Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (July 25, 1905)
CUSSlFttu AUYtKiMttm CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS : Fifteen worda or lees, 25 cts for three successive insertions, or 50 cts per month; ferall tip to and including ten additional words, yt cent a word for each insertion. For sill advertisements over 25 words, 1 ct per word for the first insertion, and J ct per word for each additional inser tion. "Nothine inserted for less than 25 cents. Lodge, society and chnrch notices, nthur than strictlv news matter, will be charged for. FOR SALE EIGHTY-THREE ACRES OF LAND .3 miles west of Blodgett. on the county marl 90 nrrpR in cultivation. More f-nnld he ant. Fair house 4 rooms, fair barn, other outbuildings, good orchard, some small fruit. One farm wagon worth sn.. 10 head of cows, one tnrrwcanr old hill I. 1 VPAtUdZ Steer, calves, 40 head of sheep, 6 head of hogs, 15 tons of good oat hay, 1 acre of potatoes, tools on tne place, a Dargaiu nt l son. r. D. Pitman. Blodgett, Or 61-9 TWO HOUSES AND 4 LOTS ON THIRD ntrppt- Tnnnirn of Mrs. Wm. Crees. Corvallis. Oreeon. M.-2 SPAN OF DRAFT HORSES, WEIGHT 3fnO. in rnod condition, and true pul lers. Inquire of L. R. Ray, Philomath, Or. 5361 FOR SALE 400 CORDS MAPLE AND sh wood. 3 and S3.R0 per cord, de livered latter part of August. Leaye orders at Abbott's feed barn. Norwood Tradine Co.. Bruce, Or. 42-68 CORD WOOD FOR SALF. CALL TJP No 1 phone, P. A. Kline lire. P. A. KXine. 42t.f, CAMERAS. KODAKS, KODAK SUP- plies, a good dark room in the store, at Graham & Weils. PAINTS. OILS. VARNISHES, GLASS Brushes, fu.l stock of all painters' Sup plies, at Graham & Wei's. 4UtL NEW TIRES PUT ON BABY BUG gies and go-carts, at Diiley& Arnold's ALL LATE POPULAR SHEET MU- sic, Guitars, Mandolins, Violins, Ac eordeons. Harmonicas, Musical Goods coirect Pricpe. Call and see them at ' Graham & Wells, Corvallis, Or. 40tf ATTORNEYS WANTED WAiSTE O 500 SUBSCRIBERS TO THE Gazette and Weekly ; Oregonian at $2.55 per year ' DENTISTS E. H. TAYLuR, less extraction. Opp. Post Offi -e, DENTIST. PAIN Ia Zierolf building UorvalU6.?Oregon. PHYSICIANS DE ETTE JONES a specialty. 57tf Trained nurse; massage Phone 334. A O A.THF, Y. M. l)..fnI81WAJ!i and Surgeon. Rooms 14, Bank jjnua ing. Office Hours: 10 to 12 a. m , 2 to t p. m. Residence: cor. 5th and Ad- urns Sta. Telephone at office and res idence. Corvallis. Oregen. . H. NEWTH, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, Office an i Residence, on Main street, Philomath, Oregon. R. D. BURGESS. M. D. Office over Blackledge Furniture Store, Office hours : 10 to 12 and 3 to 5. (BANKING. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Corvallis, Oregon, does a general, con servative banking business. Ic guarded safely its customers' banking business through the panics of the last two decades, which merits proper consider ation. It affords banking privileges at home and abroad, first-class, not ex celled bv anv institution in the United States. The members of the Board of Directors were born and raised in Ben ton County, except one, and that mem ber has resided in the county forty-six vears. The business history ot eacn is as an open book before the people of the county. Loans to customers solicit ed, properly secured. 4Qtf J. F. YATES, ATTORNE Y-AT-LAW. Office First National Bank Buildine. Only set of abstracts'in Benton County W. E. Yates. Bert Yater YATES &SYATES,; ;Law, Abstracting and Insurance. Both Phones. Corvallis, Oregon. ELASTIC PLASl I NO SAND. I HOLBEIN AND TITIAN. To the Former Genius the World Was a Toilsome Pilgrimage, to the " Other a Pageant. Fire Proof Water Proof i i FALL OFF. CRACK CRUMBLE E. R. BRYSON ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in Post Office Building, Corval iis, Oregon. . JOSEPH H. WILSON, ATTORNEY-at-Law. Notary, Titles, Conveyanc ing. Practice in all State and Federal Courts. Office in Burnett Building. Administrator's Sale perty. MEDICAL PURE FRESH SDRUGS AND MEDI- cines, some bought diwt from the fac tory; Perfumery, Ruiner uoods, Cotcbs, Brushes, Stationery, Books, School Supplies. Druggists' Sundries, everything found in a first-cites drug store, at Graham & Wells, Corvallis, Oregon. 