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About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (May 1, 1906)
fHE CORVALLiS GAZETTE Published Tuesdays and Fridays by Gazette Publishing Company. The subscription price of the Gazette lor several years has been, and remains, 1 2 per annum, or 5 per cent, discount if paid in advance. This paoer will be continued until all arrearages are paid. ONLY POLICING. Much harsh criticism has fal len upon the State Guard of Cal ifornia because of its conduct, in part at least, in San Francisco in connection with its duty follow ing the resent earthquake Prob ably much of this springs from lack of understanding just what sort of law the soldiery were en forcing upon the people. There are three distinct laws the military power may enforce to meet certain agencies. These are, The Laws of War, Martial Law and Military Law. The first are the usages and customs recognized and practiced by civ ilized nations when at war with one another, lhe second, or Martial Law, is a modified form of the law of war. It is called into exercise temporarily, for specific purpose, in a well defined territory rarely in an enemy country or in a place under per manent military government. I overrides and supersedes all civi law and authority, except so far as designated by the terms o: the proclamation declaring it. I will warrant the military com mander at his discretion to re sort to summary measures by which the liberty of the citizen mav be restrained, his actions coerced, his rights suspended But the existence of martial law does not aut . z eneral mili tary license or place the lives liberty or property of citizens under the control of every holder of a military commission. San Francisco was not under martia law. Military law is that which or dinarilv governs the officers and men of the Army, Navy and Marine corps during their term of service, and National Guard or militia when on military duty It is embodied in certain statute? enacted by congress. Some o these are known as Articles War. These statutes are admin istered in compliance with estab lished usage and certain orders made and published by compe tent authority and known as Army or Navy Rules and Regula tions. The student of military law is likely to ba much embarrassed by the confusion of regulations with statutes. Regulations are simply orders and directions made and published by the President in the exercise of his constitutiona authority as commander-in-chief, or as executive in exercise o power vested in him by law. The citizens of San Francisco are not in the military service of the nation nor state, so they are not governed by military law. They are governed by the su preme police power of the mun icipality exercised by the execu tive and police of the city assist ed by the soldiery doing police duty. In such emergencies the Amei- ican regular soldier is the best police officer possible. Discipline and intelligent training have given him power of wise discre tion in executing his orders and performing his duty which he clearly understands to be guard and Dolice duty. One such sol dier is equivalent to about ten ordinary policemen. As to the guardsman, he lacks the discipline and training of the regular soldier. He does not have a clear conception of the nature of the duty required of him. and for obvious other rea sons is not the most efficient and desirable polices v. In face of this, however, he i , :n y:z efficient and desirable than the average "special policeman." That there has been some abuse of power is not strange. This was to bs expected. That there was gross and fillful abuse of power in some instances may be admitted, yet in the main the government of the stricken peo ple has been exceedingly wise, efficient and humane. DON'T SULK. We are pleased to state that there exists little, if any, indica- ion that defeated candidates are going to sulk m their tents in Benton county. Many times conditions are such that a cer tain man will fare ill in his candidancy, while if he takes his defeat smilingly and with good grace affairs may so ad just themselves in the future that no man in his district could defeat him. There i is Tmuch truth in the following which ap peared in the Oregonian: The defeated candidates for Congress in the First District have congratulated the successful aspirant and tendered their assist ance in his campaign, The men who tailed to get the coveted nomination for Secretary of State have in the same manner assur ed their more fortunate oppon' ents of their party loyalty. lhis is a proper spirit and ore that foretells party success. It is a spirit that Iwins populi 1 a . approval ior those who possess it. The defeated "aspirant fcr nomination who sulks'in his tent while he nurses his sores fgets small sympathy even fiom his friends and soon loses their cor 22J I if 1 11 -r . uuence ana, J. good-will, it is difficult to come upcheerful ar.d smiling after defeat, but the man who cannot do so has no right to engage in the great game of politics. The