. Twenty years' experience. Satisfaction guaranteed. LAND AGENTS. WHEN IT COMES TO BUYING lands, new-comers in this county will make no mistake in consulting James Lewis. Mr. Lewis baa been la isentou for 30 Tears and not only Knows the county but the entire valley. He has been actively engaged in celling and buying live stock and real estate all of this time and naturally - ma Judg ment is sound. He knows soils and values. His knowledge is worth tnoaey to anybody desiring correct and sincere information. ,, 25-77 POULTRY. FADS W CAW t HAIR DOGS AND AUTOMOBILES. Ilnd That Customer To- FacuH&r Mixture of Seek lMuea and Superstition. . Recklessness and old fashioned sup Afl Canines Ear One : They Will JBTrvr Swk 8eo&d Dos. track "A dog that baa once come in contact erstitlon in peculiar mixture are shown with an automobile never goes back form. in the different fads ana fancies warn- : second dose," said a man who lives out en follow la earing for the hair. The the Old York road, to the C&Uadel gasouue or "dry shampoo," of late the phia Record. '1 know, because I have fashionable cause of numerous explos- t i mean dogs not automobiles. Ions in Paris, is now frequently butee 'em limping around? Well, every vainly requested at the Chicago hair- tone na8 been hit, and now they give the dressers.'says the Tribune. ftutos a wide berth. You'd think that It is asked for by the woman who is jfter one or two had the experience in a hurry, by the one who doesn't want they'd put the others next, but. that's the wave taken out of her tresses, by wnere the meanness of .a dog's nature she who is afraid of taking cold, and by BOmeg m. They say that every doe haa the white haired woman who approves of the peculiar and beautiful blue white tone andsllky softness which every pro fessional hairdresser admits this pro cess gives to gray locks. In contrast to this there is a Chicago establishment especially devoted to clipping, singeing', and such processes, where .fashionable customers come in great numbers at the new of the moon. This is at the request of the proprietor, who has Imbued her customers with the belief that the oils and coloring matter flow upward at this time, whereas they would go in the opposite direction and devitalize the hair if It were clipped during any other time of the month. his day: I suppose they regard experi ence as the best teacher. It's hard to figure the thing out; but, at any rate, every one of my six dogs has been struck, with more or less serious results, and now their curiosity is satisfied. They are quite content to let the machines whiz by, and save their barks until the (Jf-"""- is rt " THE7 MAKING OF LENSES. STROKE AFFECTS NERVES. COLLEGE VIEW POULTRY FARM Barred Plymouth Rocks, Brown Leg horns. Eggs. $1.00 per 15, at yards. My Barred Rock hens are of the best laying strain on the coast. I have add ed cockerels from Park's world's best egg strain, Brown Leghorns are good as the best. S. H. More Corvallis. ' 19tf Indp Phone 555, THOROUGHBRED BARRED PLYM- outh Rock Cockerels for sale cheap at $2.00. J. I. Taylor, at C. & E. cross- BARRED ROCK EGGS STANDARD matings, $1.50 per 15; special exhibi tion matings, $3 per 15. If you want the bebt. call on or write W G. Emery, Barred Rock Specialist, Corvallis. 23tf NEW TIRES PUT ON BABY BUG- gies and go-carts, at Dilley & Arnold's. SOFT-SHELLED ENGLISH WAL- nntB outvield all other varieties. If von desire trees write for price and par ticulars to Bert Brooks, McMinnville, HOTELS. lightning Strikes Building Oocupled by Part of Begiment Attend- ant Results Interesting. It is' with great rarity, saya the New York Medical . Record, that one la enabled to observe the effects of light, ning on the animal organism on such a large scale as has been ' studied by Rippe, who reports that a building .'oc cupied by three squadrons of a Rus sian dragoon regiment was struck by lightning. There were'22 men in the building at the time." One man and a horse were killed, and all" the others were more or less severely Injured. Post mortem examination of the dead man and horse revealed as the most important abnormities: hyperaemia of the brain and its membranes, haemor rhage into both hemispheres, augmen tation of the subarachnoid fluid, and I congestion of the internal organs, es pecially the lungs, liver and kidneys. ! The symptoms in the survivors were the severest on the part of the nerv ous system. All the men-swere ren dered unconscious, and In some in stances there were convulsions, de lirium, arid other signs of concussion of the brain. .All these; symptoms dis appeared. ' . Glass la Made Principally in Euro pean Countries and Snipped in Small Slabs. Or., R. F. D. No. 2. SHORT ON PERUNA BUT LONG on Prunes. Italian Prunes. 