Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Corvallis gazette. (Corvallis, Benton County, Or.) 1900-1909 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1906)
GAIEITL l-'ublished Tuesdays and Fridays by "azette Publishing Company. - iiil-ai-riiil 'tin nrii' nf the Gazette . - - vtral years has beeu. aui reman s ' , annum, or 5 oer cent- diwwinf if j a advance. This pa.wr ilt be o , .;.i:i'i9l until all arrearages are pail. i (PARITY. In many ways our civilization has made a charitable people of us, but there is yet much lacking1. There are various forms which charity may as sume. Those who contribute money to the needy are designa ted charitable, and they are. First of all, however, it must be remembered that they are fortu nate to possess funds to donate. Because a person does contri bute money to a worthy cause does not signify that he is more charitable than a neighbor who does not give. The neighbor might in the goodness of his heart be more charitable than he who contributes, but be abso lutely unable to assist the cause by so much as a farthing. In the matter of giving we are quite free-handed as a general thing and little criticism is justi fiable on this score. The only observation apropos would be that we are apt to be stampeded in tha matter and contribute to causes because somebody else did, and in our saner moments reflact that w-3 acted like idiots. But above and beyond all this is another form oijfcharity which comes nearer the real article Charity of action toward each other. How quick we are to be little one of our clique or of our self-established social stiatuni. We are not equal socially, it is true, and some are fr more cultured than others, but in any walk of life their is need of "the milk of human kindness;" of charity which is charity. The higher up the scale of civilization education, culture, refinement we go the more we are justi fied in expecting to find men and women of charitable views. In educated people we look for a kindly tolerance of the short comings of others who by the ac cident of birth even did not get a fair start in the race of life, Fate, that intangible something that ever walks with us and de termines our destiny, impels us hither and yon, and a few Ere put in exalted places whilst the greater majority remain "draw cTi of water and hewers of wood.' For him whom chance placed above his fellows to treat them with disregard is unchari table and unworthy of real man hood. We condemn, criticise, ridicule and ill-treat our fellows and in most cases without cause, or just because they do not think as we do. Mayhap he or she does not dress to suit us. A lady may not have enpugh features in her hat or she may have it bedeckedvith too many. Or possibly the foolish creature dresses in blue when in our opinion she should wear pink or some shade of this or that crea tion which we would select, so we proceed to condemn her in the . :ost approved and up-to-date Christian style. We .Mil ourselves a Christian people! "Alas for the rarity of Christian charity." There is much opportunity for our Sab batical institutions in thedis seminiatbn of the seed of real chnriiy. Here is a chance to show man's humanity to man ' and establish principles of char ity that shall make the name worth while. USDER EVIL SPELL. One Assunta Marasco, Madam, a child from Italy's sunny shores, laments the cruelty of fate that thr-.nv u . under the influence of u mauiaionial de sire. This same bit of much abused feminine innocence is in the courts praying that she be freed frsm the "evil spell" which caused her to place herself, soul COBWilS soul and body, in the care, of Gaspare Marasco. Marasco ac cepted his responsibility last Oc tober in Coos county. t Madame Marasco in the suit for .divorce recently filed in the courts of Portlrnd alleges that prior to her marriage she was under an evil influence, or spell, cast by one Spanarello. Spana rello, the evil genius of the fair Assunta,' caused her to wed Mar asco in spite of the fact that she loved him not, nor could she ever hope to thus honor him. Poor Assunta! How many of her sis ters will aetest the evil spell! However, to be matter of fact, it will be . interesting to watch the course