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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1905)
1 OTFIEI) ADVERTISEMENTS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS: Fif'epn words or lees, 25 cts for three successive insertions, or 50 cts per month; for all up to and including ten additional words, cent a word;forach insertion. For all advertisements over 25 words, 1 ct ter word for the first insertion, and t per word for each additional inser tion Nothing inserted for less than' 25 centH. Lodge, society and church notices, other than Btrictly news matter, will he Char 1 tor. FOR SALE BARRED PLYMOUTH ROCKS Breeding hens and pullets at $1 each Choice breeding cocken is. from pen hearted by my $20 Arp's pullet bred cork bird, at from $1 tn $5 each. Call r flallerv. W. G. Emerv. Barred Rock SDecialist. 90tf ALT. WOOD HANDLED BY THE undersigned know in this city and has reen placed in tne nanas oi me v.nv Transfer Comnanv for sale. Norwood Tradine Co. 66tf NEW TIRES PUT ON BABY BUG- fii-s and go-carts at Dilleyoz Arnold's ATJT' 'MOBILE FOR f ALE $195.00; steam; in good condition, top lamps, Box 461. McMinnville, Or. 87 96 ATTORNEYS J. F. YATES. ATTORNE Y-AT-LA W. Office First National Bank Buitdine Only set of abstracts in Benton County E. R. BRYSON ATTORNEY AT LAW 9rtic in Post Ofhce Building, (jorval iis. Oregon. JOsKPH H. WILSON, ATTORN KY at-Law. Notary, Titles, Conveyance ini Practice in all State and Federal Courts. Office in Burnett Building. AUCTIONEER P A KT.TNTC T.TVK STOCK AUCTION eer, Corvallis, Or. P. A. Kline Line, PhnrmNo. 1. P. O. address. Box 11. Pavs highest nrices for all kinds of live stock. Twenty years' experience. bat.islaction guaranteed. WANTED WAiSTEO 500 SUBSCRIBERS TO THE Gazette and Weekly Oregonian at $2.55 per year. DENTISTS E. H. TAYLOR, DENTIST. PAIN less extraction. la Zierolf building Opp. Post OtBi, Oorvallis, Oregon. BANKING. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Corvallis, Oregon, MAKES LOANS on approved security and especially on wheat, oats, 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 of good ee- " 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 B. A. OAT HEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon. Koomal4, Bank Build ing. Office Hours : 10 to 12 a. m , 2 to 4 p.m. Residence: cor. 5th and Ad ams Bts. Telephone at officn and res idence. Corvallis. Oregon. 0. H. KEWTH, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, Office an 3. 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 DbETTE JONES. Trained nurse Ind. Phone 234. 82-90 ELASTIC jPULP PLASTER. NO SAND. NO LIME. Fire Proof Water Proof WELL FALL OFF tmr 1 crack W 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. Beggars Print a Paper. It has been discovered that the Paris beggars' guild circulates a four-cent weekly in Paris, giving the news or fraternity doings, articles upon the latest discoveries of means to wring tears and cash from the tender-hearted, announcement of society affairs at which beggars may hope for a rich harvest, want ads., such as: "A mem ber seeks a colleague able to simulate fits," "Wanted Blind boy, curly-headed preferred, able to play .the violin." The police, having found the list of subscribers, expect to be able to purge the chapel doors of watering places of many impostors. Boycott on Togo. When some of our various $ 100,000 men hear that "Admiral Togo's salary is only $3,000, they may feel some in clination to boycott him for cutting rates. Oscar Stands Pat. King Oscar refuses to let any of his boys or their boys occupy the throne of Norway. Evidently Oscar is not a be liever in the efficacy of scattered shot. LETTER LIST. The following letters remain uncalled for in the Corvallis postoffice, for the W aek ending Oct. 28, 1005: Wednesday, Oct. 28, 1905, Miss Irene Crow, Mrs C A Edwards, Miss Mary England, Tom Forsom, James Gire, Miss Bertha Gray, S C Holmes, Mrs Meliuda Harris, Austin Laverd, Roy Morgan, W C Millhollend, F R Mendball; Miss Maud Magness, Miss Margaret Haddock, Miss Lee Riley, Mrs E J Watts, Miss Nellie White. B. W. Johnsox, P. M. tt Lost Mother. "Consumption