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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 31, 1905)
1 'Tuesdays and Fridays by - iTE Publishing Company. .hai-riptlon price of the Gazette r il years has been, and remains, niiim, or 'Zb per cent discount if H it vance. Stand by Yaquina. OUR GREATEST MAN. that they will bring here annual ly to visit a show of this character j and from whom our merchants! cau expect a good trade. Port-j land is the natural livestock cen-1 ter on the Pacific Coast, and if we establish this big show here, we will be encouraging an in dustry that is bound to bring to the trade center a wonderful but conservative trade. l ne city is situated in a wok IT. is this nation ever before produced such a man as Presi de at Roosevelt? Never that we Li.ovv of. He is a man of the people and for the people, first, last and all the time. With him, in his capacitv for dealing with humanity throughout Christen dom, it is not so much a doctrine of any political creed as it is a "square deal for every man." Give every man a show. Who, among all ot us comes so near the teachings of the Golden Rule in our every day life as the president of these United States? During his recent trip through the South he has met one ovation after another. Is such demon stration on the part of our peo ple meaningless? Far from it. These demonstrations are from the whole people and are the voluntary offerings that come from the hearts of both plebeian and patrician. These acts show the respect and confidence of the masses of this commonwealth in the chief man of the nation and he merits it all. In many in stances . the respect and confi dence which President Roosevelt 'first won from his fellowmen have given place to sentiments akin to love and adoration. In the East he is first man of the nation, in the West the peo ple's idol, in the North the man of the hour, and in the South he at present appears in the estima tion of the people all that he is to those of the other portions of this great land and more, if possible. Why is this? Well, look ahout you and perceive that in every nook and niche, even to the re motest hamlet in the land he is making sentiment. Sentiment for what? For that which gis right from one man to another. He is a champion above all things of that which is right. Be The policy ot the people of this section should be to stand bv Yaquina, as anything done toward the betterment of this barber and the C. & E Railroad is an im- iportant maUer to this part of the Iwoild. , The Toledo Reporter, j in its last issue, contains the fol lowing, and it contains much that is true: Most all of the valley papers derfully rich agricultural district. have gone back on the Yaquina which is bound in time, if prop harbor and are now whooping it erally cultivated, to make Port- up tor Coos bay. ... land a wealthy city, . But agri Coos Bay needs a raf-road and cultural in this world is absolute harbor improvements and we hy impossible without the live- hope that she will get tnem. sUck industry. Livestock has But it is poor policy lor the cities alwavs been the right hand of on the Willamette, from Salem agricultural. It is indispensable to Eugene to ignore ' Yaquina that we return to the soil that with its harbor nearly developed, which we take from it. We can with almost as great a depth of not continue to draw upon the water on its bar as has the bar of feitilitv of a soil, no matter how thegColumbia a depth sufBcieut substaniial it may be, without now tor any, except a lew or me ultimately reaching bankruptcy. very largest freighters, witft a You have to make deposits, just railroad already constructed to the same as you do with a bank, the most favorable pass in the or SOme day your check will be Cascade range giving the most dishonored and rejected by na direct outlet ol any line proposed ture. In subtle work of nature to the great Inland Empire. iies best of all the means of keep- IfHarnman builds a railroad ung an(j restoring fertility of the to Coos Jtsay ne win not Duiid n soil to develop the harbor. He will in the keeping of our lands, use tnat line as ne is using tne c largely in grasses, the preserva & E. to force all freight over his Uion and protection thereof from railroads and not by water trans- the injurious effects of the sun portation. tiis plan is to uotue and the work ot our heavv rains. up every harbor between Portland an3 the return to it in animal and San Francisco. matter that which is taken from The safest and most sensible Ut livestock is the shore anchor, thing to do is to develop what ia this country our interests rest we already nave, mere is cap-j largely