OLvHED AO V t K i tStM EN f S I I. HSIF1KD ADVERTISEMENTS: Fif ii words or lees, 25 eta for three racer M-ti-e insertions, or 50 cts per tnon" ; or all op to and including ten Bddi'i' i al wor Is, cent a word for each inser'io.. Fc il advertisements over 25 words, 1 ct j r vord for the first insertion, and ct i r word for each additional inser tion Nothing inserted for less than 25 centf- Lo'iir'-. society and church notices, othe f'ari strictly news matter, will -be Char ' 'r. FOR SALE - OAK GRUB WOOD. CHEAT AND ve'eh hay satisfaction guaranteed. T. A. Logsdon, Phone 55 Mt. "View Linp. 75tf ALT. WOOD HANDLED BY THE nnitersigned in now in this city and has ben ilaced in the hands of the Cifrv Trnnfer Company for sale. Norwood TrHdinirCo. "66tf NEW TIRES PUT ON BABY BUG-gii-s end go-carts, at Dilley & Arnold's. ATTORNEYS . F. YATES, ATTORNEY-ATLAAV. Orce First National Bank Bui'dins Only fet of abstracts in Bentoii County E. R. BRYSON ATTORNEY AT LAW Offfc in Post Office Building, Corval lis. Oregon. 70SK.PH H. WILSON. ATTORNEY-at-Law. Notary, Titles, Conveyanc ing Practice in all State and Federal Courts Office in Burnett Building. AUCTIONEER P A KLINE, LIVE STOCK AUCTION eer, Corvallis, Or. P. A. Kline Line, Phone No. 1. P. O. address, Box 11. Pays highest prices for all kinds cf live stock. Twenty years' experience. Satisfaction guaranteed! WANTED WAtfTE D 500 SUBSCRIBERS TO THE Gazettb and Weekly Oregonian at $2.55 per year. DENTISTS E. H. TAYLOR, DENTIST. PAIN less extraction. In Zierolf building Opp. Post Office, Corvallis, Oregon. oTAGE LINE. PHILOMATH AND ALSEA STAGE Stage leaves Alsea 6 :30 a. m. ; arrives t Pbilemath 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 any time. Fare to ,' Alsea $1.00 Round trip same day $2 00. M. S. Rickakd, BANKING. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Corvallis, Oregon, MAKES LOANS on. approved security and especially on wheat, oats, flonr. wool, baled hay, e.hit.tirr; bark, and all other classes of produce, npon the re ceipt thereof stored in mills and public warehouses, or upon chattel mortgages and also upon other classes of good se curity. DRAFTS BOUGHT AND SOLD npon 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 ail lines of banking. PHYSICIANS! B. A. OATHEY, 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. Corvallis, Oregon. C. H. KEWTH, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, Office an A 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. MISS DeETTE JONES. Trained nurse Ind. Phone 234. 82-aO STALLION 3053 FANION 34473 WILL BE AT Monroe Ohilders' place new. 12 miles south ot Coryallis; anybodv wishing to breed mares this fall will find the horse there. 80-8t Presidential Election Will Make No Difference. : No matter what candidate is elected, Foley 's Honey and Tar will remain the people's; favorite -remedy for coughs, colds, and incipient consumption. It cures colds quickly and prevents pneu monia. A.J. Nusbaum, Batesville, Ind. writes; "I suffered for three months with a severe cold. . A druggist prepared me some , medicine . and : a physician nre- scribed for me, yet I did not improve. I then tried Foley's Honey' and; - far and eight doses cored me." Graham & A HATTER OF HEALTH Absolutely Pure HAS HO SUBSTITUTE A Cream of Tartar Powder, free from alum or phos phatlc acid 'ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. Full of Tragic Meaning. are these lines from J. H. Simmons, of Casey, la. Think of what might have resulted from his terrible cough if he had not taken the medicine about which he writes: ' I had a fearful cough that dis turbed my night's rest. I tried every thine, but nothing would relieve it, un til I too? Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption. Coughs and Colds, which completely rued me " Instantly re lieves and permanently cures all throat and lung diseases; nrevents giip and pneumonia. At Allen & Woodward, druggist; guaranteed; 50c and $1. Trial bottle free. are the most fatal of all dis eases. EftlEV KIDNEY CURE Is a l ULE.I d guaranteed Remedy or money refunded. Contains remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the oest for Kidney and Bladder troubles. PRICE 50c and $1.00. The Gazette for Job Work. ELASTIC PULP NO SAND. NO LIME.! Fire Proof Water Proof WILL FALL OFFi MAT 1 CRACK lfUI I CRUMBLE Just the Thing for Hop-Driers. Write for Catalogue. Pacific Pulp Plaster Co. PHONE MAIN 2362, 517-521, Chamber of Commerce, PORTLAND, OREGON. R. M. WADE & CO., Agts., Corvallis. 