Ki LJt inse F 1 .-USSIFIKD ADVERTISEMENTS Vn words or lees, 25 eta : for three tve insertions, or 50 eta pe ; tor all up to and including ten nal worJs. cent a word for each .11 advertisements over 25 wordp, r .ord for the first insertion, and 14 ft ! er word for each additional inser tion Nothing inserted for less than 5 C6ntf. Loie, society and church notices, other than strictly news matter, will be Cbur-fed for. FOR SALE OAK GRUB WOOD. CHEAT AND vetch hay satisfaction guaranteed. 1. A. Logsdon, Phone 55 Mt. View Line. 75, FRKSH. CLEAN VETCH SEED, 2 cents per pound, sacked. Inquire J. E. Aldrich, Corvallis. R F. D. 3. 72-80 WUUUAWING. new gasoline: woodsaw all orders given prompt attention ; short notii e orders solicited. Good work, as -neap as anybody. W. R. Hanseix, Ind. phone 835. 44tf. ELASTIC PULP PLASTER. NO SAND. NO um. ALT, WOOD HANDLED BY THE undersigned is now in this city and has been placed in the hands of the City Transfer Company for sale. Norwood Trading Co. 6611 NEW TIRES PUT ON BABY BUG gies and go-carts, at Dilley& Arnold'?. Fire Proof W ater Proof WILL J NOT 1 FALL OFF i CRACK CRUMBLE Just the Thing for Hop-Driers. Write for Catalogue. Pacific Pulp Plaster Co. PHONE MAIN 2362,: 517-521, Chamber of Commerce, PORTLAND, OREGON. WILL POWER AN ESSENTIAL The Man Who Believes and Has Con fidence in Himself Is Ha Who Succeeds. ATTORNEYS . F. YATES, ATTORNE Y-AT-LA V. Office First National Bank Buildinp. Only set of abstracts in Bentoii County W. E. Yatee. . Bert Yatte, YATES & YATES, Law, Abstracting and Insurance. Both Phones. Corvallis. Oreyri), E. R. BRYSON ATTORNEY AT LAW Office in Post Office Building, Cor val- iis, Oregon. JOSEPH H. WILSON, ATTORNEY' at-Law. Notary. Titles. Convevarjc ins. Practice in all State and Federal Courts. Office in Burnett Building. AUCTIONEER P A KLINE, LIVE STOCK AUCTION eer, Corvallis, Or. P. A. Kline Linp, Phone No. 1. P. O. address, Box 11. Pays highest prices for all kinds ti livestock. Twenty years' expenencr. Satisfaction guaranteed. R. M. WADE CO., Agts., Corvallis. KIDNEY DISE ASES are the eases. most fatal of all dis- OLEY' KIDNEY CURE is a Guaranteed Remedy or moneir refunded. Contains remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the Best for Kidney and Bladder troubles. PRICE 50c and $1.00. Attacked By a Mob. and beaten, in a labor riot, unlit cover ed with so'es, a Chicago street car con ductor applied Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and was soon sound and well. I use it in my. famiiv," writes G. J. Welch, of Tekonsha, Mich., "and find it perfecr." Simply great for cuts and burnsu Only oc at Alien & Voodard's drugstore. LAND AGENTS. When it comes to buying lands, new-comers in this county will make n mistake in consulting James Lewis. Mr. Lewis has been in Benton for 30 Tears and not only Knows the county bni the entire valley. He has bpen actively eDgaged in selling and buying live stock and real estate all ol this time and naturally his judg - ment is sound. He knows soils and values. His knowledge is worth money toanybody desiring correct and sincere information. 25-77 Rewards Are Offered for a Method to Remove Bisk of Lead Poison ing Little Hope. WANTED WANTE 0 500 SUBSCRIBERS TO TH E GazettB and Weekly Oregonian at $2.55per year. DENTISTS TC. TIT TAYLOR. DENTIST. PAIN less extraction. In Zierolf building Opp. Post Office, Corvallis. Oregon. STAGE LINE. PHILOMATH AND ALSEA STAGE Stace 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 can be accomodated at anv time. Fare to Alsea $1.00 Round trip same day $2:00, . M.. IS. itlCKAKD. BANKING. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF - Corvallis. Oregon, MAKES LOANS on approved security and especially on wheat, oata, flour, wool, baled hay, chittim bark, and all other classes of produce, upon the re ceipt thereof stored in mills and public warehouses, or upon chattel mortgages and also upon other classes ot good se cuntv. DRAFTS BOUGHT AND SOLD upon the principal financial centers of the United States and foreign countries. thus transferring money to all parts of the civilized world. A CONSERVATIVE general business transacted in all lines of banking. PHYSICIANS! PERIL IN STONE SETTING. What would you tMink" of a young man, ambitious to become a lawyer, who should surround himself with a medical atmos phere and spend his time reading medical books? asks