Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909, August 17, 1906, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE
PILLA
LIGHT
At first tliey "distinguisiieu liotnin?:
enve a chaotic blend of white and yel
low foam, driving over the reef at an
apparently incredible speed. Over
head the black pall of the sky seemed
to touch the top of the lantern. Around,
in a vast circle carved out of the mur
ky wilderness, the wondrous beam of
the light fought and conquered its un
wearied foes. Constance caught ..the
three quick flashes of the Seven Stones
lightship, away to the right. She fan
cied she saw a twinkling ahead, but
this was the St. Agnes light, and nei
ther girl could make out other sight
nor sound until Brand pointed stead
ily toward one spot in the darkness.
Before they could follow his Indica
tion they were compelled to duck to
avoid another wave. Then, as if it had
just popped up out of the sea, they di
vined a tiny white spark swinging
6lowly across a considerable area. It
was by that means that Brand had es
timated the size and nearness of the
steamer, and soon they glimpsed the
red and green side lights, though ever
and anon these were hidden by the tor
rents of water sweeping over her
decks. Of the vessel they could see
nothing whatever.
Steadily she rolled along her fearful
path. Having once found her, there
was no difficulty in estimating the ra
pidity of her approach. Enid, whose
eyes were strong and farsighted, fan
cied she caught a fitful vision of a big
black hull laboring In the yellow waves.
Though it was difficult to speak, she
crept close to Brand and screamed:
"Is she drifting on to the reef?"
"I fear so," he answered.
"Then she will be lost!"
"Yes, unless they manage to pass to
s'uth'ard."
Luckily for poor human nature, men
tal stress and physical effort rarely
unite forces. The mere attempt to re
sist the wind, the constant watchful
ness needed to avoid the ambitious
seas, though these, strange to say, ap
peared to be diminishing in size and
volume as the tide rose, served to dull
the horror of the threatened tragedy.
- Brand quitted them for an Instant to
glue his eyes to the lantern after wip
ing a space on the glass. He must see
if the lamp needed tending. Satisfied
by the scrutiny, he stood behind the
girls, who had shrunk closely together
the moment he retired.
"They are trying to steer clear of
the reef," he shouted. "Twice they
have got her head around, but the sea
Is too strong for them. I am afraid she
is doomed." ' ;
Now they unquestionably saw the
great body of the ship. Her funnels
showed most clearly, making sharply
denned black daubs on the heaving
desert of froth. The plunging whirls
of the masthead light were enough to
prove how the unfortunate vessel was
laboring In what might prove to be her
final agony.
And the pity of it! The wind was
dropping. In another hour the weather
might moderate appreciably, the tide
would sweep her away from the horri
ble reef and help would be forthcom
ing. Indeed, even then a powerful
steam trawler was preparing to fight
her way out of Penzance harbor, with
brave men on board ready to take any
risk to save a ship In distress.
But the hour was grudged by fate.
They could plainly hear the hoarse
blasts of the steamer's fog horn, and
again a rocket spurted its path to the
clouds.
She was barely a mile away and, if
anything, in a worse position than be
fore, as the wind remained fixed in the
southwest, and the tide at this stage
eiii'vc;! ! tr:v.-:n! tl:e Innd ere it began
to liow back again to the Atlantic.
"Can nothing be done?" screamed
Constance, rendered half frantic by the
thought that the steamer would go to
pieces before their eyes.
"Nothing," was the answer. "Pray
for them. They are in the hands of
God."
In grewsome distinctness they watch
ed the vessel's approach. The siren
ceased. Had those on board abandon
ed hope? Pitching and rolling in a
manner that suggested the possibility
of foundering in deep water, she came
on with fatal directness. Suddenly a
dreadful thought came to Brand's
mind. The lighthouse stood on the
easterly and most elevated portion of
the reef, whose bearings ran southwest
by west and north-northwest At low
water some two acres of Jagged rocks
are exposed. On all sides the sound
ings fell to sixteen and eighteen fath
oms. What if this helpless leviathan
jf 10,000 tons or more dead weight
were to strike the pillar? This was
quite possible with the tide at its pres
ent level. It all depended whether her
bows were raised or lowered at the mo
ment of impact. In the one case she
would smash away many feet of rock
and perhaps damage the foundations
of the lighthouse; In the other, her
sharp prow would stab into the vitals
of the granite and the huge column
might collapse in common ruin with its
colossal assailant.
