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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1905)
CLASSIFIED ADVERTiSEMEMTS E live lines, or less, 25 ceuta for three Inter tana, or 50 cents per month. Each additional line will be charged for at the rate oi" 10 cents per line per month WANTED SOMEONE TO HAUL 160 CORDS OF wood. Anyone wanting the job, call on G. R. Farra. 34-37. HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID FOB all kinds of Poultry also dressed Pork Smith A Boulden, Corvallia, Oregon, next to 'iazitte office. WAiSTE ) 500 SUBSCRIBERS TO THE Gazette and Weekly Oregonian ai $2.55 per year. THE HOME SAVINGS BANK CAN h ohtnined at the First National Bank Corvallia. Its use encourages habits of economy and thrift. It is an orna inAnt til anv household. Write for nrinterl rlaanrirttion. 20tf "FT. M. RTONE. REAL ESTATE AND Tntfllimnce office After 42 years in Benton And Linn counties. I feel iusti fled in coming before the bome-saekers - of limron. and feel that I am com mtont In loratn all snub as wish to buy homes here, with judgment and oompeinn-f . ' For 27 years I was a . Wiriue hni'Hpr in Benton. Lane. Polk. Yamhill and Linn counties. I have property in the above named counties - tn qaII arwl am thnroutrblv conversant with the same. I ask no exclusive riant, of na'e and unless property is old hv me 1 ask do 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 ext3nded to all OflRoB. South Main street. Corvallis Oreiion. Office phone 378, res. phone 66. FOR SALE THE "VAPOR BATH CABINET" FOR sale at Graham & Wells, with printed instructions for administering the bath at home, to cure numerous ailments T . without, use of medicine internally. Applications can be made at , home without aid of experts. Try one, the . price is small. NEW TIRES PUT ON BABY BUG- gies and go-carts, at Dilley& Arnold's SOFT-SHELLED ENGLISH WAL- nuts outyield all .other varieties. If vou desiretrees write for price and par ticulars to Bert Brooks, McMinnville, Or., R. F.D. No. 2i SHORT ON PERUNA BUT LONG on Prunes. Italian Prunes. 50 lb. boxes, $ 1.50. Come quick. ' . F. L. Miller. FOR SALE TWELVE YOUNG SHORT horn milch cows, bred from milk strains on both sides ; one short-horn bull ; one Jersey bull ; registered Poland China hogs, male and female. Address M. S. Woodcock, Corvallis, Ore. 23tf MARBLE SHOPS, TO. STAIGER & F. VANHOOSEN. Third door north of Hotel Corvallis. , 32tf ATTORNEYS1 W. E. YATES, THE LAWYER, " ' -Both Phones.l ' CORVALLIS. OR. E. R. BRYSON ATTORNEY AT LAW ' Office in Post Office Building, .Corval lis, Oregon. . 1 ; JOSEPH H. WILSON, ATTORNEY at-Law. Notary, Titles, Conveyanc ing. Practice in all State and Federal Courts, Office in Burnett Building. MUSIC. PIANO INRTRUGTIOS IVES IS any erade of alvnruenient. Also pianos timed and repaired In Btst-clast . manner. . Ind. phonte No. 405-. F. A. White, . HOTELS. OCCIDENTAL HOTEL, CORVALLIS, -Oregon. Good, clean cooking; clean beds, and rooms well ventilated ; first, class service: splendid facilities to ac commodate the public. Across the street from First National Bank. 23tf REAL EST. MORTG. , I AM PREPARED TO BUY GOOD , purchase money mortgages on any class of real estate. H. E. Noble, Commercial Blk, Portland, Or. 34 PHYSICIANS F. A. OATHEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon. Rooms 14, Bank Build inc. Office Hours : 10 to 12 a. m , 2 to 4 d. m. Residence: cor. 5th and Ad' ma Ste. Telephone at office and res idence. Corvallis, Oregon. 0. H. KEWTH, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, Office and Residence, on Main street, Philomath, Oregon. 1WTSS TYEKTTA JONES. A GRADUATE nuree of Portland Sanitarium six Private patients. Independent phone No. 334. Post of KficB box 247. 12tf DENTISTS , d TAYLR, iesa extraction. Opp PoatOffi. DENTIST. P AIN la Zierotf building oTAGE LINE. PHILOMATH AND tLSEA STAGE S' ;e leaves Alsea 6:30 a. m ; arrives it Philemath at 12 m; leaves Philo dnath 1 p. nj., arrives at Alsea 6:30 p m. All persons wishing to go or return from Alsea and points west ca be accomodated at any time. Fare to ANea $1 0 Round trip amedav $2.00. MS. Rickard. AUCTIONEER P A KLINE, LIVE STOCK AUCTION- eer, Corvallis, Or, Office at Huston's hai-'l ware store. P. O. address 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-comera in this county will make ne mistake in consulting James Lewis. Mr. Lewis has been in Benton for 30 veare and not only Knows the county bm: the entire valley. He has been actively ennaged in telling and buying live stock and real estate all oi this time and naturally bis judg ment is sound. He knows soils and values. His knowledge is worth money to anybody desiring correct and sincere information. 