boy who pouts every time he is thrown should not engage in wrestling. The only thing for republicans to do is to support the Jticket from top to bottom. Every can didate before the primaries had a good run for his money. The primary law has been half tried at least, and while f according to individual opinion it may have miscarried in certain instances, as a whole thenorninations are most satisfactory. :,The thing to do is to pull together and work he finale according to the primary! law by electing the entire ticket. Additional Local. For the first time in the history of Corvallia we have day and night electric service. Lights were turned on yesterday just after noon. This is great! The recently elected officers of the Intercollegiate State Prohibition Association are: President, W. E. Critchlow, Dallas; O. G. Weed, Philomath, vice president; William Robinson, McMinnville,. secretary; Lewis Saunders, Newberg, treasurer Miss Mary Sutherland of this city, is the retiring state president, and she has been an efficient and faith ful officer. Judge Watters arrived home from San Francisco Sunday morn ing, lie tound all of his people to have escaped the disaster which was occasioned by the earthquake, -ave one sister, whose whereabouts ne could not ascertain. He is hope ful that she escaped uninjured. Sunday evening the judge gave an interesting talk in the M. E. church. MACKluE THAT MAKES PIES Pastry That Is Declared to Equal or Surpass That Which Mother Used to Hake. This nation of dyspeptics ought to welcome the news that a nia- ?hine has been invented that makes pies, declares the New York Tribune. With seeming in telligence, almost human, this machine w ill make and mix pies. cut them to the regulation shape. flatten and stamp them and slide them into the oven to be bakeu into the more or less indigestible productions so much in favor in this country. If the inventor of this machine could only add to the mechanical contrivances with which it is provided a cavernous mouth, by which the pies could be devoured when baked, it is prob able that haggard millions would rise up and call him blessed. The pi?-making machine is pur Young EflsfPs Ederheuner Stein & Co. II 41 k i.a.s Remember we are going out of the Ready to Wear clothing Every suit in the house a bargain. ICES AND CREAMS, We are now prepared to provide the pub lic wilh Ices, Water ices, Creams, Sher bets, and everything in this line. SPECIAL FANCY ORDERS, ya? For soeial functions solicited. We cater to the whole public and guarantee the best at reasonable prices. When you want anything in our; line remember us. Our own special free delivery to any part of the city large or small quantities. CORVALLIS CREAMERY CO. suing its relentless course at the factory of a pie company in Phila delphia. Its hungry maw is fed by girls, and after the feeding thi process is purely mechanical un til the finished pie is taken from the oven. One man, three girls and the machine turn out from 16 to 18 pie as minute. For those in terested in figures it may be added that the machine is about ten feet long and twenty inches wide. . An electric motor furnishes power and a gas jet .keeps the forming pies warm. Over the machine is suspended a tank with filling for 400 pies, and in it an agitator re volves to keep the materials from blocking the outlet. After the paste for crusts has been properly mixed it is weighed and cut into properly sized pieces by a dough divider. A tray full of lumps of dough for bottom crusts is placed at one end of the ma chine and another tray, contain ing lumps for top crusts, at the other end. At one end is a stack of plates automatically fed by a ratchet. A magnetized arm swings round, picks up a plate and places it on a die made to re ceive it. A piece of dough is placed on the plate, and the next .movement brings it under a die which forms the lower crust. Then the fruit is deposited on the crust from the tank and the plate moves forward. By this time another lump of dough has been flattened out and starched with an initial, such as "L," for lemon, while an automat ic bellows blows a puff of flour over the dough to keep it from sticking. The next movement brings the filled pie and the upper crust together, an operator being ready to adjust the top cover if necessary. Then the covered pie comes under the edging die, which cuts off all the scraps, and the pie passes forward on an apron, which leads to the oven. So, with the motor humming a lively melody, the mechanical pie maker merrily plies its trade, a steady stream of pies flowing from its interior ovenward, to be later placed before the patron of Poinies's fan O hi Id r en's We can't di rectly influ ence the opinions of people about your words, your acts or your companions but we can make them speak well of your clothes. the "quick lunch" counter as of the variety that is equal, if not su perior, to that made in the ol farm kitchen. No wonder that the old-time culinary art is fast passing into disfavor with- the modern girl! Over-Burdened Women. Many a