One of the girls, be never remember
ed which of them, spoke to him. He
could not answer. For a Becond time
that night be knew what fear meant. He
watched the onward plunging of the
vessel with stupefied eyes. He w, as
In a dream, that her officers and crew
jwere tflj makin desperate effort to
jEea.ther.the reef Bat. tctth. hA.tter
Louis Tracy,
' Author of
"The
Wings
of the
Morning"
i malignity or fate, though they might
have swung her to port, she would not
budge a yard to starboard, . for now
both wind and waves assailed her most
vehemently on the starboard quarter.
Then when she was little, more than
twice her own length distant he was
certain that a dim form on the bridge
signaled to the chart house. With a
miraculous deftness, on the assumption
that her wheel was put hard over, she
fell away from tle racing seas. Her
red light disappeared, her green light
curved into full view. The next wave
lifted her bodily, with a mad joy that
it should be able to use her to batter
its enemy, the rock.
Then she struck, with a sickening
crash that was plainly audible above
the roar of the reef. This was not
enough. Another rush of foaming wa
ter enveloped her and smashed her
again on an inner ledge. There she
lodged, falling inertly over to star
board. And Brand found his voice once
more, for, as sure as this terrible night
would have its end so surely had the
gallant captain of the steamer refused
to imperil the lighthouse when all hope
of saying his ship had vanished.
The tears were in Brand's eyes. His
arms encircled the two girls.
"There goes a fine ship commanded
by a brave man!" he cried.
. And that was the beginning of the
captayi's requiem.
CHAPTER VII.
BUST as the spin of a coin may
mean ' loss or gain in some
, trumpery , dispute or game of
the hour, in like manner ap
parently are the graver issues of life
or death determined at times. It is not
so, we know. Behind the triviality on
which men fasten with amazement as
the governing factor in events there
lies an inscrutable 'purpose. Yet, to
those" watcning the destruction of the
splendid vessel, there was little evi
dence of other than a blind fury in the
fashion of her undoing. . .
The hoarse words , had ' sparce: left.
Brand's lips before a third wave, high
er and more truculent than its .prede
cessors, sprang right over the lost ship
and smothered her in an avalanche of.
water. No doubt this monster swept
away some of the officers and crew. It
was impossible to be certain of aught
save the one thing tfiat the steamer
would surely break up before their
eyes. The wind, now, blowing in fierce
gusts; the sea, rising each minute; the
clouds of spray chasing each other hi
eerie flights through space; the grind
ing, . incessant, utterly overwhelming
noise of the reef, made all sights and
sounds indefinite, nebulous, almost fan
tastic. But when the giant billow receded,
leaving the ship like a dark rock in the
midst of innumerable cascades, the ca
tastrophe took place which Brand
would have foreseen were his thoughts
less tumultuous. With the support of
the sea withdrawn from half its length
the huge hull must either slip back
into deep water or break In two. The
slender steel shell of an ocean liner is
not constructed to resist the law of
gravity acting on full 5,000 tons.
the solid looking colossus cracked like
a carrot, and the after part fell back
into the watery chasm, ttere to be
swallowed instantly amid a turmoil
which happily drowned the despairing
shrieks of far more than half of those
on board.
Constance and Enid screamed bitter
ly in their woe, but again they were
saved from utter collapse by the ex
igencies of the moment. Brand, who
expected to see the remainder of the
ship blown up by the inrushing of the
sea to the furnaces, dragged them forc
ibly below the level of the protecting
balustrade.
Yet nothing of the sort took place.
A vast cloud of steam rushed upward,
but it was dissipated by the next
breath of the gale. This incident told
the lighthouse keeper much. The ves
sel had been disabled so long that her
skillful commander, finding the motive
power of no further avail and certain
that his ship must be driven ashore,
had ordered the fires to be drawn and
the steam to be exhausted from all
boilers except one. Therefore her shaft
was broken, reasoned Brand. Proba
bly the accident had occurred during
the height of the hurricane, and her
steering gear, of little use without the
driving force of the engines to help,
might have been disabled at the same
time.
When the horror stricken watchers
looked again at the wreck the forward
part had shifted its position. It was
now lying broadside on to the seas,
and the lofty foremast thrust Its truck
to within a few feet of them.
