Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1905)
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS classified advertisements: .Fifteen words or lees, 25 cts for three successive insertions, or 50 cts per month; for all up to and including ten additional worls. cent a wordforjeach insertion. F.r all advertisements over 25 wordp, 1 ct per word for the first insertion, and ft per word for each additional inser tion Nothing inserted for less than 25 cents. Lodge, society and church notices, otbr than strictly news matter, will be ensued for. FOR SALE BARBED PLYMOUTH ROCKS Breeding henn and pullets at $1 each Choice breeding cooker Is, from pen headed by mv $20 Arp's pullet brer! cork bird, at from 1 to $5 each. Call at. Gallerv. W. G. Emery. Barred Bock Specialist. 90tf ALT, WOOD HANDLED BY THE undersigned i now in this city and has been -placed in the bands of the Citv Transfer Com Dan v for sale. Norwood Trading Co. 66tf NEW TIRES PUT ON BABY BUG pies and go-carts, at Dilley& Arnold's AUTOMOBILE FOR HALE $195.00; steam ; in good condition, top lamps, Box 461. McMinnviUe, Or. 87 96 ATTORNEYS J. F. YATES, ATTORNEY-AT LAW O'Hce First National Bank Building Only set of abstracts in Benton County E. R. BRYSON ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office In Post Office Building, Corval- ijs, Oregon. JOSEPH H. WILSON, ATTORN KY at-Law. Notary. Titles. Convevan& ins. Practice in all State and Fedeial Courts. Office in Burnett Building. AUCTIONEER P A KLINE. LIVE STOCK AUCTION eer, Corvallis, Or. P. A. Kline Linr Phone No. 1. P. O. address. Box 1 Pays highest prices for all kinds live stock. Twenty years' experience satisfaction guaranteed. WANTED WAtfTE O 500 SUBSCRIBERS TO THE Gazette and Weekly Oregonian at $2.55per year. DENTISTS E. H. TAYLOR, DENTIST. PAIN less extraction. In Zierolf building Opp. Post Offi s, Corvallis, Oregon. BANKING. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Corvallis, Oregon, MAKES LOANS on approved seenrity and especially on wheat, oats, flour. wool, baled hay, chittim bark, and a'l other classes of produce, npon the re ceipt thereof stortd in mills and public warehouses, or npon chattel mortgages ... and also upon other classes of good se curity. DRAFTS BOUGHT AND SOLD upon the principal financial centers of tiif United States and foreign countrips thus transferring money to all parts of the civilized world. ' A CONSERVATIVE gpneral business transacted in all lines of banking PHYSICIANS B. A. CAT HEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon. Rooms 14, Bank Build ing. Office Hours : 10 to 12 a. m , 2 to -i p. m. Residence : cor. 5th and Ad orns t3 Tel'Ti" at office and rcs- ideac. Corvallis, Oregon, C. H. NEWTH, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, Office an .'. Rasidence, on Main street, Philomath, Oregon. R. D. BURUESS. M. D. Office over Blackledge Furniture Store, Office hours : 10 to 12 and 3 to 5. MARBLE SHOP. MARBLE AND GRANITE MONU meats; curbing made to order; clean ing and reparing done neatly : save agents commission. Shop North Main St., Frank Vanhoosen, Prop, g2tf Notice to Creditors. In the Matter of the Estate of 1 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. Oretron. All persons having claims against the said estate of Mary A. Garlinghouse, de ceased, are required to present the same, with the proper vouchers, duly venned as required Dy law, within six months from the date hereof, to the otv aersigned at her residence one miie east of M.mrne Benton Conntv, Oregon, or at the office of Yates & Yates, Corvallis, Oregon. Dated this 2Gth day of September, 1905. MALINDV F. STAKR, Executrix of the last will and testament of Mary A. Garlinghouse, deceased. 80-92 I Thank the Lord. Cried Hannah Plant, "of Little Rock, Ark.: "for the relief I got from Bni-klin's Arnica Salve. Itemed my fearful run ning sores, which, nothing ele would heal, and from which I suffered for five years." It is a marvellous healer for ute, burns and wounds. Guaranteed at Allen & Woodward drug store. 25c FOLEYSROiflTAR for chlldrwnt mat, aurm -Vo ptatoe Jurors Drawn. At 2 o'clock Wednesday after noon, County Clerk Moses, assist ed by Sheriff Burnett, drew the jury panel for the circuit court for Benton county, which con venes in this city November 27. The following named gentlemen were drawn: R. H. Colbert Corvallis A. J. L. Cator Philomath John Bier . Corvallis Robert Richardson Monroe S. Ireland Willamette J. P. Gragg Bellfountain Peter Bilyeu Corvallis M- L. Barnett Monroe John Cresswell . . .Fairmount Chas. Hector . Fairmount R. Dunn .Kings Valley Geo. Bennett Philomath P. Anderson Bellfountain G. E. Barchard Summit W. A. Beal Soap Creek Paul E. Johnson. Fairmount Frank Dinges Bellfountain J. Fred Buchanan .... Willamette J. F. Aldrich. Corvallis Walter Maxfield Kings Valley T. A. Logsdon Soap Creek J. P.. Hummer, . . ; Philomath