man sees his wife bend and tus at burdens that strain the back and the heart alike, without any idea of the outrage, unnaren ioiiow in too quicrf succession to allow the nether time to recuperate. The womanly organs become displaced, there are debilitating, disagree able drains, with the added pain 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 snappish of tongue. She would be false to nature if she were any thing else. No persons i.cod help so much is the class of whom this woman is the type. And for such women no help is so sure, so wonderful, as J,hat 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 and shattered nervous system. It clears up the complexion, rounds out the form and makes life a daily happiness. "Favorite Prescription" contains no alcohol or whisky. It is the best medicine for women. Nothing can be "just as good" as the best. Tell the dealer so if he oilers a substitute. "I wrote to you In 1P03, about my case," writes Mrs. Ella W. Kobbinson, of Nuttree, Va. "Was then in a bad condition, and your reply svns'that I probably inherited the troaiila f run my mother, and you prescribed Dr. l'iereu's Favorite Prescription. About that time I had an attack of fever and was ! t,i-k for auite a while, so failed to get your "Prescription." In December fallowing1 was married and then my husband bouffht me two Ivttles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Before I besan to take it 1 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 bottle felt better than ever in my life, and in September gave birth to a twelve-pound baby grill. 1 am very thankful for your t'ouil medicine, and shall tell my friends what it did for me, and shall recommend it to all who are aGiicted. We think it the best medi cine in the world" ow.. Not only the Original but the I . t : r : 1 1 i . . TXCJTiX. fc.ii.fcss. Ul , t-i nils, u l iuty .eo3 "P over 43 years ago, Dy U;u ir. it. v. fierce, nave outrj much imitated but never equaled, as thou sands attest. They're purely vegetctila. beinc lr.ado up of concentrated and rcLnt d medicinal principles, extracted from : !;e roots of American plants. Do not n'-Vt-One or two for stomach corrective, three ci four for cathartic A 3lauta:n of Gold. Could pot bring as much happiness to Mrs. Lncia Wilks, of Ca-oline, Wis as did one 25c box of P.ucklen's Artri S ilve, when it completely " cured run ning sore on her leg, whkh hat tortnred her 23 years. Greatest antiseptic healer f Pile. Trtrirdn. ahd Sore. 25o a' Allen & "Woodward. ; , The Young Physician. WHAT HIS EXPERIENCE PROVED. In the early sixties it was usually the duty of a practicing physician to ride many miles every day on his regular round of visits upon nis patients.- In those days a young man who had received a splendid medical training in one of the best medical colleges of that day was ac customed to ride ten, twenty, thirty miles or more visiting the sick and afflicted. His success was soon phenomenal. Doc tors and families called him for consulta tion to towns at considerable distances by rail. His specialty was the cure of those common and distressing diseases of women. He had early discovered that by combining the extracts of the follow ing medicinal plants, in just the right proportion, without the use of alcohol nis "Prescription" almost invariably cured such cases. Later, in order to place this remedy before the public in a shape easily to be procured, he established a labo ratory at Buffalo, N. Y., where regu larly qualified chemists were put in charge to accurately prepare his "Pre scription " and put it in shape for ship ment to all parts of the world. This "remedy, which he named Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is not a "patent medicine" but a tonic and nervine for If You Have Painting to do it will pay you to look into the merits of Kinloch Paint. IMS? EMSr?1 fcWty Mi vox. I ... .1 ivj&giei HpAAirr cos" For Sale by GRAHAM 3 WELLS. The Imported English Shire Stallion, - rt 7972 Mimnm uannp.r '18366 Will make the season of 1906 as follows : Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays at Abbott's barn, Corvallis; Fridays and Saturdays at Monroe, an 4 Mondays at Watkins' place, 12 miles South of Cor vallis. Soutbill Ranger is a beautiful dark dapple bay 17 hands high anil weighs 2150 lbs. Terms : $20 to insure with foal, or $25 to insure 'a living colt. 36-43 W. O. BELKNAP, Manager. WOVEN TO ORDER From old ingrain or brussels carpets or chenille curtains, any shape. From 12 inches to 11 feet wide, and as long as wanted. First-class workmanship and and prompt service are guaranteed. I PAY THE FREIGHT Write today for further particulars. A. L. FERRINGT0N 320, E. 1st St. ALBANY, ORE; 26tf Postmaster Robbed. G. W. Forts, PostrvaPter at River- town, la., rearly ioflt his life ana was robbed of all comfort, according to his letter, which says : "For 20 vears I had chronic liver complaint, which led to such a severe case of jaundice that even my finger nails turned yellow; when my doctor persenbed Jilectric Hitters : w hich cured me and have kept me well for eleven years.'' Sure cure for Billious ness, Neuralgia, Weakness and all Stomach, Liver, Kidney and Bladder derangement. A wonderful Tonic. At Allen & Woodward Drug store. 