40tf AUCTIONEER P A KLINE, LIVE STOCK AUCTION- eer, Corvallis, Or. P, A. Klin Linp, Phone No 1. P. o. audrtsa. Box 11 Pays highest prices for all kinds of live stock. Twenty years' experience. Satisfaction guaranteed. In the mitter of the Estate of Y William Kxiens, Deceased. J Notice is hereby snven that under and pursuant to an order of sale made hy the Count Court of the State of Oregon for Bentoit County on the 3rd day f July, 1905, m tne aoove-entitiea matter, tne un dersigned administrator of saiti estate of William Kxiens, deceased, will fiom and after Friday, the 4th day of August, 1905, proceed to sell at private sale to tne nignest omaenor casn in nana.suoject to confirmation by said Court, all the following de scribed real oro&ertv. towit: The north half of the tract of land described as follows: Beeinmnsr at the SS corner of D. h. C. of C. P. Blair, CI No 57, Sees 25, 26, 35 and 36, T 12 S, R 6 W Will Mer, thence run N 43 chains to the Din corner ot saia tiiene w aong jn oounuary line of said CI 18:60 chains, thence S 43 chains to southern boundary of said claim, thence E 18.60 ehains to place ot begthmtng", containing- 40 acres, in Benton county, Oregon. Said sale is made for the purpose of paying claims against said estate, and the charges and expenses of administration. Dated th s July 7. 1003. W. E. YATES, Administrator of Estate of William. Kriens, Decd. WOODSAWING. NEW GASOLINE WOODSAW ALL orders given prompt attention; short notice orders solicited, ijrooa worit. as cheaD as anvbodv. W. R. Hassell, Ind. phone 835. 44tf. LAND AGENTS. WHEN IT COMES TO BUYING lands, new-comers in this countv will make ne mistake in consulting James Lewis. Mr. Lewis has been in Benton for 30 vears and not only Knows the county but the entire valley. He has been actively engaged in selling and buying live stock and real estate all ot this time and naturally his lUds- ment is sound. He knows soils and values. His knowledge is worth money to anybody desiring correct and sincere inform ation . zo-7 1 STAGE LINE. PHILOMATH AND ALSEA STAGE Stage leaves Alsea 6:30 a. m.; arrives t . Philemath at 12 m: leaves Philo math 1 p. m., arrives at Alsea 6 :30 p. m. All persons wishing to go or return from Alsea and points west cam be accomodated at any time. Fare to Alea$1.00 Bound trip same day $2.00. U. B. KICKAXS, roiEYsmDifnxouE Oust the Thing for Hop-Drl- . Writa fas' Cstalfflniie. Pacific Pulp Plaster Co. PHONE MAIN 2362. 517-521, Chamber of Commerce, PORTLAND, OREGON. The genius of Holbein blossorocvl early, says St. Nicholas. In 131.". when he was 18 years oid, li moved from Augsburg, where lie. was born, to Basel, the center of learning, whose boast was flia: every house in it contained r.t least one learned man. In 1520 ho wa: admitted to citizenship at Br.so and to membership in the paint ers' guild, good proor, as he was only 23, of his unusual ability. But the times were lean ones for the painter. Holbein found hiin self in need of money, and accord ingly set out for Lou-Jon with a letter of introduction to Sir Thorn. as More, the king's chancellor. "Master Haunce," as the Eng lish called him, arrived in England toward the close of 1526. During this first visit to England he pain f ed portraits of many of the lead ing men of the day. But two years later, in consequence of an out break of the plague, he returned to Easel, only to be driven back to England in 1531 by poverty and the death of his old friends. . In 1537 Holbein came to the no: ties of Henry VIII., and was estab lished as court painter, a position which he held until his death. This? snams to have occurred dari:ir an l;er visitation of the plar-e in 1543 ; for at this date knowledge ol ,?e great artist ceases. When lie died or where he was buried is not I;:iown. What a contrast between his Tife and Titian's! One the favor and the other the sport of for For though the gri vhiess of 'nth was recognized by the men of their time, Titian lived a life of "''Tnptuous ease in the: beautiful :;r?oundings of Venice, while Hol bein, often straitened for money. nrver wealthy, experienced the ri;:or of poverty; forced by need r.-iH circumstances to become an a: sen in a strange land, dying un iWieed and nnhonored. The world to Titian was a pas-pant, to Holbein, a scene of toil and pilgrimage. MAY PUT BAN ON QUEUE. Chinese Government Said to Be Con sidering the Abolishment of Old Style Appendage. Some time ago it was announced that the members of a Chinese revolutionary reform movement had decided to abandon the cus-1 torn of wearing the queue, and that hundreds of the Chinese in New York and California colonies were cutting that hirsute append age. The Chronicle expressed its incredulity of the revolutionary source of the reform at the time the announcement was made on the ground that the cutting of the queue would be a distinguishing mark of the disloyalty to, the im perial dynasy of the Chinese who submitted to it, and be an absolute bar to his return to his own coun try. According to the local Chinese papers, the inspiration