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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1905)
mr . -CdHVAUTS LA. ETTE Published Tuesdays and Fridays by Gazette Publishing Company. Tbe sui.g.Miption pn. of the Gazette fur several yeM h; and remains. 42,, i5,.er.nt discount if paitl in itva . AS II IS. There always has been and perhaps always will be a class in the United States opposing tariff stability. , Like cases occur in very day life wherein the peo ple or a certain per cent.t at least, are never satisfied. They want a change of conditions no mat ter how agreeable in the main those conditions are to the masses. Just so with our tariff policy. Shortly after the election of President Roosevelt last fall tfyere was a cry, more or less weak, setup throughout the land for tans revision. This gradually . subsided. Then came the change of base on the part of mai-con-tents and reciprocity was made a slogan. The Vinton (Iowa) Eagle very neatly and aptly sums up the situation as follows: In 1896 the Republican party promised Tariff revision. It re vised the Tariff then in existence and broneht prosperity to the country. This prosperity still xists. It has made no promise of revision since. The party has put in weary months trying to make operative reciprocity. It lias failed because of too many "entangling alliances." In the 1896 National Republican Con vention the Republican party agreed to take up the silver ques tion and President McKinley ap pointed commissioners to an in ternational monetary convention, one of its purposes being to re establish silver as a circulating medium. That there might be no charge of trifling he appoint ed as the head of the commis sion from this county the late Senator Wolcott, ot Colorado. The commission met but its la bors were futile and Senator Wolcott acknowledged that it ,was impossible to induce the great commercial powers tore- establish silver. Since then sev eral nations, including Mexico, bave established the gold system. The Republican party will be guided by public sentiment' and by party sentiment, and when party sentiment and public senti ment demand there is no doubt a revision will take place. What will be done is well evidenced by tie President's action on the freight rate question. It met with a unanimous response ex cept from the interests .involved. It will be so with the Tariff. Even with the Democratic rank and file there is but little or no 3emand for Tariff Jrevision. It is satisfied, and last fall was so well satisfied that it had no hesi tancy in -voting for President Koosevelt even when their own managers held the red flag of re vision before their eyes. It did not scare them. They acknowl edged they were as well satisfied with the Tariff as were the Re publicans, The Republican party has made rip promises that it has not religiously carried out or hon estly attempted to. - .BENNINGTON DISASTER. Never before in times of peace ItaS such a frightful disaster be fallen the American navy as oc curred in the harbor of San Diego, California, last Friday morning at half -past ten o'clock. 'The boiler exploded with a roar that was deafening and terrify ingand sixty human beings are reported blown into Eternity. .Aside from the Maine sunk in Havana harbor, Cuba, our naval Ihistory is without a parallel. ' The gunboat wai lying quietly in the harbor awaiting sailing orders, while officers and crew were attending their various du ties, when, without warning the szz.--.zn cccur gan a scene the like of which is J seldom witnessed in this world. Nearly every man aboard was injured and sixty are reckoned to i have been killed. The boat was I towed into shallow water in or- der to prevent her sinking. ipe Bennington IS a sister ship the Yorktown and the Con- !cprd, having the same dimen speed and arma sions, tonage, ment. She ha a length of 230 feet; breadth 36 feet; mean draft, 14 feet; displacement, 1710 tons; speed, 16.5 knots, deliver ed from engines of 3436 indicated horse-power. She has a battery of six six. inch rifles and eight guns of smaller calibre. The Bennington takes rank among the efficient little cruisers design ed for special duty in shallow water. The vessel's keel was laid in?1888 and she cost $490,000. Her normal complement is 16 of ficers and 181 men. A Little Confusing. One not versed in law is often at his "wits end" to arrive at a logical conclusion as regards a legal tangle. Even lawyers seem to get mixed now and then. Two legal lights of equal standing may render opinions on a certain point that are directly opposite, but it is seldom that we find one man quoted on the same question who within a period of startling briefness gives out two opinions, one contradicting the other, on the same subject. Yet, such is true in Portland if one is to be lieve the Telegram. This paper, of Thursday, contains the fol lowing notice: "In the course of the trial of Messrs. Johnson and McGlinn, proprietors of the Tuxedo Saloon, Municipal Judge Cameron held todays that women of apparent good character could not be ex cluded from saloons, or rather that the proprietors of such places could not be found guilty of per mitting females to frequent those places unless it was shown that such women were disorderly or disreputable. The proprietors of the Tuxedo were fined $50 each for permitting disorderly women in their saloon and were held un der bonds of $200 each to appear before the grand jury to answer a charge of permitting minors in the place, as prohibited by the new law. Jane Connon is the minor referred to. She was found drunk there recently." Bear in mind that in the above