runs in our family, and through it I loBt my Mother," writes K. B. Reid, of Harmony, Me. "For the past, five years, however, on the slight est sign of a Cough or Cold. I have taken Dr. King s New Discovery for Consump tion, which has saved me from serious lung trouble." His mother's death was a sad lossfor Mr. Keii, but he learned that lung trouble must not be neglected and how to cure it. Quickest relief and ture for coughs and colds Price 50c and $1 CO; guaranteed at Allen & Wood ward drug store. Trial bottle free. Notice for Publication. United States Land Office, Portland, Oregon, August 19, 19o6. Notice is herebv given that in compliance with the provisions of the act of Congress of June 3, 1873, entitled "An act tor tne sale ot timoer lands in the States of California, Oregon, Nevada and Washington Territory," as extended to all the Public Land States by act of August 4, 1892, 1VA SHERWOOD PATTY. of Corvallis, comity of Bentcn, State of Oregon, has this day filed in this office her sworn statement No 6654, for the purchase of S. J Si of Section No 26 in Township No lo S., Range No fi West, and will offer proof to show that the land sought-is niore valuable for its timber or stone than for agricultur al purposes, and to establish her claim to Baid land before the Register and Receiver of this office at tortlai.il. Oregon, on Mondav. the!6thdav of November, 1905, She named us w.tnesses: Erwin R. Alexander. Thomas R. Graham, James H. fatty, all of Cor vallis, Oregon, Root. A. Miller, ot Portland, Oregon. Any and all persons claiminir adversely the above- described iands are requested to tile their claims iu tins omce on or Deiore said otn day ot November, 1905. ALGERNON S. DRESSER, Keeritr. Administrator's Notice. Notice io hereby given that the County Court of Benton County, Oregon, has appoint ee, the undersigned administrator of the estate of Huldah A. Brown desceased, and 11 per sons having claims against said estate will present the same according to law. to me at Corvallis, Oregon, within six mouths from this dale, - W. S. LISVILLE, Administrator. Dated September 7, 1905. Notics ot Flat! Settlement. Notice is hereby given that the undersizned. ad ministrator of the estate of William Krieus, de ceased, has filed in the County Court of Benton Ounty. Oregon, his final account as such adminis trator, and that Wednesday the 8th day of Novem ber, 1905, at the hour of two o'clock P. M. has been fixed by said Court as a time for hearing objections to said final account and the settlement thereof. VV. E. YATES, Administrator of the Estate of Win. Kricns, de ceased. Notice to Creditors. In the Matter of the Estate of i Mary A. Garlinghouse. deceased. J Notice is hereby given to all persons concerned that the undersigned has been duly appointed ex ecutrix of the last will and testament of Mary A. Garlinghouse, deceased, by the County Court of Benton County, Oregon. All persons having claims against the said estate of Mary A. Garlinghouse, de-oef-d. are required to present 'he same, with the pioper vouchers, duly ver.nua as required by law, within six months from the date hereof, to the un dersigned at her residence one mile east of Monroe, Benton County, Oregon, or at the office of Yates & Yates, Corvallis, Oregon. Dated this 26th day of September, 1906. MALINDA F. STARR, Executrix of the last will and testament of Mary A. Garlinghouse, deceased. 80-92 Ma s Unreasonableness. la often as great as a woman's. But Thos.B. Austin, Mgr., of the "Republi can ," of Lavens worth, Ind., was not. unreasonable when he refused to allow the doctors to operate upon his wife, for female trouble, "Instead," he says, "we concluded to try Electric Bitters. My wife was then so week, ehn conld hardly leave her bed and five (5) physi cians had failed to relieve her. Alter taking Eisctric Bitteis, she was perfect ly cured and ran now perform all her household duties.". Guaranteed by Allen & Woodward druggists. Price 50c. KIDNEY DISEASES are the most fatal of all dis eases. rni EV'O SIDNEY CURE Is a 1 ULbl O Guaranteed Remedy or money refunded. Contains remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the