favoring queue cutting comes from an im perial and not from a revolution ary source. These papers repre sent that a mandate directing the cutting of the queue is being seri ously considered by the Chinese government, and its issuance at an early date is anticipated. It is expected that within the next six months the custom of wearing queues will disappear entirely in the local colony. If the Chinese government is contemplating the issuance of such a reformatory order it has doubtless been influenced in its course largely by the example set by Japan, which, before its adop uuji oi western civilization, was a queue-wearing nation. Whether the wearing of the queue by the Chinese grew out of a condition of servility or possesses a special re ligious significance, its abolition will mark the abandonment of one of China's oldest and most ner sistently cherished traditions. But it will be accepted generally as the initial step of the Chinese government toward the modern ization of the nation. If the gov ernment favors the change there can be no doubt that the people will promptly comply with its edict. mm BIG FAMILIES OF ENGLISH. Horth of Britain Is Booseveltian Par adise as Far as Race Suicide Is -Concerned. R. M. WADE & C0.,:Aq5s., Corvallis. of Real Prc- Notlce For Publication. United States Land Office, Portland, Oregon. July 7, 1905. Notice is hereby given that in compliance with the provisions of the act of Congress of June 3, 1878. entitLed "An act for the sale of timber lands in the States of California, Oregon, Nevada and Washington Territory, ' as extenaea to all tne Public Laml States by act of August 4, 1892, EU6ENE BOGERT, of Honmouth. county of Polk, State of Oreeon. has this day filed in this office his sworn state ment No. 6554, lor tne purchase ot tne 01 s. w. t a w 01 s. B. 01 section no. is in lownsmp no, 13 South, Range No. 6 West, and will offer proof to show that the land sought is more valuable for its timber or stone than for agricultural purposes, and to establish his claim to said land before Regis, terund Keceiver at Portland. Oregon, on Tuesday, the 19th day of September. 1905. He names as witnesses: Charles H. Newman, Wil- lard Church, Philip H. Johnson, rnest ft. Allen, all of Mcnmoth, Oregon. Any and all persons claiming adversely the above- described lands are requested to file their claims in this ottlce on or before said 19th aay 01 September 1905. , - B3AL6ERNON &. DRESSER, Register. ASPHALT COMES FROM LAKE Venezuela Bodies of Water Are Source of Chief Supply of Great Com mercial Product. The north of England seems to be a fertile soil for large families, for in 1797 we read of a Cumber land njan and his wife, accom panied by 30 of their children, all attending the christening of the 31st child; and in earlier years another north countryman, Tl-om-1? Gi-eenhill, applie dto the then duke, of Xorf oik, earl marshal, f or an augmentation to his coat-of-arms on the singular ground that be was "the seventh sop and 29th chlid of one father and mother." In Conway churchyard there wus to be seen it can scarcely be there to-day a tombstone hear the following remarkable epi taph: "Here Iveth the bodv of Nicholas Hocker, of Conway, gen tleman, who was the 41st child of his father, William Hocker, by Alice his wife, and the father of 27 children. 1C37." z"-'s fr--.!7te czzz'.Z-:?' .2 as including all his descendants, that of Peter Smith, who flour ished in New Jersey in the seven teenth century, is entitled to a high place of honor, for at a recent annual gathering of Peter's pro geny no fewer than 7,000 met and dined together under the apple trees in the orchard attached to the ancestral homestead. In families it is not an unknown thing for one child to be old enough to have a sister or brother young enough to be his or her great-grandchild." Thus the eid-rr-- '-'"n ofTltomc FBr tty. of Dvr.m r:.;- ;!. h;id passed his 73d.birfh d - v when his you ntst brother q,-. -;;ud for the cradle. When Wiliisim Frost, of Gnlphay, near Kipon, died in 1780, his eldest child was n sturdy toy of b& summers, and his youngest was barely 16. and the. LndyPowerscourt of to d;ty is a half century older than her latest brother. Pneumonia follows La Qrlppa but never follows the use of FOLEY'S Honey and Tar It Hops the Cough and bealt the loaf PmeatffPatumBuIt ind Coaiasipttas. Although the asphalt lakes of Trinidad and Venezuela furnish over 90 per cent, of the asphalt used, small deposits are found ia the limestone of Val de Trivas, in Switzerland;" Seyssel, -on the Rhone; Cuba and America, de clares a writer in the New York Tribune. The largest South American asphalt