W- M. Alford-- Philomath Lewis Hartley Corvallis John Lemon... Monroe J. L. Caton Bellfountain L. A. Brush ...Fairmount Lee Henkle Corvallis H. Hammersley Corvallis Jasper Hayden Alsea J. r. Arrants Philomath It Will Make You Think. That play is most attractive which will be remembered the longest, because of the elements which make up and cause it to linger in the minds of those wit nessing the production, and for this the characters must be natur al. This requires of the author close study of humanity and it is this knowledge that has originat ed the characters in "A Broken Heart," which is to be presented at the opera house, Monday night. Its popularity has already been demonstrated by its successful ran in the East for the last two seasons.' This season a. more capable company than ever before is presenting it, and their success everywhere has been marked. Notice for Publication. United States Land Offlee, Portland. Oregon, August 19, lo Notice is hereby given that in comnli.wn wich tbe provisions of the act of Congress of June 3, 1873, entitled "An act for the sale of timber land. in the States of California, ..Oregon, Nevada and Wash irtnu Territory," as extended to all thi Public Land Ktttes by act of August 4, 1802, IVA SIKORWOOD PATTY, nt Corvallis, couuty of Belltcn, State of Oregon, has this day file 1 in this office her sw -m ta :Pien' No 6851. lor tile purchase of S. Si 4 of Sectioi So 26 in T..winU .No lo 6., Range No (i Vest,anr. will offer proof to show that the land sought is nor. valuable for its timber or stone than for agricultur al purposes, and to establish her claim to said law! before the Register and Receiver cf ihis office a rurtlaud. Oregon, on Monday, the ecu USy ui Nnvenibar, 1905, She names as witnesses: Krwin K 'Alexander, Thomas K. Graham, James H. Patty, all of Cor vallis, Oregon, Robt A. Miiler, of Portland, Oregon Any and all persons claiming adversely the above described lands are requested to tile their claims in tins i me--on or oeioro saia etn aav oi November. 1805. ALGERNON S. DRESSER, . Administrator's Notice. Kotioe io hereby given that the County Court of Benton County, Oregon, has appoint ed the undersigned administrator of the estate of Huldah A. Brown desceased, and 11 per sons haing claims against said estate will o resent the Fa'ne a'-Tfli-i tn-.v, t-m;rf JorvalUs, Orig u, wiihia six mouths from tnis jttte, i " W. S. LINVILLE, Administrator. Dated September 7, 1905. Notice of Final Settlement. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned executrix of the estate of C. E. Mcor de?eae1, has filed in the Couuty Court of Benton County, Oregon, her final account as such executrix of said estate, and that Friday the 8th dav 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 tne settle ment thereof. PERSIS J. LINDEMAN Executrix of the estate of C. E. Moor, deceased ELASTIC PULP PLASTER. NO SAND. NO LIME. Fire Proof; Water Proof FALL OFF: CRACK CRUMBLE Just the Thing for Hop-Driers. Write for Catalogua. Pacific Pulp Piaster Co. PHONE MAIN 2362, 517-521, Chamber of Commerce, , PORTLAND, OREGON. R. M. WADE ft CO., Agts., Corvallis. Tomorrow's Game. Tomorrow afternoon the best game of football to be played in the Northwest' this season will take place. Tomorrow the event will have been decided and the historian of intercollegiate sports will be called UDon to chronicle the outcome of what promises to be the hardest and most scien tific contest ever held between two state institutions. The followers of the popular college game have been looking forward with keen interest from the opening of the season to this game- Every game that either of the big teams have engaged in, the team work and individual players have been taken as cri terions, yet no one can confr dently predict the final score. LETTER LIST. The following letters remain uncalled for in the Corvallis postoffice, for the week ending Nov. 4, 1905: Frank Dye. H A Dyke 3, W P Dyke. Herbert C. Foster, Walter Gay, Fred Kalian, Frank Kuehnel, Harry Powel, Miss Dois, William Scott, L J Seaton. Miss Alice I Thompson, Zetta While B. W. Johnson, P. M, Gazette 433 -Independent phone No GROWS V1NELESS POTATOES Montana Genius Can Supply New Tubers at Any Season in New Form. Great Falls, Mont. A local man has produced potatoes without vines, and asserts that he is now able to supply new potatoes for the market at any season of the year. The Inventor will not re veal the process in detail. He has con ducted his experiments in a box four by eight feet, in which there is a steam coil for heating. He states that he has succeeded, after much experimenting, in perfecting a compound resembling soil that when heated is a fertile field for the develop ment of plant life. In a layer of this compound he plants potato eyes, then another layer of the compound with more potato eyes, and so on until the box is filled. He claims that in