best for Kidney and Bladder troubles. PRICE 50c and itJOO, Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys nnd bladder right. CURE FOR BLINDNESS VIOLET KAYS SAID TO BXSTOBE SIGHT. Interesting- Experiments with. Elec tric Current in New -Form How the Treatment Is Applied. New York. A series of Interesting experiments with the violet ray as a cure for blindness has disclosed that electricity in this weird and strangely beautiful form has possibilities before undreamed of. Heretofore it has been used chiefly to .destroy bacilli and malignant, diseased tissue, but this new experiment applied it to the op tic nerves of a woman who had been pronounced incurably blind by the spe cialists in one of the eye and ear hos pitals of this city. As a result of the treatment the patient, Mrs. Charlotte Walker, is able to read the headlines on a newspaper, see the hands on a watch and pursue the ordinary vocations of life. The fact that the nerves responded to the treatment proves that they were not entirely atrophied, as supposed by the physicians that administered treat ment in the hospitals. Whether the sight can be entirely re stored will depend, according to the ex perimenter, Dr. S. S. Yallan, on the patient's general condition and the cause of the trouble. If there be deep seated organic disease, affecting the entire system, the cure may not be per fected and the improvement is likely to be only'temporary. The electricity may be generated by a static machine or by a coil, the rtstic machine being used by Dr. Yal lcn. Mrs. Walker sits beside it on an in.-ulated platform. The electrode is a S'.izs vacuum tube with an expanded b:i':b at the end and an insulated i-ndle, or one having two bulbs, this i;c.2g used on both eyes simultaneous v. The physician appiies the bulb to C.o temples, to the eyeballs, to the back of each ear and over the spine and cr.:-k in order to reach- the cervical nerves tnat control tne eyes. While the treatment is in progress tie glass bulb is more beautiful than r.r,y flower, the ray changing from pale v:'o"-et to deep purple. At the same tine the patient experiences a priek 1:2 g sensation more or less intense, socording to the strength of the cur rout. "The patient was brought to me for the experiment with the violet ray by a ph3sician in the hospital in which si: 3 had been pronounced incurable," Dr. Yallan. "She was about 20 yeir3 old, had been blind two years -"Hi , could -not or would not give any r .story of her case that could be of err- aid in treating her. There was evidence that the nerves of the eye v ere entirely atrophied. The woman El-o I:as rheumatic pains, which com-"-:ted her case and showed the gen-r-:.l system was not in a healthy con il.tlon. " . "After taking the violet ray treat ment for a month she announced to me Tally-: .'Oh, I am going to get my r'rt tack again! I am seeing fine! T can ree people on the street. I can " s care of the lamps.' Soon she was 'eg considerable housework, being s.'j'.s to see her way about the house." . :as right to get drunk !iitte Judge Decides Once in Thirty Says Is Proper Average '. for a Man. LVttte, Mont. "Any man, who pays his liquor bill and is not too boisterous . -.".fit's;.! to get drunk ones a month," s .:"; PoTIca Judge Warren in acq"ii tins - Lr-ther Y.'ilson, chsrrc-.l with bs a prioiical drunkard. The pro:e cutlng sttcrney cited the fact that Wii c;:i had been a regular oitender dur iss the past year, and asked that he bo siven a jail sentance. The prisoner argued that he had nc.cr been arrssisd twice in the same meat!', end expressed the opinion that i:.:;e a month, 'a 3 point was ve:i ' '.C2 ty Jul;;e Warren, who said:. ": a 0; tie ppintcn any man who dse-,. nrt cr;;ts a disturbance or make a n Usance of himself is entitled to get " -:k ence each 20 days if he cares to. Yo 1 may go, Wilson, but don't let your i?r; dates conflict, for if you are ar re t?d twice in the same . month you w: 1 be punished. Take my advice and rt':k to the water wagon until after tie Fourth of July." BECOMES BALD , IN A WEEK Young Wan Loses His Hair in Re markable Way and the Doc tors Are Puzzled. Connersville, Ind. Clarence Maple was arrested for alleged assault. Maple is a married man and has a family. Since his incarceration in jail he has lost his hair and now is as bald as the average man of 70 years, the only sem blance of hair on his head being a r-" -rovth nsar the front. When r'.. 