upon agriculture, and ital enough in tne territory nat- agriculture rests upon the tarm urally tributary to Yaq'iina bay ers cow. As stated by Dr. Jas. to build a new road and open the Witbycombe, a few evenings ago, harbor. Until that is done we in an address before the Oregon shall continue to pay heavy tri- state Academy of Science, if the bute to the railroad companies farmers of semi-arid districts of tnl retard the development of the this state persist in their p.esent Over-Bardened Women. Many a man sees his wife bend and tug at burdens that strain the back and the heart alike, without any idea of the outrage. Children follow in too quick: succession to allow the nether time to recuperate. The womanly onjans become displaced, there are debilitating, disagree able drains, with the added r;ain of in flamed or ulcerated parts. In this condi tion the woman bravely tries to carry her household load, afraid to take the rest she needs lest a meal will be late. No wonder she is pale, weak, wretched, surly of temper and snanpish of tongue. She would be false to nature if she were any thing else. Ko persons need help so mucu as the class of whom this woman is the type. And for such women no neip is so sure, so wonderful, as that given by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It re stores all the womanly organs to perfect health. It establishes regularity in their functions. It restores the strained ana shattered nervous system. It clears up the complexion, rounds out tne iorm ana makes life a daily ha ppiness. "Favorite Prescription" contains no aiconoi or whisky. It is the best medicine for women. Nothing can be "just a3 good" as the best. Tell the dealer so if ho offers a substitute. "I wrote to you In 102, about my case," writes Mrs. Ella W. Eobbinson. ot Nuttree, Va. "Was then in a bad condition, and your reply was that I probably inherited the trouble from my mother, and you prescribed Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. About that time I had an attack of lever and was sick for Quite a while, so failed to get your Prescription.' In December following was married and then my husband bought me two Kitt.im nt Tr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Before I began to take it I had bearing-down pains at monthly periods, also dizzy spells. After 1 had taken one bottle I felt better and had no more pains. After taking the second win witt tVinn ovfir in mv life, and In September gave birth to a twelve-pound baby girl. I am very thankful for your good medicine, and shall tell my friends what it ha trT nm and shall recommend It to all who are afflicted. We think it the best medi cine In the world." 5C-,rf. Not only the uneinai mrc tne Wjerc? best uttfe Lrver P'". first put Vvvrt up over 40 years ago, by old Dr. E. V. Pierce, have been much imitated but never equaled, as thou ,wa, oct ThfiTT'rA Ttnrelv vegetable. being made up of concentrated and refined a! nrincinles. extracted from the wu-tu rtt ATripripan rilants. Do not gripe. One or two for stomach corrective, three 01 four for cathartic. last time, ith unfortunate results. This vear is Western Oregon's turn and there is no man in the republican party more representative, bavin-; eeater nossihililies of usefulnei s, more deserv ing of the honor than Dr. Withvcombe who would run well and tiring r,o me office those high qualities of mind and character so necessary to tne governor, country. Annual Livestock Exhibit. metnoos ot wneat raising, it 1? only a question of time until their land will be converted into a desert waste, where man will be unable to subsist. While it would be a long time I before conditions of this kind Plans for holding permanent annual international livestock ex hibits in Portland, after the fashion of Chicago and Kansas could ever exist, we only have to City, says the Telegram, will be look back a few years, when the considered by the Chamber of Willamette Valley was producing Commerce at its next meeting. 