this compound potatoes grow without any portion of the vine or sprout appearing above the surface; that all growth is in tubers, and that it is not necessary for either light or air to reach the pota toes at any stage of their growth, ele ments in the compound serving the pur pose of oxygen. At first the potatoes, when exposed to the air, rotted quickly, but now this has been overcome, he says, and his ex periment is an unqualified success after, many years. Those who saw the box he exhibited showing potatoes in vary ing stages of growth were greatly im pressed with the "spuds." A Chicago man has offered him ?100,000 for his in ventions, he declares. BIRD OUSTS CONGREGATION Feathered Mocker Does "Stunts" in Church. Audience Finally Takes Its Leave. Baltimore, Md. An English mocking bird wandered into Hagerstown, Md., and had quite a timo. It attacked first an apple in the street in front of & fruit store on West Franklin street, and when some sparrows interfered, knocked them right and left. They formed a chattering ring and specu lated on the new champion. ". The bird then flew offi and entered Christ Re formed church by the bay window. Rev. Charles Shaffer of Thurmont, was reading his text, when the bird lit on tie e-1"-? cf the Bible. He gently waved' it off, and it flew down to the edge of the pulpit and came back and stood on the text. The reverend gentleman read, though, and the bird flew to. the top of the organ, and sat awhile, and then came hack and perched right over the preacher until he was through with his sermon. It seemed very attentive. When the organ opened" it flew to that and en joyed the music, and, finally, after a comprehensive flight over the congre gation, turned to the chandelier. There it was when the congregation went out. Mr. Spielman went to the church and easily captured it. Battlers Near University.' Rattlesnakes in large numbers have been reported as infesting the hill slopes just behind the University of California grounds, and there is a be lief that the record breaking rattler that was killed a few months ago was the mother of this large brood of young snakes.- & Eats Do Great High Wire Act. At Sligo, Me., a crowd watched nearly 150 rats cross high at ove the ground upon an electric wire from the town hall to a flour mill more than 200 yards away. The rats used their tails as the pro fessional walker on the lofty wire uses his .balancing pole, and not one made a misstep. Ruling of Judge. Down in New Jersey a judge has de cided that a man must pay the bills con tracted by his wife before their mar riage. If this kind of law holds good some cautious men will insist hereafter in having a look at the receipts before starting for the church. SEA WATER AS CURE. EFFICACIOUS IN THE EARLY STAGES OF CONSUMPTION. According to French Investigators It Contains All the Ele ments of the Hu man Body. Paris. A broad philosophical con ception, corroborated, moreover, by physiological research, has enabled M. Quinton to regard sea water as a veritable normal center for living be ings. So that according to the most recent analysis our organism resem bles a simple salt water . aquarium, wherein the cells of which it Is. com posed continue to live under conditions of aquatic origin. The idea is all the more interesting from the tact that it is based on minute analysis and close chemical studies', whence it appears that all the elements of the human body, even those of which only traces exist, are to be found in their integri ty in sea water. These views, which were developed by M. Quinton last year in a bulky volume, were the prelude to their ap plication to therapeutics, which, as sisted by Robert Simon, he has" just commenced. These two savants, pass ing from theory to practice, have at-tempted-to use sea water in the treat ment of certain conditions character ized by the decay of the system, begin ning with the cure of tuberculosis, the healing of which is all the more urgent alike from its widespread ex tension and the powerlessness of sci ence to combat it. After reducing sea water to isotony, that is to say, reducing its free saline by contact with pure water to 7 per 1,000 the only proportion in which the tissues of the body can bear contact with- it .without deterioration they sterilized it "a froid" and injected it "oeneath the skin once every four days, m doses of 50 to 300 cubic centimeters. This treatment applftd to 18 tubercu losis subjects within the last few months gave three failures and 15 cases of improvement. The rapid improvement that result ed began with the general condition, the injection of isotonic sea water re vived the appetite, restored sleep as well as the vital force, and diminished the coughing, spitting and night sweating. At the "same time the le sions were improved to such an ex tent as to be discernible by auscula tion and percussion. Another proof of restoration was