1' in 5a:l Maple possessed a heavy head "? hair. Irrtsneas have been known of a per-sr- 's tair turning suddenly ' white r' ci sneering from fright or grief, t :l tie present instance is believed to t t e first on -score! of tie k:nd. A fi: 'B".ci;n whose attention' was called to the matter could not account for it, but said it was of great interest to medical science. War Must Go On. , A dispatch from Gunshu pass says the Russian generals have adopted a belli cose attitude and declare that the war must go on. Comparatively few Rus sian generals get near enough to the fir ing lines to be hit. FORTUNE FOR WORKWOMAN Forgotten Relative in Texas Leaves Hew York laborer Over $3,000,000. New York. Wonderful news came to ' the little cottage near Wbodlawn, L. I., occupied by Thomas O'Keefe and his wife, in the form of a letter from a sis- j ter in Ireland. It told him that he is 1 heir to $3,825,000 as his share of the es tate of an almost forgotten relative, who settled in Texas a century ago, and who died years ago, leaving $11,500,000. O'Keefe, until two years ago, was a section foreman of the Long Island railroad. He had been so employed for nearly 40 years, when, having acquired a modest competence from his wages of $1.20 a day and the earnings of his wife, who took in washing to aid the family exchequer, he bought a six-acre farm, which he has been working in rustic contentment. The O'Keefes were celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of their wedding when the golden news came in the letter from Ireland. (Romance surrounds the O'Keefe in heritance, but investigation by lawyers and by Douglas Conklin, cashier of the Bank of Huntington, establishes the fact that the millions haVe a very sub stantial foundation, and that from an Income of $438 a year, the former sec tion boss and present owner of a six acre farm is about to step into one of $150,000. In 1804 Dennis O'Keefe, of Kil kee, County Clare, Ireland, left his home and shipped as a sailor. He wan dered over the world, and finally set tled in Texas, acquiring many acres of land, and on nearly all of it oil has been found in immense quantities. The oil was found years after old Dennis O'Keefe died, and since scores of law yers have been searching for his rela tives. Finally, a lawyer, named Hil dreth, discovered one of the three heirs to the estate, Mrs. Maria O'Keefe Fen nell, of Kilkee, Ireland. Mrs. Fennell notified her two brothers, Patrick Mc Guire, who lives in Ireland, and O'Keefe. BUILDING HER OWN HOUSE Massachusetts Woman Has Started, Tffnaided, a Two-Story Structure.' North Adams, Mass. Mrs. Elizabeth Hollis, young, muscular and handy with tools, has started in to build, un aided, a two-story frame dwelling on a plot of ground recently purchased by her at Lorraine, a suburb of the city. She has already started the cellar excavation, and has a good portion of the work done. She has ordered stone, and plans to put in a heavy foundation wall. Mrs. Hollis feels she will be forced to call for assistance when it comes to handling the heavy framing tim bers, but aside from this she will put up the house and finish it without help. The Building Trade council of the city practically controls the build ing in the city They will offer no objection to the woman doing the work. In fact, the council has of fered to furnish a coupleof men to do any work which Mrs. Hollis is un able to do, but she declares emphat ically that she will get along .very nicely after the heavy framing is done. Mrs. Hollis declares she will have but little ' difficulty in doing the in side finishing, plastering and paper ing. Several men residing near her have offered to lend a hand in dig ging the cellar, but she prefers doing the work herself. , NO RACE SUICIDE THERE. California Woman Becomes the Moth er of the Twenty-Fifth Child. San