50 to 60 bushels of wheat to the The proposal will go before the acre, compared to 15 and 25 Chamber in the form of a letter bushels now. The livestock in addressed by M.,D. Wisdom, ed- dustry needs more encouraging, ltor f the Rural Spirit, and an and here is an opportunity lor enthusiastic promoter of Oregon's the business men of Portland to livestock resources. In his let- lend a helping hand to an enter ter Mr. Wisdom call attention to prise that wi;l return to tm-m the fact that agricultural and good interests on thtir inom-y a man rich or be he poor he must ' livestock are dependent on each in vested, nl he a lsii-:g lt.f. other, and sueeest that the surest ut to rtic cuv ami smrvaiKiirso preventative ot impoverishment couu'ry. be granted a "square deal" nothing more nor less than Golden Rule doctrine of the first order. He is our "Teddy" and he is very near to a Ivloses or we miss cur guess. YAGES PAID IN BELGIUM. How important the wage question is to the information of sound opinions on Tariff may be judged from the reports coming into our State Department from different parts of the world. A recent' one from Belgium reports that women working on hand made lace earn only twenty-five ; stock company of of soil is by the broadening of the lives' ock industry. He fur ther poii.ts oiAt Portland's loca tion as the center of the livestock i 'tustry on the Pacific Coast, and the benefits this city would receive from such an enterprise. Mr. Wisdom proposes that this enterprise be launched as a joint stock company, with stock floated in Oregon, and with a capitalization of about $50,000. The main cost, he says, would be for the erection of suitable permanent buildings and lease or purchase of ground. He says Looking Oat the Mindow. C ASTOR I A Tor Infants and Children. . , The Kind You Have Always Bough Bears th,e Signature of A Few Points About Leather Bottomed Rubber Boots 'rife further that investors m a this to thirty cents per day of twelve to fifteen hours. In the eastern part of that kingdom the wages range only from sixteen to twenty cents a day and girls' be gin at six years of age to learn the business. Even this scale of wages is a great improvement upon that of but a few years ago when they stood at but seven or eight; cents a day. It appears that the lace was then sold to middlemen and jobbers, but a philanthropic woman took hold of the matter . and made it possible to sell lace direct to customers, and by ex cluding agents and their profits the women are able to gain the magnificent wages of 25 cents a day, as it must have seemed to them, where they had been earn ing not more than eight or ten cents a day before. The demand of Protection is that the Free-Traders shall show wherein it is r.n advantage to this country to le!: down the bars and force compeliii n with for eign rates of wagss, and it seems every year to be on more and more solid ground as foreign rates of wages are considered. Buffalo News. joint kind would realize on the investment, and says that the institution would be self-supporting when once gotten under way, T;he Lewis and Clark livestock show, says Mr. Wisdom, was a revelation to the Eastern stock men on Oregon's livestock re sources, and he believes that if is the only other candidate. The following brief mention of our fel lo townsman by, the Albany Herald gives an idea of the esteem ia which he is held by others as well as ourselves : Lookicg out of the window, we ol-SHr.-e that, a handsome horse drawing a trim runabout has drawn up to the door, and that a pleasant looking man, yonnu enough to take a wholesome interest in the really good things of life, old enough for the judgment and discreliun which crown experience, is descending from the vehicle. It is Director Withvcombe, of the! Or egon experiment station, by common eon33nt foremost of the republican can didates for governor. D'-, Withvcombe has a habit of doing things, and cm conduct more institutes, do mora experiment work at the station, and loik after more correspondence with the enquiring farmers of Oregon, and direct more young men in the way they should go to become scentific farmers than any one else in the West.'' Practically, Mr. Johns, ot" Buker City, an international show were estab lished it would be liberally pat ronized by livestock interest ev ery wheret The following is Mr. Wis dom's letter to the Chamber of Commerce: . E. C. Giltner, Secretary Cham ber of Commerce, Portland Dear Sir: I am requested to lay before your honorable body a proposition to hold an annual livestock show of international character in this city, similar to to the one held in connection with the Lewis and Clark Expo sition this year. The cost of holding these an nual shows Would depend largely upou the cost 01 procuring suit able grounds and buildings. A committee from vour honorable body .ccuid determine this mat ter. The advantage of such shows to the city of Portland is appar ent when we take into considera tion the cumber of stockmen It will be remembered that Eastern Oregon was conceded the nomination Marb, the Magician Opera House, Nov. 6 Up to the time of placing the Rubberhide Boot on the market all of the Leather Bottomed Rub ber Boots were made by nailing the bottoms to the rubber upper. The nails are driven throug' both leather ad rubber, punctur ing the rubber with two