the diminution of bacilli in the saliva. Finally the weight of the patient in creased from day to day with regular ityon an average of 27 grams per day. In seme cases the gain was considerably more, averaging 38 and 43 grams, and even as much as 53 grams. The beneficial results obtained by the sea water cure, even in the middle of the winter, in patients free in their movements, several of whom went to work, compares favorably with, the fine results of the sea water cure, at Arachon, for example, where out of 29 cases selected from 132, in which improvement was recorded, B. Lal esque certified that the average gain in weight was 32.G1 grams per day. Such really encouraging statistics, which were communicated to the Academy of Medicine at one of its re cent meetings, give ground for hop ing that the treatment may become more general and that we may soon know whether sea water in the hands of other practitioners will give rss Its to be compared with those alrra'ly at tained by Rene Quinton and Robert Simon. In the meantime it will be prudent- to reserve j-dgrcent. for so many treatments have from tima to time appeared on the medical stage, giving rise to the greatest hope, but unfortunately have met with only an ephemeral success. ARE HARVESTING SNAKES. I Novel Industry Which Is Proving Profitable to New Jersey , People. Mount Holly, N. J. Selling pine snakes is a pastime at which more money can be made than gathering moss or killing foxes. In this industry a large number of persons are engaged in the pines at Chatsworth, where is located a country club, composed of wealthy residents of New York city. The annual shipment cf snakes from this district will amount to nearly 1,000 re'ptiles. They ara secured by dealers in animals and by others who want fine specimens for pets, as a pine snake is perfectly harmless, and a good rat catch er. One of the most extensive dealers in this peculiar line is George V. Bozarth, ' freeholder of Woodlawn township, and I whenever he attends a meeting of the i board in Mount Holly, his friends al j ways anticipate a good snake story, i Nineteen reptiles secured in one af ter , noon were obtained by two men near I Chatsworth. They averaged over five j feet in length, and commanded a mar ket price of one dollar each. Many C-ilsinnts. - Thus early in the season all. ordinary fish storie3 have been driven into ob scurity by tto news from Boston that a 1,400-pound fish, 19 fpet 7 inches long, has been captured and brought to the famous T wharf. Several hundred fish ermen can identify it as the fish that got away from them. , j Great Financiering. j A New York man who received four i dollars per week has been arrested for bigamously maintaining two wives and domestic establishments. The law should spare the man for purposes of ; sociological inquiry in the 6?pflrtment ! of economics. r m iBIH ii nil I - l mm AYfegetable Preparalionfor As similating theFoodartdBeguIa tirig the Stomachs andBowels of Promotes Dige3tion.Cheerfur- ness and Kest.con tains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. Not arc otic T&npe aroUiArSAMUILPITCHKR PuntfJtu Seal- 4bcSmrui RoAmIUSJH- fl&emmt - , JSiOatanakSoia Aperfecl Remedy for Conslipa Tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. 22 1. I EXACTC0PY OF WRAPPER. l i j fH ARRIVAL AKD DEPARTURE OF WAILS. KAIL ARRIVES. 8:30 a. III. 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 ttl. From Portland and all points on the West Side. 1:30 p. IK. From Albany and all points North on the S. P. AMBLER & WATTERS. . REAL ESTATE, LOANS- INSURANCES I: VIRGIL E. WATTERS, CORVALLIS Dainty Fs IN EVERY Receipt that calls for, cream of tartar, soda, or baking powder, use the Royal Baking Powder. Better results " will be obtained because of the absolute purity and gceat leavening strength of the Royal. It will make , the food lighter,, sweeter, of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome. It is always reliable and uni form in its work. , Alum and phosphate baking powders some of them sold at the same price and some of them cheaper will make neither dainty nor wholesome food. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., NEW YORK. ' Bring your JoblWork to the Gazette Office. 0) 111 For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought TUB CENTAUR COMMHV. NEW YORK OITV. fjj 1 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 r nd all points North and South on theS.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. STlS p. m. For Portland, Cali fornia, and points North, East and South. ii yon are 'looking for some real good Bargains in Stock, Grain, Fruit and Poultiy Rnnches, write for our special list, or c me and see us. We will take oleasure in tri vine you reliaole infonna- tion : also showing you over the cou'nty HENRY AMBLER, PHILOMATH. J Bears the A . 1 Signature A ir I rv JjK .- In jr For Over I Thirty Years