25-77 POULTRY. rHOROUGHBRED BARRED PLYM onth Rock Cockerels for sale cheap at $2.00. J. I. Taylor, at C. & E. cross ing, i BARRED ROCK EGGS STANDARD matings, $1.50 per 15; special exhibi tion mating?, $3 per 15. If you want the bett, call on or write W G. Emery, Barred Rock Specialist, Corvallis. 23tf LOST. A PURSE BY FRANK WYATT, BE tween Philomath and John Wyatt gate. Finder please leave at this office. 33-34 MISCELLANY. Gazette 433. -Independent phone No Get your pchool liooks and school upplied at Graham & Welle. PRAISING FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR. Foley &. Co., Chicago, originated Honev and Tar as a throat and lung remedy; and on account of the great merit and popularity of . Foley's Honey and Tar many imitations are offered for the genuine. Ask lor Foieys Honey and Tar and refuse any substitute offered as no other preparation will give tae same satisfaction. It is mildly laxitive. It contains no opiates and is safest for child. ren and delicate persons. Sold by Graham Notice of Final Settlement. 4 Notice 18 hereby given that the undersigne.1, ad ministratrix of the estate of James M Wilkinson, deceased, h8 filed in the Comity Court of Benton County, State of Oregon, her Final Isocount as such administratrix, and that Monday, the 6th day of Jim, 1905, at the hour of two o'clock P. M. has been fixed l.y said Court a a time for hearing of object ons to said report and the settlement thereof. Dattd April 21, 1906. . . . Sarah A. Wilkinson, . Administratrix, of the Estate of James M. Wilkinson, deceased. 222 South Peoria St., ' : Chicago, Iia., Oct. 7, 1902. Eight months ago I was so ill . that I was compelled to lie or sit down nearly ail the time. ' My stomach was so weak and upset that I could keep nothing on it and I vomited frequently. I could not urinate without great pain and I coughed so much that my throat and lungs were raw and sore. The doctors pro- . nounced it Bright's disease and ' others said it was consumption. It mattered little to me what they called it and I had no de sire to live. A sister visited me from St. Louis and asked me if I had ever tried Wine of Cardui. I told her I Had not and she bought a bottle. I believe that " it saved my life. I believe many women could save much suffer ing if they but knew of its value. Don't you want freedom from pain? Take Wine of Cardui; and make on . -me effort to be well. Yi ; need to be a weak, helpu.." - .Jerer. You can nave a woman's health and do a woman's work in life. Why not secure a bottle of Wine of Cardui from your druggist today? lib Hall WATER NEAR. YET MANY DIE Countless Travelers Pariah in Bight . of Springs on Graat Bouth.- -west Deserts. Countless men and women have perished in the deserts of the southwest, for lack of rain. Yet had they known how to find ' it the : water was there, often so close that a shallow well would have brought it, says the author of "The Land of Little Rain." There were numberless liv ing things all about them, night traveling creatures, whose well worn trails would have led them .to it. It is the opinion of many wise and busy people that these little creatures of the desert pass .the ten-month interval between the end and the renewal of winter rains with no drink. Your true idler, however, with days and nights to spend beside the water trails, will not subscribe to such a theory. The trails begin far back in the scattering sands and hills and converge in a one-span-broad white, hard-trodden way in th gully of the spring; and why trails if there are no travelers in that direction? The land is scarred by these thin, far roadways of rabbits and what-not of furry-folk that run in them, venture to iook for some seldom-touched water-hole, and so long as the trails run with" your general direction, you can be sure you are right. But if they begin to cross your path at never so slight an angle, to converse toward a point to left or right of your ob jective, no matter wnat the map says or your memory tells you trust to the trails. Their