They were spared one ghastly scene
which must surely have bereft the
girls of their senses. The majority, of
the first class passengers had gathered
in the saloon. Some clung like limpets
to the main gangway; a number, most
ly men, crowded together in the draw
ing room on the promenade deck. Far
ther than this they could not go, as the
companion hatchways had been locked
by the officer of the watch, the decks
being quite impassable.
. When the hull yielded the spacioa
saloon was exposed to the vicious
.waves. Finding this Dew cavera-openes'
tothetn. crest lianid toncaes.
R
(Copyright. 1904. by I C
Edward J. Clode I t
rnto tne darkness and licked out hap
less victims by the score. Of this a
palling incident those in the lighthouse
knW jytinjHn.tafclongteriYanL L
When the ship snclv, the electric dy
namos, stogped, arid atf'her''figTfifeVen
out.
Tars
lens,
dim sxnl ,Ii-stl7" tIhTcu beneath? but
the great fraino' of tli j- Tore part of the
vessel served r.s a 'bfailcwater to some
extent and " temporarily Withheld the
waves from beating against the col
umn. ' '
Hence BranQ. stiv.Iing his eyes
throasa the Hylnj: rueX fancied he
could make out ILc- trci's of th cap
tain as he? left the bridge and, .with
some of the crev,-. tool: shelter behind
the structure of tlie library and state
cabins on what remr.iued of the prom-,
euade deck. At the same moment the
frenzied occupants of the library and
gangway contrived to burst open the
door of the main companion.
If they had to die, they might as well
die in the open and not boxed up in
Impenetrable darkness. As a matter
of fact, the bolts were forced by a man
who fired his revolver at them. The
sea quickly discovered this new outlet.
The next wave, passing through the
saloon, sent tons of water pouring
through thepen hatch. One good re
sult accrued. The strong canvas awn
ing which prolonged the spar deck was
carried away, and te group of surviv
ors, benumbed with cold and wholly
overcome by their desperate position,
could see the entire height of the gran
ite column in front crowned with its
diadem of brilliancei The liberated
passengers saw it for the first time.
The sight brought no hope. Between
ship and lighthouse was a true mael
strom of more than sixty feet of water
created by the backwash, from the
stonework and the shattered hull.
Even if the passage could be made, of
what avail was it? The iron entrance
door was full .fifty feet above the pres;
ent level of the sea. It could only be
approached by way of the rungs of
iron imbedded In the granite, and ev
ery wave, even in the comparative
moderation caused by the obstructing
wreck, swept at least twenty feet of the
smooth stone tiers. It is this very fact
that prevents rock lighthouses from sel
dom if ever serving as refuges, for ship-'
wrecked sailors. The ascending ladder
Is so exposed, the sea usually so tur
bulent under the least stress ,of wind,
that no human being can retain, hand
hold or footing. . '
Yet there was. one faint chancy jot
succor, and it. was not a saUpr .who
grasped it. .The first that Brand knew
of . the desperate venture was theiglit"
of a spectral ; man .climbing, up " the
shrouds of the foremast.. On a stenier
whose, yards are seldom, used foresails,'
the practicable rope ladder . xieasj, at
the fore, main or mizzen top, aa"the""
case may be. Thenceforward a jailor
must climb with hands and, feet Jto,the.
truck, ' a feat which may occasimaIly
be necessary when the vessel, Is in
dock. It Is hardly., ever atenipe'a
sea.
o 1
The venturesome individual who thus,
suddenly made himself the.- center of
observation carried a line with him.
Not until he essayed the second portion
of his perilous ascent did Brand realize
what the other Intended to do, which
was nothing less than to reach the
truck, the very top of the mast, and en
deavor to throw a rope to the gallery.
And he might succeed, too that was
the marvel of it. The tapering spar
came very near to them, . perhaps
twelve feet distant, and the .wind
would certainly carry the rope across
the chasm if carefully thrown. A few
strong and active men might use this
aerial ferry. Well, better they than
none. Brave fellow! Would that the
Lord might help him!
Higher and nearer swung the stal
wart youngster, for none but a lithe
and active boy could climb a pole with
such easy vigor. At last he reached
the track, and a faintly heard cheer
from beneath mingled with the hyster
ical delight of Enid and Constance,
when, with legs twined round the mast,
he rested his arms for an Instant on
the flat knob of the truck.
Here his fact cczzo into ilz? loTror
focus of the light strong, clean shav
en, clear cut features, a square, de
termined chin, two dark, earnest eyes
and a mop of ruffled black hair,: for
his deerstalker cap had blown off ere
he cleared the spar deck.