50 lb. boxes, $1.50. Come quick. F. L. Miller. TWO REGISTERED OXFORD DOWN Rams and four half-breeds. Peter Whitaker. ' OCCIDENTAL HOTEL, CORVALLIS, Oregon. Good, clean cooking; clean beds, and rooms well ventilated ; nrst. class service : splendid facilities to ac commodate the public. Across the street from .First National Bank. i. 23tf MISTOOK CHINK FOR JAP. Si'; Vegetable Preparationfor As similating theFoodandReg ba ling the Stomachs andBowels of Chicago Sympathizer Meets Yellow Individual, Hakes Demons tra tion, and Is Rebuffed. - ! MISCELLANY. Gazette Bell phone No 341. CLEANED SPRING Oats for sale by W. vallis, Or. WHITE SIDE M. Crees, Cor- , , 3132 Gazette Independent phone No 433. ' -FOR SALE TWELVE YOUNG SHORT- horn milch cows, bred from inilk strains nn both sides: one short-horn bull : one Jersey built registered Poland China hogs, male and female. Address M. S. Woodcock. Corvallis, Ore.. 23tf Get your school books and school supplies at Graham & Wells. ; Last Hope Vanished. When leading physicians said that W. M. Smithart, of Pekin, la., had incurable EASTERN OREGON PROPERTY FOR consumption,; ,hi last hope vanished; sale. We have over 30,000 acres .ot lmnroved wheat farms for sale in Aillinin. Morrow-and Sherman on ties. Oreeoni Jfnces ot .tnese lanns 1S to 20 ner acre. Small cash pay ment aud easy terms on balance. We also have a first-class implement buai TiPHB for sale in a live Eastern uregou town on railroad. Address. Moore Bros.. 621 .Washington St. Portland, tlreson. ' ta-ai Attorn eys? W. E. YATES, THE LAWYER, . Both Phones. CORVALLIS, OR. E. R. BRYSON ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in PoBt OfUce Building, Corval- - as, Oregon. JOSEPH H. WILSON, : ATTORNE Y- at-Law; Notarv, Titles. Convevanc- . ing. Practicte in all State and Federal Courts. Office in Burnett Building. but Dr. King's New:' Discovery for Con sumption, Coughs and Colds, kept him ou ol his grave. . He says: xnis great specific completely cut ed me, and saved my life. Sice theu, I have used it for over io years, and. considered h a marvel ous thtoat and lung cute." Strictly scientific cure for coughs, -Sore', Throats or Colde: sure preventive of Pneumonia. Guaranteed. 50c - and 1.00 bottles at Allen & Woodward's drug Btore. Tria bottle free. Among the Chicagoans who are enthu siastically pro-Japanese in their view of the war In the east Is one man with a business office on Dearborn street, says the Chicago Inter Ocean. This man buys all the extra editions of the newspapers . and gets up in the morning as early as he hears the paper strike his door. ' He has even become such a war news read er that he imagines he can pronounce the names in the dispatches. One day Mr. - Japanese Sympathizer .started up Dearborn street. At the corner of Mon roe street he. came face to face with a yellow-skinned individual. ' 'The en thusiast grabbed the yellow man by the hand. "; ' . . "Put her there, old man!" yelled the enthusiast. "Hurrah for Japan! Hur rah for Klrooky ! We fixed 'em at Hay- ching and ' "Layonyoung; didn't "we? Keep it up; old mam" - The yellow man jerVed away his hand and b5Ved away. "Me no Yapanee.. Me .Chinee."; said the yellow man. The enthusiast straightened up a little, fled to a news stand . bought another paper, and ducked back to his office.. ; ' When a popular camera was first .under consideration,- it be came jaecessary ,to- secure a good lens at a popular price. This was possible only by the devising and making of special machinery and tools, and by buying the raw glass and manufacturing in large quan tities, writes W. B. Ashley, in Out ing. Lens glass, as all the world knows, or will after this story is published, is made principally in Germany, France ' and England, Brought to the manufacturer in small slabs, it is cut by revolving saws into the different sizes and then subjected to a series of grind ings and polishings that must eventually enable the tester to fit the lens over an absolute form of the shape and size required, so per Eectly that a deviation of one two millionth of an inch is instantly detected. The cement used for building up "lenses from single lenses is a preparation so delicate that it cannot alter this perfection. The making of lenses for photo graphic work has now become an immense industry, and in many cases the shutters are also made in conjunction. Highest skill is employed to perfect this first re quisite of the apparatus, but care ful as these makers are to proe their work, the lenses are also al ways thoroughly tested by the camera experts. This does not mean that they are subjected to anything like the different tests the amateur will apply later on, but finish, focus and mount, and the focal scale is tested by objects at the stated distances ; the finder is brought, into alignment, and then the camera needs only the final touching up of rubbed spots to be ready for the market. Promotes Digestion.Cheerfu ness andRest.Contains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. Not "Nauc otic . Pmph Sagf Aperfecl Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Fcverish