paragraph Judge Cameron points out that proprietors of saloons cannot be fo'md guilty of any misdemeanor for allowing women to frequent their places "unless it was shown the women were disorderly or disreputable." On another page of this same paper we find the following article: "If Judge Cameron holds to the opinion he expressed in ponce court today in the case of Harry Bowen of the El Rey saloon, hereafter women of all classes will have to remain from saloons, or the proprietors will be subject to arrest. The cases before the court were those in which the police raided the saloons and captured about six women. "Judge William Reid appear ed for the defendants and declar ed the women were not of ques tionable character. The police swore they were, Judge Camer on read section 6 of the ordinance governing disorderly saloons and from that he thought a proprietor could be arrested if women of any kind visited his saloon The ordinance, aside from "specifying disorderly women, says immodest women. Judge Camel on Sdiil when a women entered a saloon and began to drink, and smoke cigarettes she becomes immodest. He Said he thought the section referred to any woman. "Judge Reid said it would be an outrage if a man could not go with his wife to a saloon and eat crawfish , and drink a glass of beer. He asked until tomorrow to submit s.n argutrent, which request was granted. "fudge Cameron said the police should have notified Bowen that he 1 was violating the law and then arrest him if he did not comply. Judge Cameron said he was not inclined to punish the women with a heavy fine." ' - Here we find Judge Cameron holding that a woman has no business in a saloon. tie is rc C proprietor of a saloon may be ar rested for permitting any kind of a woman to frequent his place, j So far as holding .that a woman who enters a saloon and begins drinking and smoking cigarettes is not a lady goes, there is noth ing new in this. ew ot us not possessed of legal lore would argue such a woman to be a lady. Now what are we to believe as a result of the two opinions found credited in the same paper to Judge Cameron? Possibly these articles were furnished by differ ent reporter?, one ot whom may have had his drinks mixed; may be both had lingered too long over the flowing bowl; further more the two articles mav h-iv been prnned by but one reporter and his condition h;-rn such that when he finihhed tit? first article he loigot about ir mid staned in on another "opinion.'' CASTOR I A Tor Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought . Bears the Signature of HSU Good Piano for Rent. . TermB three dollars per month, to the tight parties. Address H. W. Strong or inquire at Corvallis saw mill. 60 3 Cheap Sunday Rates Between Portland and Willamette Valley Points. Low round trip rates have been Dlaced n effect between irortland ana Willam ette Valley points, in either direction. Tickets will be sold SATURDAYS AND SUNDAYS, and limited to return on or before the following Monday. Bate to ob Fkom Cobvaiais, $3.00. Call on Southern Pacific Co's Agents for particulars. - Plumbing and Heating ! Cornice, Eoofing, Guttering, and all kinds of Sheet Metal Work. F.x A. Hencye In connection with J. H. SIMPSON'S 'HARDWARE STORE. - KIDNEY DISEASES 'are the leases. most fatal of all dis- rns EV'O KIDNEY CURE Is a i ULE.I u Guaranteed Remedy or money refunded ; Contains remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the Best for Kidney and bladder troubles. PRICE 50c and $1.00. FEMALE WEAKNESS 642 1-2 Congress St. Portland, Maine, Oct. 17, 1902. I consider Wine of Cardui superior to any doctor's medicine I ever used and I know whereof I speak. I suf fered for nine months with suppressed menstruation which completely pros trated me. Pains would shoot through . my back and sides and I would have blinding headaches. My limbs would swell up and I would feel so weak 1 could not stand up. I naturally felt discouraged for I seemed to be beyond the help of physicians, but Wine of Cardui came as a God-send to me. I felt a change for the better within a week. After nineteen days treatment I menstruatjd without suffering the agonies i usually did and soon became regular and without pain. Wine of Cardui is simply wonderful and I wish that all suffering women knew of its good qualities. Treasurer, Portland Economic League Periodical headaches tell of-female weakness. Wine of Cardui cures permanently nineteen out of every twenty cases of irregular . menses, bearing down pains or ., any female weakness. If you are discouraged and doctors , have failed, that is the best reason in the world you should try Wine of Cardui now. : Remember that headaches mean female weakness. Secure a SI .00 bottle of Wine of Cardui today. FOIEVSEOIJETTAR Huishing Price! The Gazette has made a special arrangement with the publishersof a number of the leading magazines and newspapers of the Unit ed States, whereby we are offered cut rates on these publications. Now we could charge you the full price for these andre serve the difference between the regular price' and their special price to us, as our commission, but as the Ga zette is a home paper for home people, it will be sat- a isfied by receiving you as a new subscriber, or, if J you are now a subscriber, then by receiving your renewal for a year in advance. This special rate may not last long, so take advantage of it NOW while the chancers yours. A Great Woman's Offer: Woman's Home Com panic n Frank Leslie's Monthly Modern Prlsctlla and Corvallis Gazette Alt five $3. 65 one year Interest the tlen: Weekly Cregonian San Francisco Examiner; Corvallis Gazette All three Diss year $3. 