makers know. - FOUR INCHES IN AN HOUR. Recent Downpour at Santiago de Cuba la Violent Storm Statistics from Other Points. The violence of tropical rain storms is proverbial ; jet never be fore has one been scientifically registered in which so much wa ter fell in so short a time as at San tiago de Cuba recently. An Eng lish engineer, who gauged the rainfall, found that it was at the re of, over four inches an hour and that between seven and ten o'clock in the evening more than a foot of water reached the ground. The storm covered nearly 300 square miles, and in places , was heavier than at Santiago. The (runninicr.m and the Platinillo riv ers each rose 33 feet. . The flow over the waterworks dam, three miles from Santiago.'showed that at least two and four-tenths cubic feet of water were coming from each acre of the " watershed each second. It is such sudden deluges as this which created some of the most aiiiTciH problems for Hie en gineers of the isthmian canal to solve, especially on the gulf side of the Niearaguan survey and in the Chagres valley. Among longer rains of greater severity one is re corded in the Khasi hills, in India, in which 30 inches of rain fell each day for , five successive days. Genba, Italy, has a record of 30 inches in 24 Tv -rid frih'""" of ,33 .z JG hours. HIS KIN NEED NO LICENSE. Soldier of Napoleonic Wars Ocrald Xn ' ter 'Any Trade Without Special Permit. 4 I The new licensing bill recalls the' fact that the right to sell alco holic liquors without a license was a privilege formerly granted to old soldiers and their children as the state's reward for their services. An act was passed in 1816 authorizing any officer, ma rine, mariner or soldier who had served in the Napoleonic wars to carry on any trade without let or customary license. The privilege was, also extended to their wives and children. Seven years ago a dealer in wine spirits and beer was prosecuted at the Mansion iouse for pursuing his business without a license. He pleaded that he was the son of a Peninsular vet eran, exempt under tnis old stat ute, and had carried on his unli censed business for 40 years with out official objection. - Baeial Illiteracy. s Illiteracy among negroes is about seven times as common as among whites, and .this ratio be tween the races has not altered materially in the last ten years. Illiteracy among the southern ne groes is more than four times that a... s soaibcrn vrLlLcs, ORIGIN OF THE MADSTONE. Fotjot 7ovr Popularly Believed to Exist in the Xyaterloua Substance. Where did the madstone come from? No one seems to know. It does not belong to the mineral kingdom, nor can it be assigned to a place in eeoloeical formations. Its composition is not definite and it may possibly be found upon any beach or in any gravel pit. and the supply is always equal to the demand, says the Chicago Chron icle. There are even now many of these precious ' talismans in this country, and f'the believers in their efficacy always know where the nearest is kept." One of them has- been the property of an Ohio negro and was placed after the death of the owner in the state li brary at Columbus. There it was recently applied to the wound caused by the bite of a supposedly rabid dog. The dog recovered and the woman to whom it was ap plied died ' of blood-poisoning, caused by the unclean contact. Such a stone was kept in the Virginia state penitentiary for years and was open to all comers for application to the bite of a mad dog or other allied wounds. One such (perhaps the same) was at a later date sold for f 39. Still more famous was that brought from Russia in 1887 by a physician of that country who set tled in Nevada. It had previously been, exploited in that country for at least a century and a half, a fact supported by documentary evidence. The document was writ ten in native Russian and as no body concerned could read it everybody implicitly believed what they were told of it. The owner offered the stone for sale for $1,000 and a joint stock com pany was formed for the purchase A number of shareholders ad vanced $1 each, and the balance was made up by a farmer who be same its Keeper wnen tne pur chase was completed. Its fame still flourishes and it is said that an offer of $3,000 has been refused for it. LARGE ENOUGH TO COUNT. Important Bearing of Little Things in the Affairs and Lives of Mankind. "The longer