of the case in the courts. Whether or not the al leged influence of an "evil spell" cast by the unholy hocus-pocus of some devilish faker possess ing the power to affect, others by prayers and incantations will have weight with an Oregon court in the unsanctified sever ing of a foreordained marriage bond remains to be seen. About the Limit. The meanest man on earth is declared to be a resident of Cor, vallis. If there is anyone meaner in the deepest and broadest sense of the word, it is up to him to step forward and claim the dis tinction. Everyone has heard of the pet ty thief who purloins flo wers from the newly made grave, but he is not a comparison; so is everyone familiar with the cur who "swipes" umbrellas from people's iront porches, and who robs the children's saving bank en occa sion, but such a one is a gentle man compared to the man in question. In fact, a red handed assassin might easier be consider ed a manly man than, could the contemptible brute to whom ; ref erence is made. - This man is the owner of a team, and with this team he prac tically makes his living. The animals are so lean and lank that they resemble walking corn cribs, so plainly can their ribs be seen through the hide, which is about all that is leit-of the poor beasts. And in spite of the value of the service rendered by these dumb, helpless creatures, the dirty, des.- picable puppy of an owner is ac cused of putting rocks , in the stalls of the horses at night to prevent them from lying down f This is, done to save the work of currying, aud the expense of straw for bedding. , Tht complaint is-made to the police by neighbors,.! who vow that such are the facts of the case. If the story be true,- and the complaint is made by resp nbl? and respectable parties nuji. j; would be too good far lus tiv-uri in human torm. To beat, starve- or otherwise mistreat a dumb siuimal of any sort, is the very essence of. cruel tyjVbut to so torture a horse, the noblest and most useful and faith ful of them all, i.s'tbe limit, and any person rtJund guilty, of such deep-seated cussedness should be summarily dealt with. Cannot Register Early. From present indications it seems probable that the registra tion at OAC the coming term will be lighter the first wek or two than was.lhr case lat vear at the same " time. "Such is the opinion! held by some who ought to know whertof they speak and the reason for it lies ia the fact that many students are detained at home latex, than usual thi year to assist in putting in the fall crop, because no help can be obtained elsewhere thau ia the family. Others are going, to the hop yards, there to earn the she kel: with which to pay their way through college the coming' win ter. Later, however, when the fall work is disposed of, there will un doubtedly be a larger attendance than last year, when the total enrollment reached 735. Up at Cautho'rn Hall there has been a vast difference wrought in the interior of the building. A few years ago only a few of the, rooms were finished and pa pered, but now all are in first class condition. Half the rooms in the hall were engaged in advance before the students left this spring, and there are now applications daily for apartments. .The hall has never been in as good shape as at present, and those who return will be agreeably surprised at the improvement. Prof, and Mrs. Berchtold fin ished moving .Wednesday into the rooms in the-hall tormerlv occupied by Prof. and Mrs. Horner. , ' w The Dedication. -' Sunday, at Albany, - will be held the dedicatory services inci dent ts the opening of St. Marys' hospital. The event will :- be largely attended, and it is pro bable that some from Corvallis will be present. v Father Springer ot this city kindly , furnishes the following program of the days' services: 10:00 a. m. Blessing of the Hospital, High Mass and sermon MoBt Rev. A. Christie, D. D , Arch bishop of Oregon City. Instrumental Solo........ Selected Miss Emma Sox , Address .... Mayor j. P. Wallace of Albany Male Quartette . . Selected Messrs. J. C. Irvine, A. M. Ham-rer, S. N. Steele, H. A. Nelson Address....... Vlayor Harry Laae of Portland Vocal Duet... .v .Selected Miss Julia DorganMiss Anna Schulfz Address .... . Hon. J. K. Weatherford, of Albany Instrumental Solo .. .Selected Miss Emma Sox Address.. Archbishop A. Christie Public Reception from 2 until 4 When it is remembered that Russell Sage's time was worth something like 50,000 an hour, on busy days, the story that he sewed on his own buttons looks silly. ' A man in Albion, N. Y., was run into by a baby carriage on the street last week and had three ribs broken. The speed for baby carriages should be re duced. , NO MAN IS STRONGER THAN HIS STOMACH. - Let the greatesf'athlete have dyspepsia and his muscles would soon fail. Physi cal strength is derived from food. If a man has insufficient food he loses strength. If he has no food he dies. Food Is mn. verted into nutrition through the stom- aclf ana bowels. It denonds on tho strength of the stomach to what extent rood eaten is digested and assimilated. "People can die of starvation who have abundant, food to eat, -when the stomach and its associate organs of digestion end nutrition do not perform their duty. Thus the stomach is really the vital or gan, of the body. If the stomach is " weak" the body will be weak also, because it is upon tho stomach the body relies ,for its strength. A nd as tho body, considered as a whole, is made up of its 'several mem bers and organs, so tho weakness of the bodys a consequence of" weak" stora- acn win oe aisirioutcd among tile or all the orgalis heart, liver, kidnevs, etc. The -liver will ba torpid and inactive, giving rise to biliousness, loss of appetite, weak nerves, feeble or irregular action cf heart, palpitation, dizziness,- headache, backache- and kindred disturbances and weaknesses. ... Mr. Louis Pare, of Quebec writes: Tor years after my health began to fail, my lieaJ grew dizzy, eyes pained me, and my stomach was sore all tho time, while everything I wouM eat would seem to lie heavy like lead 011 my stomach. The doctors claimed that it was sympathetic trouble duo to dyspepsia, and prescribed for me. and although 1 took their powders regularly yet 1 felt no better. My wife advised me to try Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and stop taking the doc tor's medicine. She bought me a bottle and vs-esoon found that 1 began to improve, so I kept up the treatment. I took on flesh, my stomach became normal, the digestive organs worked perfectly and I soon began to look like a different person. I (can never cease to ba grateful for what your medicine has done forme and 1 certainly give it highest praise." Don't be wheedled by a penny-grabbing dealer Sfito taking inferior substitutes for Dr. Pierce's medicines, recommended to be "just as good." To gain knowledge of your own body in sickness and health send for tha Peo ple's Common Sense Medical Adviser. A book of 1008 pages. Send 21 one -cent stamps for paper-covered, or 31 stamps for cloth-bound copy. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, t63 Main Street. Buffalo, N. Y. Starving to Death. B-anBP her Momieh was fo pa6n"! by nseles-t dniijaiug that, she could tin eat, Mrs. Wrv II. Walters of Sc. CI ir St., Coiumbns. Ohio, a'HS " litesHv starving to- leath. " She wiitM: ' Mv stomach, was so weak from usr-lee drey that I con Id not eat, and my t ervps w wrecked .that I mniI not Wp; and not bef-w I was given np to die was I in duced to try K'ei-tric Bitt-is; with the wonderful resiilr that iiujjr:vf t:if sit be gan at once, and 11 com piete.cn re follow ed.'' Best health tonic on earth." 50c. Guaranteed by Alien & Woodwaid, drug gists. . -. She Found Relief. If von rf troubled with iiver com plaint anii have not received heln ead this. Mrs. Marv E. Hammond, Mood-. , TexaF. "I was io poor health wi.'li liver trouble for over a year. Doctors did me no good and I tiieo Herbine. a it three Iv-.rties cflred me. I can't sav too mtiith for Herbine, as it 13 a wonderful liver medicine I always luve it in the hone. Publish where you wish." Soid bv Graham & AVortham. Well Worth Trying. W. H. B")'i', the popular pension attorney, of Pitutield, Vt., says: "Next to a pension .the beet think- to get is Dr. Kings New Life Pills." He wriif. "ihey keep my family ia siler.did health." Quick cure for Headache, Constipation and Biliousness. 