rows of holes from the heel to the toe. Water will work in between the leather and the rubber, and find ing the openings thus made by the nails, are sure to leak. The Rubberhide Boot is made by lasting the upper under the foot for an inch, all around the bottom up to the middle sole. The upper and rubber welt sole are joined by vulcanizing them toge ther, forming a union that re sists the hardest wear. It has a heavy leather inner sole. The sole leather, which is thor oughly waterproofed, is stitched to the rubber welt sole;this makes an absolutely water-tight boot, and one that will not leak. It is . impossible for the water to get into the boot except over the top. For honesty of con struction, comfort and durability, the Rubberhide Boot is without an equal. Not lowvpriced, but cheap A leather bottom rubber boot will wear longer than an all rub ber boot The Rubberhide will give longer service, more com fort to the wearer, and greater return for the money invested, A trial will convince you. ' " For sale by I M, Nolan & Son ( Brandecree." Copyrighted, 1905 ( Kincaid Wood. v Some clothes stores seem to have difficulties in pleasing their patrons and we often hear them saying how hard it is to suit and sell their customers. At our store we don't find things that way. Of course a fit is a fit and every one knows it--and that's all that can be done. We assume such difficulties arise in forcing poorly fitting garments. If you buy the right clothes all that is unnecessary. We sell Brandegee, Kincaid & Wood clothes they all bear their labelthe label means good clothes and those having a real guarantee-Suits $15 to $35 Overcoats $15 to $50 MARVEL OF MECHANICAL INGENUITY. Perhaps never before in the history of Corvallis have so elaborate stage settings been used as will be seen at the opera house tomorrow night. "The Human Slave" company recently left Chicago and carry a carload of special scenery and stage property. The rolling mill scene is one of the greatest ever pro duced on any stage. It is a marvel of mechanical ingenuity and is nightly greet ed with prolonged applause. On the stage is a huge carrier crane, a plate mill, a mammoth lathe and the shafting, belting and pulleys usually seen in an establish ment of the kind. j draught! I STOCII I l poultry! IFi Stock and p.ultry haTe few troubles which are npt bowel and liver irregularities. Black Draught Stock and Poultry Medi cine ia a bowel and liver remedy for stock.- It puts the organs of digestion in a perfect condition. Prominent American breeders and farmers keep tbeir herds and flocks healthy by pivins- them an occa sional dose of BlacK-Draught Stock and Poultry Medicine in their food. Any stock raiser may buy a 25-cent half-pound air-tight can, of this medicine from his dealer and keep his stock in vigorous health for weeks. Dealers gener ally keep Black-Draught Stock and Poultry Medicine. If yours does not, send 25 cents for a sample can to the manufacturers, The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga,-Term. . " . RooHOiiB, Qa., Jan. 80, 1902. - Blact-Mraught Stock and Poultry Medicine is t ho best I ever tried. Our stock was looking bad when yon sent me the medicine and now they are getting so fine. They are looking percent, better. 8. P. BEOOK3NOTON. e hi masses PFiOFEELY, ACCURATELY,' and SCffTSF5S&LLY To rJ3 Dsfsds sf Sight. MATTHEWS, The Optician Room 12, Basik Building. and Heating! Gazette Independent phone No 483. New Cure for Cancer. All surface cancers are now known to be curable, by Bucklen'a Arnica Salve. Jos. Walters, of Dnffield, Va,, writes: "I had a cancer on my lip for years, that seem incurable, till Bucklen'a Arcica Salve healed it and now it is perfectly well." Guaranteed cure for cuts and burns. 25c,at Allen & Woodward's drug store. Cornire, Roofing, Guttering,' and all kinds of bl-.eet Metal Work. Fi A. Hencye . In connection with J. H. ' . SIMPSON:S HARDWABE ... . STORE. The Original. Foley. & - Co..' Chicago? originated Honey and Tar as a throat and lung rem edy, and on account of the great merit and popnlarity of Foley's Honey and Tar many imitations are offered for the genuine. Ask for Foley's Honey and Tar acd reiuse and substitute offered as no other preparation will give the same satisfaction.. It is mildly laxative. It contains no opiates end is safest for ctnidren ana delicate parsons, uranam & Wortham. Plans to get lUch ; aown, one to ayepepeia or. constipation. Brace up and take JJr. King's JNew, Lite Pills. . Tbey take out the materials .Which, are c logging your energies and give you a new start.' Cure -headache and' dizzi ness, too. At Allen A. Woodward's drug store; 15u; Kiaranteed.