I live," observed the cashier of a bank downtown, re lates the New York Press, "the more I realize the importance of iittle things. Here is a case in point," he continued, referring to a letter he had just received. "A few weeks ago I. had two callers in my office, one an excitable, el derly man, a big depositor, and the ather the president of a manufac turing concern and the writer of this letter. This manufacture left and eoon afterward the escl tre ble man discovered that someone had taken his hat. He stormed about the place until one of the :lerks suggested that perhaps the manufacturer had taken it by mis rake. The excitable man demanded his address and started out to hunt him down and give him 'a piece of his mind.' "The other day I read a letter from the manr-farturing concern ind was astonished to see among the names of its officers that of my excitable caller as vice president. My curiosity was aroused and I made some inquiries." Now I learn that the excitable man was so. pleasantly received when he called for his hat that, his anger ooled at once. Then he got to talking about the manufacturer's business and the money he was making. A few days later he in vested heavily in the concern and vas elected its vice president. And all because of that little mistake about a hat." ; Japanese Maxims. Though thou should heap up a thousand pieces of gold they would not be bo precious as one day of study. ' Thy father and thy mother are like Heaven and earth ; thy teacher and thy lord are like the sun and- moon. Human ears are listening at the wall; speak no calumny, even in secret. , Human eyes look down from Heaven; commit no wrong, how ever hidden. ; ' From the evils sent by Heaven there is no deliverance; from the evils ' we bring upon ourselves there ii bo Mcape. Detroit Free Press. ' . '-" The Bind Ton Have Always in use for otei SO years, " Allow SI All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are but; Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children- Experience against Experiment What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing- Syrups. It is Pleasant. 16 contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind. Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation, and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates th Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Sears the The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. ma eaimun coaimanr. rr A Thousand Dollar's Worth of Good. "I have been afflicted with kidnev and bladder trouble for years, passing gravel or stones with excruciating pain," .says A. H. Thurns, a well known coal operator of Buffalo, O. "I got no relief from medi cine until I began taking'Foley's Kidney vure, men tne result was surpnsiug. A few doses started the brick-dust-like sub stance and now I have no pain across my kidneys and I feel like a new man. It has done me $1000 worth ef good." Foley's Kidney Cure will cure every form of kidney or bladder disease. Sold by Graham & Wortham. Citation. In the County Court oi the State of Oretron for the County of Bentoa In the matter of the estate " William Kriens, deceased! To Annie Carneeie and Carl Kriens. heirs at law of William Kriens. deceased. GREETING: IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON, yon are hereby cited and required to appeal in the County Court of the State of Oregon for the coun ty of Benton at the Court Room thereof at Cor vallis, Oregon, in the County of Benton on Tues day the 6th day of Jnne A. D. 1905, at 16 o'clock in the forenoon of said day then and there to show cause if any exist why au order of sale should not be made as prayed for in the petition of W. E. Yates administrator of .said estate of William Kriens, deceased, of the following described real property to-wit: 1 ne norm nait ot tne tract 01 iana aescriDea as follows: Beginning at the 8. E. earner of D. L. C. of CP. Blair. Claim No. 57. Sectious 2T, 26, 35 and 36 T. 12 8.K.6 West, Wl. Mer. uiencerun JNortti ennuis to tne K. i.. corner of said claim, thence West along N rth bound ary line of said claim 18 60 chaiuB, thence South 43.00 chains to Southern boundary of said claim, thence East 18.60 chains to placetof beginning, containing 40.00 acres. All 01 the above described property being in Bcrtcn, County, Oregon. You are further notified that this citation is served upon you and each of ynn by publica tion thereof in the "Corvallis Gazette" neujs ruiper for four weeks under and order made by he Hon. Virsil E. Walters, judge of the said court bearing date April 14th. lyt5. Witness, the Hon. Virgil E Walters, Judge of the County Court of lh State of Oregou U the County of Benton, with the seal of the said county affixed this 14th day of April, A. D. ,. Attest: Victor P. Moses, Clerk. 