25c. Guaranteed at Allen A Woodward's drug store. wE-vj FALL" DRESS OOO0S Many of the new Fall Dress Goods are here . ready for your approval; the choicest collection of foreign and dornestic ma terials we have" ever shown., " - v -The rich, new plaids, the handsome suitings and the im mense variety of plain weaves all go toward making an assort ment which even at this early date is very complete. Many of these goods are madeo our direct order by the best mills of France arid America- Therefore, we are able to offer you exclusive styles, bought under the most favorable circumstances, at prices which cannot be duplicated elsewhere. We make a Specialty of the. Celebrated ... BROADHEAD DRESS GOODS ... Shadow Check Plaids Where the prevailing' color is navy, green, red or gray. These are very ' pronounced styles and decidedly stylish for separate skirte. Z, ' ' The yard $1.22, 150, andl.75 English Griffonette : , k Absolutely waterproof, sponged andhrank. " $2.50 per yard' Gray Suitings , - Splendid assortment of gray suitings, in which a threadof color is wover, forming checks and breken plaids. Great values at " The yard 85c, $.00,il.25, 1.50 Broadcloths Our own importation of French broadcloth, embraces all thefaBhionable colors for evening and street wear.- Sponged and shrunk. - $1.50, 2.25 per yard Navy Blue Serges - Promiseto become a fad during the coming season. We have some splen J did values in the imperial serges. Other colors are brown, green, wine and , cardinal. ' N The yard 60c toI$1.75 Popular Price Suitings Plaids, tailor suitings, mixtures, checks,- all-wool batistes, oerges, alba tross in every wanted color. The yard 50c Panamas , - Are as popular as ever. We are showing several grades in which navy, brown, green, red, gray and reseda are the leading colors ; 48-iD. to54-in. wide. N The yard 85c, $1.00, 1.25 and 1.50 The New Black Dress Goods Are irrisistible. Many entirely new weaves are here. Marquisette, silk voiles, wire voiles, chiffon cloths, minoqua, poplin, worsteds, novelties in silk and wool. , Prices Always the Lowest , Q A young man, who recently graduated from one of the best known Colleges ia the United . States, paid his way through com fortably by money earned in taking stenographic notes and furnishing students with type-written copies. This young man took a course at the Holmes Business College .before entering the University, and this training equipped him with knowledge which he was able to turn into money. Q There are hundreds of young men and women in all parts of the " country occupying positions of prominence, who were helped up the ladder of life by training re ceived at the Holmes Business College. If you are interested in "Stories of success from real life," we shall be glad to give you the details. Q Write for our folder. It is4 worth getting and worth keeping. We will gladly send it to you post paid if you will send us your name and address ' ia kAE&ztsz&i BUSINESS COLLEGE WACHiwr.Tnr.1 5 tpmtw ever ly j FORTLAPl ORS. i.ie direct to Principal, Room 531. n?p lireH r;par Corvallis to as r it us in showing and eel ling prop--ity. iw expei ienee netessary, if MiJini to let us teai-h you the real eatnte business. Saiary 6J a month to honest mn willing to devote a part of hi tin e to thi business. Co-Opcrative Land Co., Andrns Bldg., Minr-eapolis, Minn. The for Job Work Wise ( ...... . ALWAYS USES THE BEST STA TiONERY -Ba&e IS NECESSARY FOR A EES BRED EFFECT The Gazette 3s tSses onSy of: toe in GprvaKJs tSaat can deliver the rjontlsm We Can Show You If It's a Reputation. You are after, White's Cream Vermi fuge has a world wide reputation as tl;f h of all worm destroyers, and for its 'oni- inflnpnrp on weak aDd unthrif-v i;i.ii!ie" It iinpr hvb their digest ton, iiitlsassiiiiiiaiif.ii of their food, strength ens thir mrvcofi system and restores them to health and vigor natural to a child. It" von want a healthy, han.iy child gt bottle of White's Cream Ver n.ifuj;e. Bold by Graham' & Wortbam. "To Cure a Feloa'." Savs tsm Kendall, of Phillipburg, Kan., "jui cover it over with Bucklen's Arnica Sdlve andihe Salve will do the rest." Quicisebt cqre for Burns, Boi's, Soree, Scalds, Wounds, Piles, Jezema, salt Kheuin, Chapped Hands, Sore Feet and feoie Eyes. Only 'be at Alleu & Woodwsid, druggists. Guaranteed. General Rotert E. Lee. Was the greatest General v the world l;as ever known. Ballaid's Snow Lini luent is the gieau st LiDiment. Quickly ures all pains. Jt is within the reach of kll. 1. ti. Poii.ier, Hempstead, Texas, rites : "This is. to certify that Bal lard's Saow Liniment has been used in iny household for years and has been 1 iund to be an excellent Liniment for iClieumatic paina. 