Orison Swett Marden, in Success. Do you think he would ever become a great lawyer by following such a course? No, he must put himself into a law atmosphere, where he can absorb it and be steeped in it until he is attuned to the legal note. He must be grafted into the legal -tree so that he can feel its sap cir culating through him. How long would it take a young man to become successful who puts himself into an atmosphere of failure and remains in it until he is soaked to saturation with the idea? How long would it take a man who depreciates himself, talks of failure, walks like a fail ure, and dresses like a failure who is always complaining of the insurmountable difficulties in his way, and whose every step is on the road to failure how long would it take him to arrive at the success goal? Would anyone be lieve in him or expect him to win? The majority of failures began to deteriorate by doubting or de predating themselves, or by los ing confidence in their own ability, The moment you harbor doubt and begin to lose faith in yourself, you capitulate to the enemy. Every time you acknowledge weakness, inefficiency, or lack of ability, you weaken your self-con fidence, and that is to undermine the very foundation of all achieve ment. - So long as you carry around a failure atmosphere, and radiate doubt and discouragement, you will be a failure. Turn about face, cut off all currents of fail ure thoughts, of discouraged thoughts. Boldly face your goal with a stout heart and a deter mined endeavor, and you will find that things will change for you; but you must see a new world be fore you can live in it. It is to what you see, to what you believe, to what you struggle incessantly to attain, that you will approximate. OUR HISTORY IS MASCULINE Hard and tXncolored Is the Chronicle of the Events Connected. 1 - with America. Our history is hard and mascu line; colored with few purple lights ;toolittle related to our ten derer sentiments and deeper pas sions. When older peoples have paused, as we did thenrthey Lave looked upon far different scenes, says William Garrott Brown, in the Atlantic. Fairer companies have stood about more state. I;,' figures of triumph or of trageuj than that America and the v. orid now gazed upon. The coninioi chamber, the gaunt, pale presi dent, the strong, bearded counsel ors at his bedside this was un like the scenes which European peoples have fixed in their mem ories. Charles I. and Mary Stuar; on their scaffolds, the barons ami the king at Eunnymede, Maria Theresa appealing to the noble s of Hungary to take up thci; swords for her child, Marie Anto! nette and Mirabeau, and many an otner pageant 01 human love ana sacrifice are treasured up by other peopie as we nave treasured up this crude, unlackeyed martyr dom, . Even the great personality of Lincoln, now potent in so many in dividual lives, intimate and fan iar of so many of our hidden moods, was not yet fully revealec to his fellows. It was the eman cipator only that had fallen, the leader and shepherd of men. Out ardly at least his experience was limited as theirs was. Dvino: i the midst of multitudes, master c armies and of navies, he was still of the frontier; as, indeed, all ca American life was still, in a senst'. only the frontier and western fringe of European life. True, Lincoln also leads us bad; to the princes whose peer he was. but we can pass from his deal! d with no irreverence, no ser.-x of shock or change, to look out, n the plain light of day, upon the whole wide field of work and strife d progress which was always irr his thought, and glimpse the alii tude and state of the republic when his summons passed, like an angelus, across the continent. 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. Oorvallia, Oregon. 