"Look out for the line," they heard
him shout. The wind brought his voice
plainly, but evidently he could distin
guish no syllable of Brand's answering
bail:
"Shall I make fast?" N
"Can't hear a word," he cried. "If
you can hear me hold a hand up."
Brand obeyed.
"Catch the line," he went on. "It is
attached to a block with a running
tackle. Haul in and make fast."
"The megaphone!" shouted Brand to
Constance. She darted away to bring
it, and when the adventurer clinging
to the foremast had thrown a coil suc
cessfully. Brand took the Instrument.
"Why don't you come this way? The
others will follow," he bellowed.
"There are women, and children
down below. They must be saved first,
and they cannot climb the mast." was
the reply.
"AH right, but send up a couple of
sailors. We are short handed here."
"Right-o," sang out the other cheer
ily, though he wondered why three men
should anticipate difficulty.
Down he went. Without waiting,
Brand and the girls hauled lustily at
the rope. It was no child's play to
hoist a hearvy pulley and several hun
dred feet of stout cordage. More than
once they feared the first thin rope
would break, but it was good hemp,
and soon the block was hooked to the
strong Iron stanchions of the railing.
To make assnranoe donbjr sore; Brand
toid ta tke srena torn of the
spar etrft Moad -tha bee aad the
- Tee iigntnouse lamp, owing to irs
t Ik;.:, eo:ie.?pTrateu by tne dioptric
.-Lr:-3d i'Jji s.tTc.11 io dissipate, the
Meanwhile, Constance and he saw ,
that the rope was moving through the
pulley without their assistance. Then
through the whirling scud beneath they
matle oat an ascending figure clinging j
;to4t. oon he was- close to. the gallery; j
krCatching hiia by arms and collar they
-iifted him into safety. He was one of
the junior cfHeers, and Constance,
though she hardly expected it, experi
enced a momentary feeling of disap
pointment that the first man to escape 1
was not the handsome youth to whose
cool daring some at least of the ship's
company would owe their lives.
The newcomer was a typical Briton.
"Thanks." he said. "Close shave.
Have you a light? We must signal
after each arrival."
Enid bi'O'jght the small lantern, and
the stranger waved it twice. The rope
traveled back through the pulley, and
this time ft carried a sailor man, who
said not one word, but stooped to tie.
his boot lace. -
. ."How many are left?" inquired
Brand of the officer.
"About eigaty, all told, including
some twenty women and children."
"All wetr to the skin?" "
'"Yes; some of them unconscious, per
haps dead."
"Can you hold out?"
"Yes. A nip of .brandy"
"I will send some. We must leave
you now. These with me are my.
daughters."
At last the crust of insular self pos
session was broken. The man looked
Promotes Digcstion,Cheerfur
nessandRest.Contains neither
Opium,Mofpiune nor Mineral.
KOT Har.c otic .
J3upcaf(Hd.JjlrSAMUELPlTCKXR
ImifJtM Sent'
'." Mx.Smna
Seal
-:..-. J& CarbamUeJeebt
ItvrrKjead
C&muM Sugar -
Whtotyfwt flavor.
A perfecl Remedy for Constipa
tion , Sour Stomach.Diarrh.oea
Worms .Convulsions .Fcverish
ness and Loss OF. SLEEP.
V Facsimile Signature of ,,' .
NEW1 YOHK.
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
To s8
(SESSBBj) i If For Infants and Children.
jJBggThByKinil You Have
I 'ii""""""'""""iiiiiimiii:iiiiiM'ii-jiimiiiiiiiiii. r;jjl fMl B W 3VS Br Quflfll I
AVgefablePreparationforAs- ! i
simaatingtiieroodandBeguIa- , ....... a
ungtheStoiaacitsaMBovrelsof igj Kftarg fhA :; M
f 1
If you ha.ve'125 loads of manure to spread and yon are going to plant 25 acres'of corn or wheat,
or have a 25 acre meadow we will tell you how you can increase the value of your crop this year
from 14.00 to $3.00 per acre or more than enough to pay for a spreader. We issuej a 48-page book
entitled "Practical Experience With Barnyard Manures," which explains the whole situation.
. Our Plan is not a theory. It is an actual fact, backed up by actual experiments extending over
a period of IS years. To give you an idea of what this book contains, we show results of experi
ments made with various crops where 5 loads of manure were spread per acre by the old method,
and 5 loads by the new method, on corn ground. The latter shows a gain of 84.80 per acre. On
another field and in another state, it shows a gain of $5.60 per -zre. and on a clover and timothy
meadow, a gain of $8.00 per acre.