ness arid Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. ', For Infants and Children. The Kind You Hdve Always Bought i- Bears Signature i: m m EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. I Bears the t yxr- 1 rrf AKiV a mb m a 'i .Mbllaf aut i fv iA In jj.tJf. Fdr Oyer urn 1 1111 11 lunio thb eamnum ohmuit. mi much inconvenience to your selves and to the detriment of vour business. I think I am warranted in saying that no other grand jury in. this country has been confronted with respon sibilities at once so onerous and so serieus as those which have confronted you. Whatever the result of your labors may be. you have done your duty, and in ib doiiag you have acted solely from a sense of the , obligations imposed upon you by yo.ur office. You report your labors ended, and I now dismiss vou from further service." In the above Judge Bellinger has given voice to popular senti ment as regards a duty well done by the jury. It has been an opinion pretty generally shared by all classes that while this jury had on hand a stupendous task the result would be satisfactorv. ILLINOIS STATE LINE STOLEN Lake Michigan End of Mark Disap pears and Special Survey Will Be Necessary. Men Past Sixty in Danger. TO NEW YORK. FOR REST. MUSIC. PIANO INSTRUCTION uIVEN IN ' any erade of advancement. Also pianos tuned and repaired in first-class I manner, inrt. pbone JNo. 405. Jr. A. White. PHYSICIANS B. A. OAT HEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon. ' .Rooms 14, Bank Build-1 , ing. Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m , 2 to I 4 p.m. Residence : cor. 5th and Ad- I ami Ste. . Telephone at office and tea-1 : tdence. v . - - UorvaJlia, Oregon. C. H. KEWTH, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, Office ana Residence, .on I iuain street, rnuomaui, ureon. , MISS EEETTA JONESA GRADUATB - none of Portland Sanitariom - six years experience. Private patients. Independent Dbone No. 834. Post of- "I find Thedford's Black-Dmnght a good medicine for liver disease. It cured my f 00 after he had spent iw wnn aocrors. - K is mi tne mea Icine I take." MRS. CAROLINES StABTIN, Parkorsburg, W. Va. If your liver does hot act reg '. ularly go to your druggist and : secure a package of Thedford's Black-Draught and take a dofee . tonight. . This great -family medicine frees the constipated h bowels, stirs op the torpid liver and causes a healthy secretion of bile. v Thedford's Black - Draught ; will cleanse the bowels of lm . purities and strengthen the kid : neys. , A torpid livep invites :. colds, biliousness, . chills and , fever and all manner of sick-. . ness and contagion. Weak kid- - v neys Tesult in Bright '8f disease which claims as many victims ; ; as consumption. A 25-cent - package of Thedford 's Black Draught should always be kept in the house. - "I used ''Thedford's Black Drangfat for liver and. kidney com plaints and fonnd nothing to excel -it" WILLIAM COFFMAN. Mar blehead, Sii. . . THEDFORD'S BLACK- Pittsburg Goes to Ootham and Ke tires . to Sky-Scraper tor U - ; Quiet. Isn't it strange that people should go to New York to rest up? Yon know .what Broadway and Fifth avenue are from Thirtieth to Thir ty-fifth street the densest, noisi est place in the world, writes a cor respondent of the . Pittsburg Dis patch. Yet I know a prominent Pittsburg business man . who, when he gets tired, slams down his The Lake MiJileaa end of the state! roll-top desk, seizes his case and ... . . .. . 'ill i.t . 1 - - - - , J. . -VT I. xojsjiz ii:e iraiueasu inxew ivia. he patronizes a well-known hotel much favored by Pittsburgers, asks for a room on the;1 twelfth floor, and if he gets it, or One on the floor either above or beloiv, he is happy. Twelve floors up he is re moved from the noise of the bus.y Our Clubbing; Lis. Suoscribers to the CORVALLIS GAZETTE can- obtain the following papers in combination sub scriptions with the GAZETTE, at the very loir prices stated, below; cash in adance always to ao con pany the order. Those wishing two or more publications named with tne UAZivras, will pleaso correspond with this office and we will qnote you the combination price. We can save you money on nearly all publications yon desire. Hoard's Dairyman, Fort Atkinson. Wis.. The best most up-to-date dairy journal in the world, W.t 1.WI Z.3U. Oregon Poultry Journal, Salem, Or.. M.. 50 cents; 1.80. The Desitrner, Kew!Tork. Standard Fashions. H- $1.00;. 2. 35. Pocket Atlas of the World. 