0. H. KEWTH, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, Office and Residence, on Main street, Philomath, Oregon. Advices from Washington are to the effect that the government of the Netherlands has offered a prize of 6,000 florins, some 2,000 in the currency of this country, for complete solution of the prob lem involved in the setting and re setting of diamonds without in curring the danger of lead poison ing. It is to be feared that nobody will come forward to claim this reward. For years scientists on both sides of the water have been experimenting with a view to rem edying the defects of diamonds, eliminating their dangerous prop erties, but thus far their efforts have not been productive of the desired results. Many diamonds, particularly the larger stones, can be set without the metallic background which threatens the health of the gold and silver smiths, but in every instance they lose their brilliancy, and, at tached to the shirt bosoms of "dressy gentlemen" or the bod ices of portly dowagers and ma trons attract scarcely more at tention than window glass. Four and even six-karat white dia monds, shorn of a thin, filmy un der surface of lead or lead and tin composition, frequently become transparent and fail to refract the light. Unhooked and presented as pledges after banking hours these gems are appraised at from $2.45 to $3.60 a quart, which is but a tithe of their apparent value. The lead which enters into dia monds of "purest ray serene" not only imperils the lives of those who handle them for the market, out also stains the clothing of those who wear them. Some little time ago the French ' bureau of chemistry announced that it would give 50,000 francs to the person who would devise a process which would free diamonds from the taste peculiar to alum which many of them possess, but the de partment mentioned still has the money. - FIND TREASURE OF A KING Hoard of Gold, Ivory and Precious Stones Lies Hidden in. African Soil. R. D. BURGESS. M. D. Office over Blackledge Furniture Store, Office hours : glO to 12 and S to 5.1 Treasure hunting continues to occupy the attention of many peo pie in various parts of the world, A hoard of buried wealth not as well known as certain others is that supposed io have been se creted by Lobengula, king of the Matabele in Souli Africa, before he met his death at the hands of the British. This treasure is said to consist of gold, ivory and pre cious stones. It was brought into the limelight of public notice not long ago by the arrest of a Dutch man named John Jacobs. He ar rived at Bulawayo, told some thing of his plans, was put into what they call the "goal" and has since been deported. Lobengula succeeded his father as king of the Matabele in 1870 and boldly opposed European civ ilization. He made Bulawayo his capital. After the discovery of gold in his territory in 1872, Por tugal, the Transvaal and Great Britain strove to win the supreme control over Lobengula's king dom. In 1888 he signed a treaty with Great Britain, admitting her suzerainty. In 1893, provoked by the insolence of the British South Africa company, he attacked the English. He was terribly beaten His capital was taken and in his flight he himself was killed. John Jacobs, the treasure seek er, was a school-teacher. He claims to have been private secre tary to King Lobengula and that in this way he learned where' the treasure was hid. The Bulawayo authorities, however, discovered that he had a bad record. Hence his deportation. "Jacobs is an el derly man, bearing evidence of long exposure to wind and weather. The treasure is still to be found. LACE-BARK TREES ARE FEW But Half a Dozen of This Species Now Exist Reason for So - Naming. There are in all about half a dozen lace-bark trees in the world." called because the inner bail-. r iiNiiTnti'ilinTiTimii wi'iiiiiMini-'Miiinii'i HMiHiuniiiiiLi'iiii'iiii uiimniunni Vegetable Preparationfor As similating theFoodandBeg ida ting the Stomachs andBowels of Promotes Digeslion,Cheerfur nessandRest.Contains neither Opium,Moilune nor Mineral. KOX ltARC OTIC . Zapc of Old. LrSAMlTZ PITCHER flanJan Stti" jflx.Sauai SoAdUSotit- CttmJud jagar A perfect Remedy forConslipa Tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Fcverish ness and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. ID it For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the t Signature ym In Use Over Thirty Years I EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. . jl ' THB CENTAUR COMPANY. HEW YORK CITY. Business Changes. Cur' Old Age and Late Hours. A' statistician affirms that the 1 majority of people who attain old age have kept late hours. Eight out of ten who reach the age of 80 have never gone to bed till after, 12 at night. so yields a natural lace in a ready made sheet form, which -can L made up in serviceable articles oi apparel. Only four of these cu. I ous species ot trees are ci muc-n practical value. Tourist3 7l. have stopped at Hawaii or Sam fir. may recall the lace-bark clot Iiin of the natives clothing of a re .