This Book will be sent free to anyone writing us. It is worth $100.00 to yon, bnt it won't cost
yon a cent. If it doesn't do you any good, it won't do yon any harm. Write us now and let us mail
it to you. It is brimming full of valuable information.
Endless fipron FilaEinre Spreader
Spreads all kinds of manure, straw stack bot- balanced on front and rear axles. The team is
toms andcommercial fertilizer regardless oStheir as near the load as it can work. Front and rear
condition. Streads as much in a day as IS men axles are the same length and wheels track;
can by hand. Spreads the largest load in 2 to 4 beater shaft runs in ball and socket bearings,
minutes. Makes the same amount of manure go therefore no friction. Beater is 23 inches in di-
three times as far and produce better results; ameter , seat turns over when loading. Machine
makes all manure fine and immediately avail- turns in its own length.
ab!e for plant life. Simplicity, x here are only two levers on our
Non-Banchable Rake forms a hopper, holds machine. One which raises the hood, locks it
oil hard chunks in contact with beater until and throws the machine in gear at the same time,
thoroughly pulverized. It can then be thrown in and out of gear without
Endless Aprcn is one continuous apron, (not lowering the hood. One lever which changes
a apron) therefore always ready to load. You feed to spread thick or thin, making it so simple
don't have to drive a certain distance to pull it that a boy who can drive a team can handle it.
back into position after each load or wind it back Strength and Durability is one of the most
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hauls. J spreader. The Great tVesternJats a good, strong.
There In n.0 Gearing' about our Endless Apron durable wheel. Extra strong spoke and rim,
to break and cause trouble, ut is always up out heavy steel tires. Strong, well braced box with
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below axle. Streads evenly from start to finish malleable castings, gears and tfrockets all keyed
and cleans out perfectly clean. on. Galvanized hood. Every part is made extra
Hood and End Gate keeps manure away from strong, regardless of co-t. It is made for the man
beater while loading : prevents choking of beat- who -wants the best, made in four sizes, js, so,
er and throwing out a bunch when starting and 70 and zoo bushel catacity.
acts as wind shield when spreading. It has a- Guarantee Should any part break, wear out or
graduating lever andean be regulated while im get out of order withi one year we replace free
motion to spread thick or thin, 3 to 3S loads fer of charge. Send or free catalog, showing latest
mere. improvements. .It tells how to apply manure to
Lijfhf Draft because the load is nearly equally secure best results. - . .. (
" . ' , i . 1 ' , . - ; . , . : . f . w
' Writs' Just these words on a postal card or taslettor eadrcyoor book Practfcal 1 Ex
perience with Barnyard Manures' and catalogue No Jatii " y They will be stalled to you free,
Dqitsow before you haul your manure or prepare f any crop, . y , j f 1 -j . .t : -a, ,
CsUthtBafaeiBrisa CtfeV ,102 Ilerrisca GfCss
rrom one to tne other of the"seCTms
lighthouse keepers. '
"Well, I'm" he blurted out in his
surprise. "ThatAmerican youngster
wondered what the trouble was."
A shapeless, bundle hove in sight. It
contained two little girls tied inside a
tarpaulin and lashed to the rope. This
evidently was the plan for dealing with
the helpless one.
. (To be Continued)
Doa't Be Blue
And lose all interest when help is with
in reach. Herbin will a ake that liver
perform its duties properlr. J. B.
Vaughn, Elba, Ala,, writes; "Being a
constant f ufferer from constipation and a
disordered liver, I have found Heroine
to be the best medicine, for these trou
bles, on the market. I. have used it
constantly. I believe it to be the best
medicine of its kind, and I wish all
sufferers from these troubles to know
the good Heroine has done me. Sold
by Graham & Wortham.
The
for Job Work
TH CENTAUR Q.MMUIV. MEW TORE CITY.
N PER ACRE.
m i oti . mm m i ss bbt si m
f;' For Over
-.' Thirtu Yoaro
MB,'- - B II IB If:-- I.UUI W
That's what a Spreader will do If
used as Et should be
CLASStFILU ADVtRTISLMENTS
CLAESlFIEli .ttVE&TIBEMEXT8 :
Bucceehiy't'diBi .drOtJts , per
month- fViirrrtv--'tWl ' ."