Francisco, Cal. At the resi dence of Mr. and Mrs. John Mello, of Barkeley, Mrs. Mello says: "John, we have another." He replied: "All right, Maria." . Mrs. Mello was born' in the Azores 46 years ago. She began married life at the age of 15, and has had 25 chil dren. She has been wedded twice. Her first huslrind. was the father of ten infants, end to John Mello belongs the responsibility of 15. . Mrs. Mello is the youngest of 20 children by her own mother, and knows of several additional half-brothers. . "I don't know just how many," says Mrs. Mello; "I think ten, but maybe more." After her marriage Mrs. Mello came with her husband to California. And before she was 16 Manuel arrived to prove to his grandfather that the fam ily tradition was just as strong in the new land as in the old. Such was the beginning. The records of to-day show 25 children in 30 years, with seven pairs of twins among them, each time, until the last, a black-eyed boy and a blue-eyed girl.' Talking Good for the Teeth. , Somebody has advanced a new the ory to account for the rapid decay of the teeth of human kind.. -It is due, this wiseacre says, to the decline -of conversational powers. Talk exer cise.: the jaws, and jaw exercise is beneficial to the teeth. . The more tik the more bensSt Our ancestors were forced to talk because there were few amusements to' silence them. '- Their teeth were more shapely and ctronger, and they endured. Nowadays caca? entertainments of many kinds entice the teeth owners and cheap literature of an engrossing character draws them from the natural exercise that their molars and incisors so sorely need. University Statues. -The class of 1904 at the University of Pennsylvania has voted to put a statue of Benjamin Franklin In the university grounds. The class of 1905 to erect one to William Smith, the ftrst provost of the university. The Kind You Have Always in use for over SO years, 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. It 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 Bears the The Kind You Bare Always Bought Bn Use For Over SO Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY. TT ARRiVAL ANDgDEPARTUBE GF MAILS. QMAIL ARRIVES.! 8:30 a. nt.f jMail arrives by stage for Portland and all points North and East, atso for Californiaand points on S.P. 10 a. m. From Monroe by stage. 11:15 a. in. From Philomath and points West on C. & E. 12 tn. From Portland and all points on the West Side. 1:30 p. m. From Albany and all points North on the S. P. AMBLER:&' WAITERS, . - REAL ESTATE, LOANS INSURANCE . E. WATTERSa CORVALLIS. HENRY AMBLER, PHILOMATH. Kyai w ROYAL BAKING Bring your Job Work to the -."'-'.-' ...'. - '.--'. . "''' , Gazette Office. Notice of Fteal Settlement. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned executrix of the estate of C. E. Mcor deceased, has filed in the County Court of Benton County, Oregon, her final account as such executrix of said estate, and that Friday the 8th day of De cember, 1905, at the hour of ten o'clock A. M. has been fixed by said Court as a time for hear ing objections to said account and the oettle ment thereof . PERSI8 J. LINDEM AN. Executrix of the estate of C. E. Moor, deceased Bought, and which lias been. nas borne the signature of - and has been made under his per jfjs sonal supervision since its infancy. Signature of MURRAY STREET. HEW YORK CITY. 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 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. in. For Monroe, Or. 6:15 p. m. For Portland, Cali fornia, and points North, East and South. Ii you are looking for some real good Bargains In Stock, Grain, Fruit and Poultry Ranches, write for our special list, or c me and see us. . We win take pleasure in giving you reliaole informa tion: also showing you over the county !TJ'-. SKf POWDER CO., NEW YORK I Thank the Lord." Bllttft. Cried Hannah Plant, "of Little Rock,. Ark., "for the relief I got from Bncklin's Arnica Salve. It cuted my fearfoljrnn ning sores, which nothing else would heal, and from which I fuffered for five years." It iaa marvellous healer for nute, burns and wounds. Guaranteed at