381 )res, containing colored maps of all the states and territories in the United State, the province of the dominion of Canada, and of every country and civil division on the face of the globe. Also valuable statistical In formation about each state and county, giving tne population of every large city in. the wor esides other valuable information. A handy , reference work' for every person; with Corvallis G ittk one year, 2.00. . The abbreviations below are explained as follows: W, foi weekly; S W for semi-vet kly; T W, for tri weekly; M, for monthly; S M, for semi-nronthly. The first price represents the subscription rate of the publication alone, and the second the rate for the pubujeatiod offered in conjunction with the semi-weekly GAZKTTE. Oregon Agriculturist and Rural Northwest, Port land, Or., S.W., 50 cents; $1.80. Oregonian, Portland, Or., W., fL60; 2.667" . Rural Spirit, Portland, Or., Contains a live-stock market report, W., 12.00; 2.56. Pacific Christian Advocate Por and. Or.. W-, $2.00. 8.06. . Women's Home Companion, Springfield,' Ohio. $1.00; 2.15. - ' - 7 Lippincott'a Magazine, Ihilndelphia, Pa., C, J2.60; 8.25. Evv Month (Music, Song and IKnce), Hew York H.,$1.00; $2.15. : The Century Ma gazine, Kiw Tork.M., f4.C0; &0e- : More than half of mankind over sixty years ot age sutler trom kidney and . bladder disorders, usually enlarge-1 ment of prostate glands. This is both painful and dangerous, and Foley's Kid- I ney Cure should be taken at the first sijrn I of danger, as it correfcts irregularities and Has cured many old men ot tnis disease. Mr. : Rodney Burnett, R. ck Port. Mo , writes: "I suffered with enlarged pros tate gland and kidney , trouble tor years and after, taking two bottles of Foley's Kidney cure I leer better than I have l tor twenty years, although I am. now QI, years Old."., bold, by Graham & I 'Boston Cooking School Magarine, Bi-M.,50etft vVortham. - ) lw. - . . . V tung Ptople's Week; , C hkaco, 111., V., 60 een $1.90. . " ncinnati Inquirer. Cincinnati, W., f".0O; 2.06. -Tlie Fruit Growers' Journal, Cobden, IIL, IL, 6m cents; $1 75. . s ' . . - Houiestead, Des Moines, Iowa, A. thorough! stoc'x and iarm journal, W $1.00; 2.30. , The Kepublic, St, Louis, Mo S. W., $1.00; 206. ' The American Farmer, Indianapolis, Ind., Uve stocs, num ana poultry journal, at., ou cents; jLdo. line between Indiana and Illinois has . been lost or stolen,-: and the police of two states are hunting for it. , The mark for years lias been a stone, at One Hundred and Eighth street and Indianapolis avenue. On one side was cut the word "Indiana," and on the other ' "Illinois." The stone was four feet-: long and two feet high, one and o bnlf iAAt nrniectinir Above the prnnnrl Not only has it been removed, but I pavement below, bo far as qui the hole from which it was taken has tu.n filial an nna mh toll AT..tltr Tvnere u . stooa. x ne ponce oeiieve some householder, more' thrifty than honest, has imbedded the stone in -the foundation of a residence of used it as a base for a lawn flower pot. - r ' . , The next boundary stone Is five miles Inland, and a survey win. have to be made from that point before the place for a new Lake Michigan mark can be established. HA (APHOT laWUUi-U I Experts Watching America. : ' The Australian and German govern ments both have experts In Colorado this summer studying' the irrigation systems of the state. Colorado W ac knowledged to have the best Irrigation systems in the world, and the ideas of her experts are eagerly sought by the countries of the old world, which have to deal with arid-land problems, in their colonies and at home. itude is concerned - he mignt as well be in a country i village. In the morning the bright sunshine steals in at v his : window, - which overlooks the river and the docks below. At night the view is one of enchantment, watching the ves sels move to and fro -with their myriads of lights. And, although there is gayety below in a dozen corners of that self-same hotel, no sound of it ever penetrates to his quarters. "But this is only one of the many possibilities of a won derful town. : Biggest' Wedding Ceremony. . The biggest wedding occurred when Alexander the Great married Statira, daughter'of the conquered king of Per sia., By Alexander's orders 22,202 per sona ' were made .husbands and - wives in. the same ceremony The grooms were Greek toldlen and the brlOM Pr- i yoma. . . -r Jury Dismissed. Last : Saturday evening Judge Bellinger dismissed the federal grand jury,: which has labored so conscientiously '. , regarding; the land fraud cases, with the follow ing, words : "This grand jury , will be memorable in ,,the history.;, of this country. irJYotthav.e ;ser.ved through -lyoor Bbnic1! -scssiott'!r at Children especially are fond of dainties, and the housekeeper must look carefully to their food. ; t As good cake can be made only with good eggs, so also a cake that isv health ful as well as dainty must be raised with a pure and perfect baking powder. Royal Baking Powder is indispensable in the preparation of the highest quality of food. It imparts that peculiar light ness, sweetness and flavor noticed in the finest cake, biscuit, doughnuts, crusts, etc. and what is more important renders the food wholesome and agreeable to young: ana oia . : r ROYAL BAKlNtt POW0E CO, NEW YORK. r