55 Offer: Cosmopolitan Magazine or Leslies, ' Housekeeper , or McCalPe, Corvallis Gazette Any three onei year SO - Address Ccrvzf.'fr'Qre J The Announces that the two first weeks of their Dissolution Sale eclipses all previous sales. For the next two weeks we have planned Still Greater Bargains in all Departments. Buy liberally Now. Our new Fall stock will arrive early in August. Come to us for your Harvesting Outfits long range for selection. toBo 'gjffdfi anywhere than right here. We clean and repair all sorts of watches thoroughly and quickly and guarantee all our work as well as our prices to be right. If your watch chain is beginning to show signs of wear, or if you'd like a new chain for any rea son, we are prepared to supply you with the best gold-filled one made, at a moderate price. We carry the Simmons make, the best known and most strongly guaranteed chains ever sold. E. W. S. PRATT, Jeweler and Optician. Open Day and Night. mm mm S3 a i One oilthe Finest Eauiped Hotels in the Valley 2 Both Phonos ft.' C. Hlosttmd.'Z . Chaa. Blakomlso. CORVALLIS STEAM LAUNDRY. Patronize Home Industry Outside Ordera Solicited. All Work Guaranteed. fywitmtmV41mm fUnVV) (HOME SEEKERS AMBLER & WATTERS, REAL ESTATE, LOANS? INSURANCE VIRGIL C. WAITERS, CORVALLIS HENRY AMBLER, PHILOMATH. Bring your JoblWorkJicuths Gazette Office. The Orsglaal. Foley A o.. Chicago, originated Hon ey and Tar a throat and lucg remedy, and on aeoount of the great merit and popnlaritv of Foley's Honey and Tar many imitations are offered for' tbe genn ine. Ask for Foley's Honey and Tar and refuse any t nbstitute offered as no otier preparation will give the same satisfac tion. It is mildly laxitive. It contains no opiates and ia safest for children and dplioftte persons. Sold by Graham & Worthams.'. Registration of Land Title. In thoTCircuit Court;of the State of Oregon for Benton ccuDty. - In the matter of the Application of S. S. . -Train and J. E. Whitney. Applicants and Plaintiffs, to register the title to the : North half; the Southeast quarter; and and the North half of the Southwest quar ter of Section 27; and the North" half; the - Southeast quarter; and the East half of the Southwest quarter of Section 33; ail in Township 10 South, Range 7 West of the Willamette Meridian iu Benton County, Oregon; vs.- J. A, Bottger, Sol. Kine and The Coast Land & Live Stock Company, a corporation, Defendants. To all whom it may concern, Take notice: That on the 27 dav of Juue. A. D.. 19o5, an an-. plication was filed by said S. S. Train and J. E Whitnev. in the Circuit Court of Benton County. Oregon, for initial registration ot tbe title of the land above described. Now, unless you appear on or before the 29th day of July, A. D.,"l!)o6, aud show cause why such ap plication shall not be granted, the same will be taken as confessed, and a decree will be entered ac cording to the prayer of the application, and you will oe torever Dairea trom Disputing me bbiuo. raeall i - , '' Percy R. Kelly, . VICTOR P. MOSES, Applicant's AttorrPy. Clerk. If your watch shows any irregu larity or gives other evidence that something is wrong with it, better have it examined by a competent watchmaker. You won't find any more skillful or more experienced Rooms Single op EnSuite BusZMeets aHTrams CORVALUS, OREGON. Ii von are looking for some real good Bargains In Stock, Grain, Fruit and Poultry Ranches, write for our special list, or come and see us. We will take pleasure in giving yon reliaDle informa tion; also showing yon over the county The Diamond Cure. The latest news from Paris, is, that they have discovered a diamond cure for consumption- If you fear consump tion or pneumonia, it will, however, be be best for you to take that great remedy mentioned by W. T. McGee, of Vanleer, Tenn. 'T had a cough for lourteen TPars. Nothing helped me until I took Dr. Kind's New Discovery for Consump tion, Coughs and Colds, which gave in stant relief. 1 and eflected a permanent cure." Unequalled quick cure for Throat and Lung Troubles. At Allen & Wood ward's drug store: price 50 cents and $1, guaranteed. Trial bottle free. Registration of Land Title. Ia the Circuit Court of the State of Oretron for Benton county. In the matter of the Application of E. M. Howell and T. C. Howell, . Applicants and Plaintiffs, to register the title to the east half of the east half of section 6; the north half, and the southeast quarter of section 15; the south half, and the south half of the northwest quarter of section 17; the north cast, quarter, and the east half of the north west quarter, and the northwest quarter ot the northwest quarter of section 21; all in township 11 south, range 7 west of the Wil lamette Meridian, in Benton county, Oregon, and containing 1317 acres, vs. C. M. Giddings, Defendant. , To all whom it may concern,' Take notice: That on the 14th day of June, A. D., 19t5, an ap plication was filed bv said E. M. Howell and T. C Howell, in the Circuit Court of Benton county. Ore--gon, for initial registration of the title of the land above described. - Now unless you appear on or before tho lPth day of July, A.D., 1905, and show cause why such application shall not be granted, the same will be . taken as confessed, and a decree will be entered ac cording to the prayer of the application, and you -will be forever barred from disputing the same. Witness my hand and the seal of said Circuit Court of Benton county, Oregon, hereunto affixed this 11th day of June, A. D., 1905. - - SEAL ' VICTOR P. MOSES, County Clerk and Ex-Omclo Clerk of the Circuit Ccurt o ILi '.iic of Oregon for Benton county.