1 am never without ii." Sold by Graham & Worthana. at 39s tiio cough and heals lungs 2"brcr:bc for the Gazette. I i Up-t if Fniiciiig CLASSIFIED AOVERllStMEIITS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS : Fifteen words or less, 25 eta for three successive' insertions, or 50 cts per month; for all np to and including ten additional words. cent a word for each insertion. - . For all advertisements over 25 words, I ct per word for the first insertion, and ct per word for each additional inser tion. Nothing inserted for less than 25 cents. " Lodge, society and church notices, other than Btrictly news matter, will be charged for.' ". FOR SALE PIANO FOR SALE OR RENT. IN- quire of George Campbell, Corvallis. Phone 466. 73tf I OFFER FOR SALE MY ENTIRE outfit and business consisting ot 2(H) fowls, three incubators, one bone grinder, one grit grinder, ne clover cutter. Cheap if taken soon. R. F. D. 3, Ind. phone 3. S. H. Moore, Corvallis, Ore. 70tf HOMES FOR SALE. WILL SELL LOTS IN CORVALLIS, Ofegon, on instalment plan and as sist purchasers to build lion es on them if desired. Address First National Bank, Corvallis, Or. WILL SELL MY LOTS IN NE v PORT, Or., for spot cash, ba ance icsta!- . mente, and help parties to build homes thereon, it desired. Address M. S. Woodcock, Corvadis, Or. Veterinary Surgeon DR. E. E. JACKSON, VETERINARY surgeon aud dentist. Residence 1220 Fourth street. Phone 389. Office . 1011 Main stieet, phone 204. Give him a call. FHYS1CIANS B. A. OATHEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon. Rooms 14, Bank Build ing. Office Hours : 10 to 12 a. m , 2 to 1p.m. , Reeidence : cor. 5th and Ad ams Sts. Telephone at office and res idence. Corvallis, Oregon. House Decorating. FOR PAINTING AND PAPERING SEE W. E. Paul, Ind. 488. Utf -3 MARBLE SHOP. MARBLE AND GRANITE MONU meats; curbing made to order; clean ing and reparing done neatly: save agent's commission. Shop North Main St.,Frarjk Vanhoosen, Prop, 9"tt ATTORNEYS J. F. YATES, ATTORNE Y-AT-LAW. Office np stairs in Zierolf Building. Only set of abstracts in Benton County E. R. BRYSON ATTORNEY AT LAW Office in I est e fhee Building, Corval lis, Oregon. WANTED WANTE D 500 SUBSCRIBERS TO THE Gazette and Weekly Oregonian at $2.55per year. WANTED FIFTY CARLOADS OF oats aiid wheat; will ship from neuitst R. R station. Sacks furnished; those not i ed returned free. I handle every kind of larm seed that will grow. Gt others' prices, then get mine. Yours for business, L. L. Brooks. 68tf 'BANKING. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Corvallis, Oregon, transacts a general conservative hanking business. Loans money on approved security. Drafts bought and loid and money t.rsirpferred to the principal cities of the United States, Europe and foreign countries. Reduced Rates. Offered for the East by the S. P. Company. Corvallis tcf Chicago and re turn, $73.95; St. Louie, $69.95 ; Milwau kee, $72.15; St, Paul and Minneapolis, $62.45; Sioux City, Council Bluffs, Omaha, St, Joseph, Atchixson, Leaven worth and Kansas City, $62.45. 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; return limit, 9o days, but not after October 31. 42tf The Breath of Lile. Its a sienficant fact that the strongest animal of its size, the gorilla, also has the largest lungs. Powerful lungs means powerful creatures. How to keep the breathing organs right should be man's chiefest study. Like thousands of others Mrs. O. A. Stephens, of Port Williams, Ohio, has learned how to do this. She writes: "Three bottles of Dr. Kings New Discovery stopped my cough of two years and cured me! of. what my friends thought was consumption : O, it's grand for throat and long troubles.''- Guar anteed by Allen'& Woodward ' drugaiste. Price 5Cc and $1.00. Tiial bottle free.