5600 TELEGRAPHERS NEEDED Annually, to nil the new positions created by Railroad and Telegraph Companies. We want TUUN6 MEN and LADIES of good Habits, to LEARN TELEGRAPHY And Railroad Accounting. We furnish 75 r-er cent, of the Operato. id Station Agents In America. Our six schooib , ;r the largest exclusive Telegraph Schools IN Thl WORLD. Established 20 years and endorsed bv all leading Railway Officials. . . .. We execute a $250 Bond to every, student' to furnish him or her a position paying from 840 to 860 a month in states east of the Roeky Moun tains, or from $75 to 100 a month in states west Of the Rockies, iramsdlattty iipea frad nation. -' ; Students can enter at any time. No vaca tions. :. For full particulars regarding any of our Schools write direct to our executive office at Cincinnati, O. Catalogue f roe. The Morse School of Telegraphy, ; 6fnciririti, Ohio. . buffalo N, Y KIDNEY DISEASES i TtttrkMi -Tx San Franolsooi Call COUNTRY CORRESPONDENCE. OAK OBOVE. Tom Hodges left for Portland, Friday, to see the closing of the big Fair. Mrs. Cora Gilsou, ef Cottage Grove, is spending a few days with relatives. Mis. Minnie Schoel, of Halsey, is spending a few days with ber parents, Mr. and Mrs G. W. Goff. Ed Wiles and family are moving to Albany to reside. . Mr. Armstrong, of Albany, has just finished a new barn on his property here. Strawberries in October is not a com mon thing, even in Oregon, yet Lewis Wentz has them on his table quite often, of late, fresh from the vines. John Wallace has fallen heir to some real property in Illinois, which he is dis posing of as soon as the estate can be set tled up. Pete Karsten had the misfortune to get one of his valuable horses badly crippled, this week, by getting entangled in a barbed wire fence.. Ralph JKohizer spent the week at Port land seeing the v inding up of the Lewis and Clark Exposition. Mrs. Mayberry, of Syracrus, Linn county, was here Thursday visiting old friends and neighbors. Qw. L. Cauthorn, of . Wells, has been confined to his room for sometime with a severe attack of rheumatism. Sam Krochel is attending school in Albany this winter. The late rains have made ploughing gaod but the roads! Well they are too bid to speak of. Potato digging is now on hand, and the farmers are hurrying the work in fear the ground may become too wet for digging. me Oak Grove Matrimonial Bnreau under the new regime is not doing bad two Weddings Consummated Hnrt turn nearing the same end is a very good showing for six months, when you take into consideration that this is not leap year and the crops were bad. Kev. F. W. Launer filled the Oak Grove pulpit Sunday. BEAVER CBEEK. Columbus Weed, of Philomath, came out one day last week for a stay on his homestead. ' Wm. Park and Geo. Mercer have each bought a new double disc plow which woiks to perfection. Sherman Gleason spent a few days at the Exposition last week. Messrs. Keeley and Harkin are at present baling hops for Clarence Ireland. The public school Is progressing nicely with Prof. G. A. Peterson as teacher. - J. S. Ireland and family have recently returned from a few days visit at the Fair! . O. L. and G. C. Winters were Corval lis visitors last Saturday. Mr. Duffey has been again laid with an injured hand. up Mrs. Mercer has been quite ill the past few weeks, but is reported to be slowly improving, A Week of Hard Work. Coach Steckle has been putting his 'men through some hard train ing during the past week. The first and second teams appear on the field every evening and after a short signal practice, line up against each other for a half hour'-sstrenuous scrimmage work. It is clear to be seen that the team will not be caught napping for they are not the kind of lads to rely upon the showing made during the-two previous garqes. The Agrics presented a good line at the Chemawa. game. They showed up better and played a speedier game with Whitworth but tomorrow the big fellows will go on the field better prepared than at any previous time, to give a speedy, scientific exhibition of the popular college game. Dr. Steckle is developing a team that for defensive playing is a wonder. The second team, that during the first few