lake consists of a dark brownish deposit of a -semifluid- and semi-solid substance sur rounded by banks from three to six feet high. In the center of th is lake is a continual ejection of hot fluid asphalt, accompanied by large bubbles of gas. The dark-skinned workmen ex cavate it in pieces weighing in the neighborhood of 25 pounds, sec tions 40 feet in area and about four feet deep being worked at one time. As quickly as freed from its surroundings it is placed in large tubs, resting upon small flat topped tramcars- operated upon a narrow gauge road. The entire surface is constantly mov ing, thus necessitating a continual relaying of the tracks. The freshly excavated asphalt is conveyed to the shore, where the tubs are lifted by hydraulic power to ah aerial tramway, by which it is conveyed to a large wharf sit uated on the Guanoco river, about five miles distant from the lake. Here it is weighed and dumped into the vessels which convev it to the foreign lands. Upon its arrival at a factory it is neatea until tne water js ex pelled and the earthy msrf ' cast to the bottom of the vats, and it is poured throug h a sieve into barrels, where it solidi fies. It is then ready for com merce. ' , Not oyal to Her. Mrs. Newbride Yes, I'm deter mined to leave him. He ias doubt ed my word Her Mother But surely yoa won't leave him simply because he doubted your word? "It's too hateful of him. He should know I'm always right, even if I'm wroni?." Philariolnhiu Public Ledger.. The Kind You Gave Always "Bought, and which has been in use for ovei i50 years, nas borne the signature of and has been made tinder his per- jy J7- , sonal supervision since its infancy. iUCA44Z Allow mm n ir. (hit 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 gorie, Drops and Soothing Syrups. . It is Pleasant. It . contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Karcotie 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 the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep The Children Panacea The Mother's Friend GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of S7 he KM You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 7T MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK CITY. ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE OF. MAILS. MAIL ARRIVES. 8:33 a. rtl. Mail arrives by stage for Portland and all points North and East, also for California and points on S.P. 10 a. m. From Monroe by stage. 11:15 a. m. From Philomath and points West on C. & E. 12 m. From Portland and all points on the West Side. 1:30 p. m. From Albany and all points North on the S. P. MAIL DEPARTS. 6 a. m. For Albany and points East on the C. & E., and for points North of Albany on the S. P. 10:30 a. m. For Albany and all points North and South on theS.P. 12:30 p. m. For West Side poipts, Portland, and points North and East, also for points West on the C. & E. 2 p. m. For Monroe, Or. 6:15 p. m. For Portland, Cali fornia, and points North, East and South. CorvaEfss Bates to Lewis and Clark Fair Over Southern Pacific Raiiroads. S $2.60 Individual Tickets. RATE One and one-third fare for the round trip. sale DATES . . Daily from May 29th to Oct. 15th, 1905. LIMIT Thirty ds. but not later than Oct. 31, 1905, Parties of Ten o'r'More. For parties of ten. or more from one point, (must travel together cn one ticket both -ways), party tickets will be sold as follows: KATE One fare for the round trip. SALE DATES.. Daily from May 29th to Oct. lEth, 1905. UKSiT Ten days. Organized Parties of 100 or IVBore. For organized parties of one hundred or more moving on one- day from one place, individual tickets will be sold as follows: RATE .... One fare for the round trip. r nr SALE DATES. .Daily fromMay 29th to Oct. 15th, 19C5 $2.60' LIMIT........ Ten Days. ( Stopovers. - No storjovers will be allowed on 'any of the above! tickets: they- must be used for continuous passage in each direction. For further information call on . J. E. FARMER, W. E. COM AN, Agent, Corvallis Gen'l Pas. Agt., Portland. Eclipsed. Helen Was your bitterest hour the time you discovered that your fiance was flirting with some one else? Eliser-No, it was when he dis covered that I'd been doing the same thing. Detroit Free Press. Did She Mean It? She The Swellingtons called on us last week, you know. He-rYes. , "Don't yoa think it is about time we Btould retaliate?" Tit-BItg. There is a quality in Royal Baking Powder which makes the food more digestible and wholesome. This peculiarity of Royal has been noted by physicians, and they accord ingly endorse and recom mend it. QYAi BAKING POWDER COu MEW YORK. BakM KMoqr m bummmf tuga