50c. EO YEARS' INEXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights Ac- Anyone sending a !ketch and description ma qnjckly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents Bent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive tpedal notice, without charge. In the - - Scientific .Hmertcam A handsomely illustrated weekly. I,areest cir culation of any seientiUc journal. Terms, $3 a year : four months, tl. Sold by all newsdealers. f ''asliinitton. D. C. women, and a regular pnysicians pre scription, and contains the following in gredients : Lady's Slipper root, Black Cohosh root, Unicorn root, Blue CohosH root,. Golden Seal root, and chemically pure glycerine. Dr. Pierce does not claim for his "Fa vorite Prescription" that it is a "cure-all." It is recommended as a most perfect specific for woman's peculiar ailments. So uniform are the results which follow the use of this remarkable remedy, that it can be truly affirmed of "Favorite Pre scription" that it always helps and almost always cures. Ninety-eight per cent, of the women who give this medicine a fair and faithful trial are cured and remain cured. It is a powerful invitroratine tonic im parting health and strength in particular 10 in womD ana its appendages. J.ne local, womanly health is so intimately related to the general health that when diseases of the delicate womanly organs are curea me vnoie ooay gams in heal to. ana surengin. or weak and sickly women who are "worn-out." "run-down or debilitated, especially for women who work m store, omce or schoolroom, who sit at the typewriter or sewing machine, or bear heavy household burdens, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription will prove a priceless benefit because of its health restoring and strength-giving power. Thi Proof. "I want to tell you of the great lmprore ment in my health, since taking your Favor ite Prescription, " says Mrs. H. 8. Jones, of Forest, N. C "When I began its use I was a physical wreck and had despaired of ever having good health again. Could not sit tip all day. I noted a great improvement before the first bottle was all used. Was suffering with almost every pain that a woman is sub ject to ; had Inflammation of the ovaries, painful and suppressed periods, and other symptoms of female disease. After taking six bottles of 'Favorite Prescription I felt like a new person. Can ride horseback and take aU kinds of exercise and not feel tired.' Only one or -VV'Y.TVfc coated Pel JXI -r' VVfesAVve lets will reg 0X ulate, tone in healthy, vigorous action a foul stom ach, torpid liver and sluggish bowels. Little Pill, little dose: produce great results. First put up by old Dr. R. V. Pierce, over 40 years ago. Much imitated but never equaled. Send 31 one-cent stamps to cover cost of mailing and get a copy of the "Common Sense Medical Adviser," over 1000 pa; Address Dr. K. V. Pierce, Buffalo, JN. Everyone should subscribe for his home paper, in order to get all the local news, but to keep in touch with the world's daily events should also read ) The Evening Telegram, Portland, Oregon, The leading evening newspaper of the Pacific Coast, which has com plete Associated Press reports and special leassd - wire sorvico, with correspondents in important r.cws centers and in iili the cities 'ar.d principal towns cf ihs Northwest. Portland and sr.lrarfcs are covered by a brishS sta.'f of reporters, aril editorial, dramatic, society ar..I special writers. Saturday's edi tion consists cf 25 to 23 pa.jes, ar d has colored, comic ..pa?:. as ?.e!l -as a de?artr.:r-v'. colore fashion fa..i-t. u.u i.. sc.- . s'.ory and -' in addition io :: .: .c c day. Subscription 50 cents: 'ut'.e months. S2.CC: r 0 Sample coijIvs .S...u ilv IMPORTED BLACK PERCHERCN STALLION C6 F0TACHE CCM Will niakt- lhe season t.f IS.CO ar All ot'a ham, Corvailie, Oregon. Folache was winner ot 1st prize at the : St. Lnnia fair, 1st at American Royal Live Stock Show, at Kaneaa Ctty ; In ternational Live Stock Show, Kant as, and at the Government Show in France, ' 1904 Terms, $25 to insare. Mares frcm ' a dietsice will be funithed tirst.class pa tnrc. Si.-;. J T. K. FAWCETT, Owner CORVALLIS, - OREGONj) 28-53 . Fir-p mriy Drxt fffd corn at Zi- roilV. 35tfi STEAMER POMONA ij For Portland and way points, leaves i Corvallis Mondajr, Wednesday and Fri-1 day at 6 a. m. Albany 7 a. m. Fare to Portland. $1.75: round trip 3.00. ti rioetf II. A. Hoffman, Agt. l 1 Deaths from Appendicitis. Decrease in the same ratio that the use ot Dr. King's New Life Pills in- j creases. Ttey eave you from danger ; and bring quick and painless release ' from constipation and the ills growing out of it. etrength and yigor always, follow their use. Guaranteed by Allen & Woodward Druggist. 25c. j Try them. n Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys nn$ ladder right i 1