weeks prac tice experienced little difficulty in breaking their line, are now unable to do business with them. In. company with such marked improvement in defensive work, the team has made great pro gress in the art of advancing the pigskin and those who attend the game tomorrow may expect to see the Oregon Agricultural College represented by the strongest and fastest football team that has ever played on the local gridiron For Sale. . Choice oat, Vetch and cheat seed, to be had at reasonable prices either at the Corvallis or Benton Flouring Mills. A. W. FISCHER. Man. 80tf ,! take The Gazette for all the local news. Rev. M. S. Bush arrived home Monday evening from La Grande, Eastern Oregon, where he attended the Presbyterian synod of Oregon. . Largest line of malting in ( ooun- A Communication. Corvallis, 0 :t. 18: What Dr. Steckle expects to be one of the hottest uatnes on OAC schedule is the match with Pull man here on Saturday. The Pullman men claim that on a hard Held of the kind to which they have been accustom ed, the score of Wednesday with Willam ette would have been reversed. What the latter game was played on as a soft sawdust field, on which the speedy work to which the Pullman men are accus tomed was impossible. At OAC the Washingtonions will have the kind of field they seek, and the resuit. if thev are riht in their conclusions ought to make the outcome of the game a matter of uncertainty. On size, though the OAC men are big, the Washingtonions are bie-. They are, in fact, giants, nothing more, noth ing less, at leas' their line men are. Doa't Borrow Trouble. It is a bad habit to borrow anything, but the woist thing you can possibly bor row is trouole. When su k, sore, heavv, weary and worn-out by the pains and poisons of dyspepsia, biliousness Brights disease, and similar internal disorders, don't sit down and brood over your symptoms but fly for relief to Electric bitters. Here you will find sure and permanent foruetfulness of all 'our troubles, and your body will not be burdened by a load of debt disease. At Allen & Woodward's drug store. Price 50c Guaranteed. Yesterday W. G. E uery received of A J. J.ickson, the rmiowned photo artist of Tacorna, Wttnh , a copy of his famous pictUiH entitled "Consolation." Tbti copy sent our local photogrHpher is fiom the origi nal plate and is highly prized, as ii is a w 'lcome bit of art t adorn any man's ttudio. "Consolation" repre sents a lady playing a violin, while clinging to her and weeping is an other lady. Such a -picture no doubt wculd'cost $25. The work is truly an art creation and is mo3t happy in its conception. Consumptives Made Comfortable. Incipient consumption is curea by Foley's Honey and Tar, but we do nt hold out talse hopes to consumptives ly claiming that it will cure that dread dis ease in the advanred stages; but if the lungs are not too far gone Foley's Honey and Tar will effect a cure, as it stops the racking cough and sooths the inflamed air passages giving them a chance to heal, and even the advanced stages it always gives comfort, and relief. A. A. Herron, of Finch, Ark., writes: "Foley's Honey and Tar is the best preparation tor coughs and lung trouble. I know that this has cured consumption in the first stages. Giaham & Wortham. BONES OF DUQUESNE. MEN. Workmen in Pittsburg Cut Into Its First Graveyard, Making Interesting Find. Pittsburg, Pa. Workmen cutting Oliver avenue 20 feet wider found be hind a stone wall quantities of hu man bones. W. E. Watson says that his grandfather, William Eichbaum. told him when a boy that here the French soldiers who defended Fort Duquesne buried their dead. .T hey also interred the Indians who died within the fortifications with t'neir own soldiers, and the first negro who died in Pittsburg was interred there. The dead were carried from the tort "by the path of the Virgin," as they were all good Catholics then, and trie alley became known as Virgin alley, afterward being changed to Oliver ave nue in honor of Harry Oliver, who owned all the property adjoining. There has been nothing found to mark the rank of the dead nor to teh what nationality they were. Not far from this spot Maj. Grant, who com manded a reconnoitering expedition from Gen. Forbes' army, was defeated on a hill, now Grant street, and the bodies were flumped into holes in the graveyard, according