-, brown color when new, of 1 eor.. able stiength and of a fragra... odor, like freshly cured tobacco leaf. The native tapa cloth, as i; is called, is made from the bail-: of the brusonetia papirifera, bu; it is not usually included among the real lace-bark trees. In its natural state the real lace bark is of a delicate cream-white tint. It is probably a kind of fibrous pith. When the outer bark is removed it can be unfolded and unwound in one seamless piece, having a surface of a little more than a square yard. Washing and sun bleaching give it a dazzling white appearance. The fabric is airily light. It is used in the West Indies for mantSlas, cravats, col lars, cuffs, window curtains in a word, for every purpose that or dinary lace is used. In making up shawls, veils and the like it is cus tomary to piece two sheets of lace bark together.,. Delicate and ap parently weak as it is in single mesh, a bit of lace-bark, if rolled into a thin string, will all but re sist human strength to break it. ; Despite its practical use there is no essential demand for lace- l bark. It has been used oy the na tivesforhundreds of years and yet is comparatively little known to this day. A few specimens of lace bark articles exist in different countries of Europe. These were made hundreds of years ago, yet, although their age is considera ble, they are said to be in a good state of preservation. Nothing Left. A political reformer is a politi cian who has managed to get himself disliked by the machine. Chicago Daily News. A movement is on feet that will cause several plays on the local business checkerbcaid. It is authoritively stated that ar rangements have been perfected whereby Moses Bros, will soon move into other quarters. We understand that carpenters are to go to work at once at the task of repairing and making such improvements as Moses Bros, desire in tbe Fisher Brick. This firm will have the two large rooms lust south of the Bemoan grocery. When this move is made it is understood that C. A. Gerhard will move his stationary store into tne building vacated by Moses Bros. We are also in formed that Milton Morgan will move his business into a part of this building. These changes are expected to cccur within a month. Gazette Independent phone No 433. Cured of Bright's Disease. Geo. A. Sherman, Litbon Bed Mills, Lawrence Co N. Y., writes : ,-I hsd kid ney disease for mar y yecrs acd had been treated by physicians for twelve years; had taken a well known kidney medicine and olher remedies that were recom mended but got no relief until I began using Foley'B Kidney Cure. Tbe first ball bottle relieved me and four bottles have cured me ot this teirible disease. Before I began takina Foley's Kidney Cure I had to make water about every fifteen minutes, day aEd night, and pass ed a brick-dust substance, and some times a Elimy subetance. I believed I would have died if I had not taken Foley's Kidney Cure." Scld by Gre ham &Wortbam. RedttctioninRates. r The Frauklin Hop Bailer is the best, the cheapest, and for sale at our shop direct to you. You get the commission,-20 per cent, at our shop or 15 per cent. F. O. B. If you waut a Bailer write us for prices or come and see us 'franklin iron works co. 6g-77t CORVALLIS, OREGON. September 1, the roundtrip fareto Portland, account Expcsition.Jwill be re duced from $3.50 to $2.90 for a thirty day ticket but not good afterOctober 31st. This is a voluntary reduction made by the S. P. E. K. and wiliLbe appreciated by the public as the last sixjweeks of the Fair will be the best part and see the largest crowd. J. E. Farmer, agt., Corvallis. W. E. Coman, G. F. & P. fAgt , Port land. 72tf k great j Woman's Kerne Companion Frank Leslie's Msn'hiy Filcdsrn PrisciliaTand CcrvaHis Gazette AH five one year 65 ome Made Have your cake, muffins, and tea bis cuit home-made. They will be fresher cleaner, more tasty and wholesome. Royal Baking Powder helps the house wife to produce at home, quickly and eco nomically, fine and tasty cake, the raised hot-biscuit, puddings, the frosted layer cake, crisp cookies, crullers, crusts and muffins, with which the ready-made food found at the bake-shop or grocery does not compare. Royal is the greatest of bake-day helps. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO, NEW YORK.