3.-42 Men Past Sixty In Danger. More than half of mankind over sixty years ot age sutler irom money and bladder disorders, U3ually enlarge ment ot prostate gianas. inis is oota I painful and dangerous, and Foley's Kid ney cure snouici ne tHKet? at tne nrst sign of thwifi , us it corr tls.irri gUartt'.e? has cured triariy' bld men 01 this disease. Mr. Rodney Burnett. ck I' it. Mo , writes: "I snffered with erlau 1 pros-. tate gland and kidney trouble lor year and after taking two" bottles of Folv's Kidney Cure I i' ei l triler lba;i 1 ..sv.- for twenty years, tign 1 s.m ;: 91 years old." hold, py Oranam & Wortham. g MeJtes Cler Bread With Royal Baking Powder there is no mixing with the hands, no sweat of the brow. Perfect cleanliness, greatest facility, sweet, clean, healthful food. Full instructions in the " Royal Baker and Pastry Cook" book' for making all kinds, of bread, biscuit and cake with Royal Baling Powder. Gratis to any address. , ftOYM. BAXINO POWDER CO., 108 WILLIAM ST, NEW YORK. 1 1 i i Bought, and which hag been, nas borne the sitmature f and has been made under his per sonal supervision since its infancy. no one to deceive von In thin. Signature murrav street, new vomt city. Our Clubbing Lis. Suoscribers to the CORVALLIS GAZETTE can. obtain the following) papers in combination sub scriptions with the GAZETTE, at the very low prices stated below; cash in adance always to ac company the order. Those wishing twe or more publications named with the GAZETTE, will please correspond with this Office and we will quote yon the combination price. We can save you money on nearly all publications vou desire Hoard's Dairyman, Fort Atkinson. Wis., The beBt most up-to-date dairy journal in the world, W.. I. 00; 2.30. Oregon Poultry Journal, Salem, Or., M 60 cents; 1.80. The Designer, NewrYork, Standard Fashions, JT. tL00; 2.35. , Pocket Atlas of the World, 381 pages, containing colored maps of all the states and territories in the. United States, 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 conoty, giving the population of every large city in the wor esides other valuable information. A bandy reference work for every person; with Corvallis G bits one year, 4.00. The abbreviations below are explained as follows:: W. foi weekly; S W for semi-weekly; 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 publication offered in conjunction with the semi-weekly GAZETTE. Oregon Agriculturist and Sural Northwest, PorW- 1 land, Or., S.W., 50 cents; 11.80. . Oregonian, Portland, Or., W., $1.60; 2.66. Kural Spirit, Portland, Or., Contains a live-stock; market report, W., 42.00; 2.55. Pacific Christian Advocate Par and. Or., W., (2.00. 3.05. Women's Home Companion, Springfield, Ohio, II. 00; 2.16. .. Lippincott's Magazine, Philadelphia, Fa., M., $2.60; 3.26. Evrv Month (Music, Song and Dance), New York M., 1.00; 2.15. The Century Magazine, New York.M., I4.C0; 8.0s Young People's Weekly, Chicago, 111., W 60 oen J1.90. C winiwti Inquirer, Cincinnati, W &C0; 2.05. tlx: Fruit Growers' Journal, Cobden . 111., X., 50 cents; 1 75. Homestead, Des Moines, Iowa, A thorough stock : and farm journal, W.. 1.00; 2.30. The Uepublic, St. Louis, Mo S. W., L.00; 2.06. The American Farmer. Indianapolis. Ind.. Live stock, farm and poultry journal, M., 50 cents; 1.06. Boston Cooking School Magazine, Bi-M., 60 cents; ; 1.90. Last Hope Vanished. When leading physicians said that W. M. Smithart, of PekiD, la., had incurable -confiumptioD, hit . last hope vanished; but Dr. King's New . Discovery for Con fumption. Coughs and Colds, kept him ix of bis grave. He ny: This great. j specific completely cuied me, d taved. j my life Si ce 'he- , I hnve ued- il for i over io yemi-, and co. i-ideiedita marvel ous iho.ti: nd luhg cu e." S'MCtly- Fcietific cu e for congh, 5oie Th-oats o; Cold; ue pri-vei-iive of Pi.eumonia Gu trjii: eed. 5vc d ji.oo bolt lei at Allen & Wootiwaidy drug note. Trl -i bo lie fee. irowcler