, .v. .... -f lUVlUUHIJJ ICtf
additicDal words! nt a word for eacb
insertion. " i . -. .
For all advertisements over 25 words,
1 ct per wordfor the first insertion, and
K ct pr word for each additional inser
tion. Nothing inserted for less than 25
cents. w .' " 1
Lodge, society and church notices.
other than etrictly news matter, will be
charged for.
FOR SALE
THREE-PIECE MAHOGANY MAR
ble top bedroom suite.
Two-burner oil stove.
Box heating stove.
60tf S. L. Kline, residence.
HOUSE 6 ROOMS, AND BARN, 3
lots in Job's Addition. House, 7 rooms,
barn, 4 lots near college. House, 7
rooms, barn, 12 lots Wilkins Addition.
Inquire of S. H. Moore, Ind. Phone
713, or any of the real estate men. 60tf
HOMES FOR SALE.
WILL SELL LOTS IN C0RVALLIS,
Oregon, on instalment plan and as
sist purchasers to build homes on them
if desired. Address First National
Bank, Oorvallis, Or. .
WILL SELL MY LOTS IN NEWPORT.
Or., for spot cash, : balance instal
ments, and help parties to build homes
thereon, if desired. Address M. S.
Woodcock, Corvailis, Or.
Veterinary Surgeon
DR. E. E. JACKSON, V. S., MORRIS
blacksmith shop. Residence, 1011
Main et. Give him a call. 12tf
PHYSICIANS
B. A. OATHEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN
and Surgeon. - Rooms 14, Bank Build
ing. Office Hours : 10 to 12 a. m., 2 to
1p.m. Residence : cor. 5th and Ad
ams Sts. Telephone at office and res
idence.... . . CoryaJlis, Oregon.
House Decorating.
FOR PAINTING AND PAPERING SEE,
VV.-E, Paul, Ind. 488. i:, ( ' . 14tf
MARBLE SHOP.
MARBLE AND GRANITE MONTJ
meats; curbing made to order; clean
ing and reparing done neatly: save
agent's commission: Shop North
Main St.,Frank Yanhoosen, Prop, Q2tt
ATTORNEYS
J. F. YATES, ATTORNE Y-AT-L A W.
Office np stairs in Zierolf Building.
Only set of abstracts in Benton County,
E. R. BRYSON ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Office in Post Office Building, Corval
ds, Oregon.
WANTED
V7ANTE 0 600 SUBSCRIBERS TO THE
GazettB and Weekly Oregonian at
$2.55per year. v
WANTED FIFTY CARLOADS OF'
. oats and wheat; will ship from nearest
R. R station Sacks furnished; those
not used returned free. Have cleaner
and grinder to go to your iarni and
clean 'seed and grind screenings it
saves $3 per day for a man and team
hauling. Get others' prices, then get
mine. Yours for business. L. L.
Brooks. (iS f
BANKING.
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF
Corvailis, Oregon, transacts a general
conservative banking business. Loans
money on approved security. Drafts
bought and Fold and money transferred
to the principal cities of the United
State?, Europe and foreign countries.
Reduced Rates.
Offered for the East by the SJ P..
Comoany. Corvailis to Chicago and re
turn, $73.95; St. LoaU, $9.9i; Milwau
kee, $72.15; St, Paul and Minneapolis,
$62.45; Sioux City, Council Bluffs,
Omaha, St, Joseph, Atch:.sson, Leaven
worth and Kansas City, $32.4o.
Sale dates: June 4, 6 7, 23 and 25; .
July 2 and 3; August 7, 8 and 9; Sep
tember 8 and 10.
Limit going, lo days; rrtiwn limit,
9odays, but not after October 31. 42tf
if
Notice to Creditors.
Notice is hereby given to all persons concerned .
that the undersigned has been duly appointed Ex
ecutrix of the last Will and Testament of James
C Taylor, deceased, by the County Court of Ben
ton County, State of Oregon. All persons having -fiqima
against the estate of said James U. Tay
lor, deceased, are hereby required to present
the same, with the proper vouchers, duly veri
fied as by law required, within sis months from .
the date hereof, to the undersigned at her resi
dence in Corvailis, Oregon.
Dated this 39th day of June, 1906.
LILLIAN L. TAYLOR,
Raecutrizof the last Will and Testament of
James C Tar or deceased.
;.-. Us