to tradition. The British afterward used the same burying grounds as long a3 the gar rison was kept in Pittsburg. WILL PROVIDES FOR CIGARS Spinster Leaves Estate to Sister on Condition That Father Be Al lowed to Smoke Freely. Philadelphia. When the will of Charlotte D. Sage was admitted to pro bate one of the most curious clauses ever contained in a document of this kind was brought to light The estate is valued at $350 and the will disposes of it in this wise: "I bequeath to my beloved sister (if she promises to allow my father, Ben jamin F. Sage, of beloved memory, all the cigars he wants, also all the vests he likes to wear in the winter) all my personal and real estte I die possessed of or to which I shall he entitled at the time of my decease.". Inquiry developed the fact that Miss Sage's father, who is an elderly man, has a fondness for cigars. Some time ago his' eldest daughter, refused to al low him to smoke the usual number on account of bis health. He felt the loss of tobacco keenly. ; His fondness for fancy waistcoats "amounted to a hobby. Bars Huslc in Church. .. ; lf an organ or a musical. Instrument of any kind is ever brought into ' the Christian church at Hartwick, la., the building and - Bite will revert to 'the members of the congregation who op pose their Installation. This is accord-, ing fo the terms of a deed to the property given the church by H. B, Smith, j The Kind Ton Have Always usd iui uvci ow years, f ana has been made under his per- . 'fyfesfay sonal supervision since its infancy. 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. Ifc 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 the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children;s Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Sears the lie Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. CorvaHis Rates to Over Southern Individual Tickets. -J5-i:-i-' 0ne and one-third fare for the round trip. ) SALE DATES.. Daily from May 29th to Oct. 15th, 1905T $2.90 L,MIT Thirty ds. but not later than Oct. 31, 1905. Parties ot Ten or More. For parties of ten or more from one point, (must travel together on oneticket both ways), party tickets will be sold as follows: RATE One fare for the round trip. ) . SALE BATES . . Daily from May 29th to Oct. 15th, 1905. ' $2.60 " xen aays. Organized Parties of 100 or More. For organized parties of one hundred or more moving on one dayNfrom one place, individual tickets will be sold as follows: RATE. .. One fare for the round trip. SALE DATES. .Dailv from Mav 29th to Oc IKt.K R9 fiO LIMIT ...TenDavs. . Stopovers. , TCTn strYnnvorc will T-io allnwofl rr omr n-P tVia o'krvrTi tinl-,.. must be used for continuous passage in each direction. For further information call on J . E. FA RMER W. E. COMAIM, Agent, Corvallis. Gen'l Pas. Agt., Portland. ARRIVAL AND DEPARTURE CF EMAILS. KAIL ARRIVES. 8:30 a. nt. Mail arrives by stage for Portland and all points . North and East, also for California acd 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. - HOiESEEKERS AMBLER & WATTERS, REAL ESTATE, LOANS INSURANCE VIRGIL E. WAITERS, Corvallis. HENRY AMBLER, Philomath. Calling card? popular ptylea in cards and type at the Gazi tte office. SOtf Bakes SUtSaev.itj -..:.u.'.- Bring y oil r J 6 jaunt i yjj Bought, and -which has been. nas Dome the signature of Signature of Lewis and Clark Fair Pacific Railroads. -.v. 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. nt. For Albany and all points North and South on the S. P. 12:30 p. m. For West Side points, Portland, and points North - and East, also for points West on the C. & E. 2 p. m. For Monroe, Or. fc15 p. m. For Portland, Cali- fotnia, and points North, East and South. Ii yon are looking for some real good Bargains In Stock, Groin, Fruit and Poultry Ranches, write for our special list, or c 'me and see us. We will tabe pleasure In giving you reliaole informa tion; also showing you over the county & PrnttlllteHf Tr.1 tti An - The many friends of G. H. Hansan, Engineer L. . & W. R. R., at present living in Lima. Ohio, will be pleased to know of his lecdvery from threatened kMrwv--Hp-av. IJo-nys: "I was mired in nig Pi 'i' KMnfv l-nre, whiuhl rwomn, ii. I ali. .sci.ry to train men.. tioar- i.Mia:l ni'niiariy afflicted.'' Graham & Wortham. b Woik to the - . Worths m. ty'atBlaekietfges. SOtf